Search results for "histology"

showing 10 items of 985 documents

Spatial calibration of structured illumination fluorescence microscopy using capillary tissue phantoms.

2008

Quantitative assessment of microvascular structure is relevant to the investigations of ischemic injury, reparative angiogenesis and tumor revascularization. In light microscopy applications, thick tissue specimens are necessary to characterize microvascular networks; however, thick tissue leads to image distortions due to out-of-focus light. Structured illumination confocal microscopy is an optical sectioning technique that improves contrast and resolution by using a grid pattern to identify the plane-of-focus within the specimen. Because structured illumination can be applied to wide-field (nonscanning) microscopes, the microcirculation can be studied by sequential intravital and confocal…

MaleHistologyMaterials scienceMicroscopeOptical sectioningSilicon dioxideArticlelaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundMiceOpticslawConfocal microscopyMicroscopyFluorescence microscopeImage Processing Computer-AssistedAnimalsInstrumentationMicroscopy Confocalbusiness.industryPhantoms ImagingMicrocirculationResolution (electron density)CarbocyaninesSilicon DioxideMicrospheresCapillariesMice Inbred C57BLMedical Laboratory TechnologychemistryMicroscopy FluorescenceNonlinear DynamicsLight sheet fluorescence microscopyData Interpretation StatisticalCalibrationMicrovesselsAnatomybusinessSoftwareMicroscopy research and technique
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Maxillary Sinus Anatomy: A Cadaveric Study With Clinical Implications

2009

This study measured maxillary sinus volume, evaluated the location of the semilunar hiatus in correlation to the nasal floor, and the incidence, location, and height of antral septa and discusses their clinical implications. Maxillary sinus volume was quantified in 65 cadavers (130 sinuses) by water application through the semilunar hiatus and measuring the used amount. The location of the semilunar hiatus was identified as distance from the nasal floor. The septa were counted, evaluated, and the size measured from the antral floor. The medium maxillary sinus volume was 12.5 mL (range, 5-22 mL). The medium location of the semilunar hiatus was 25.6 mm above the nasal floor (range, 18-35 mm).…

MaleHistologyMaxillary sinusMandibular first molarMandibular second molarCadaverCadaverotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicinePremolarHumansJaw EdentulousEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAgedAged 80 and overSemilunar hiatusbusiness.industryAnatomyMaxillary SinusMiddle Agedmedicine.anatomical_structureMaxillaFemaleAnatomybusinessCadaveric spasmBiotechnologyThe Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
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Expression of p11 and Heteromeric TASK Channels in Rat Carotid Body Glomus Cells and Nerve Growth Factor–differentiated PC12 Cells

2020

Psychological stress activates the hypothalamus, augments the sympathetic nervous output, and elevates blood pressure via excitation of the ventral medullary cardiovascular regions. However, anatomical and functional connectivity from the hypothalamus to the ventral medullary cardiovascular regions has not been fully elucidated. We investigated this issue by tract-tracing and functional imaging in rats. Retrograde tracing revealed the rostral ventrolateral medulla was innervated by neurons in the ipsilateral dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH). Anterograde tracing showed DMH neurons projected to the ventral medullary cardiovascular regions with axon terminals in contiguity with tyrosine hydroxyl…

MaleHistologyNerve Tissue ProteinsProximity ligation assayPC12 Cells03 medical and health sciencesPotassium Channels Tandem Pore Domain0302 clinical medicineGlomus cellmedicineAnimalsHomomericRats WistarAnnexin A2030304 developmental biologyCarotid Body0303 health sciencesChemistryEndoplasmic reticulumS100 ProteinsfungiArticlesImmunohistochemistryRatsCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureNerve growth factorCytoplasmCarotid bodyAnatomySignal transduction030217 neurology & neurosurgeryJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry
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Early Alterations of Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase Expression Patterns in the Guinea Pig Cochlea After Noise Exposure.

2019

Constitutively expressed endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is supposed to play a role in noise-induced nitric oxide (NO)-production. It is commonly known that intense noise exposure results in inducible NOS (iNOS) expression and increased NO-production, but knowledge about a contribution of the eNOS isoform is still lacking. Effects of noise exposure on eNOS immunolabeling were determined in male guinea pigs ( n=24). For light microscopic analysis, 11 animals were exposed to 90 dB for 1 hr and 6 animals were used as controls. After exposure, eNOS immunostaining was performed on paraffin sections, and the staining intensities were quantified for 4 cochlear regions. For electron micro…

MaleHistologyNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIIGuinea PigsNitric oxide03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineNoise exposureEnosAnimals030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesEndothelial nitric oxide synthasebiologyArticlesbiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryCell biologyCochleachemistryHearing Loss Noise-InducedReticular connective tissueAnatomyGuinea pig cochleaNoise030217 neurology & neurosurgeryThe journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society
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Differential localization of neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity and NADPH-diaphorase activity in the cat spinal cord.

1994

The distributions of neuronal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity (NOS-IR) and NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) activity were compared in the cat spinal cord. NOS-IR in neurons around the central canal, in superficial laminae (I and II) of the dorsal horn, in the dorsal commissure, and in fibers in the superficial dorsal horn was observed at all levels of the spinal cord. In these regions, NOS-IR paralleled NADPH-d activity. The sympathetic autonomic nucleus in the rostral lumbar and thoracic segments exhibited prominent NOS-IR and NADPH-d activity, whereas the parasympathetic nucleus in the sacral segments did not exhibit NOS-IR or NADPH-d activity. Within the region of the sympathetic autono…

MaleHistologyPathology and Forensic MedicineNitric oxidechemistry.chemical_compoundLumbarDorsal root ganglionGanglia SpinalmedicineAnimalsNeuronsNADPH-diaphorase activityChemistryNADPH DehydrogenaseCell BiologyAnatomyCommissureSpinal cordImmunohistochemistrymedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal NervesSpinal CordCatsFemaleAmino Acid OxidoreductasesNitric Oxide SynthaseNucleusNeuronal Nitric Oxide SynthaseCell and tissue research
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Loss of desmoglein 2 suggests essential functions for early embryonic development and proliferation of embryonal stem cells.

2002

Summary Desmoglein 2 (Dsg2) is a Ca 2+ -dependent adhesion molecule of desmosomes and is synthesized in all desmosome-bearing tissues from their earliest appearance onward. To examine the function of Dsg2, its gene was inactivated by homologous recombination in embryonal stem (ES) cells for the generation of knockout mice. DSG2 −/− mice and a considerable number of DSG2 +/− mice died at or shortly after implantation. On the other hand, DSG2 −/− blastocysts developed an apparently normal trophectoderm layer, the first tissue known to produce desmosomes, and hatched properly. Immunofluorescence analyses of these blastocysts showed, however, that the distribution of the desmosomal plaque prote…

MaleHistologyPopulationImmunoblottingFluorescent Antibody TechniqueBiologyPathology and Forensic MedicineAdherens junctionEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentMiceDesmosomemedicineInner cell massAnimalseducationbeta CateninMice Knockouteducation.field_of_studyDesmoglein 2CadherinCell growthStem CellsGap JunctionsCell BiologyGeneral MedicineCadherinsEmbryo MammalianEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyCytoskeletal ProteinsMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureBlastocystDesmoplakinsImmunologyTrans-ActivatorsFemaleStem cellDesmogleinsEuropean journal of cell biology
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Giovanni Filippo Ingrassia: A five-hundred year-long lesson.

2010

Giovanni Filippo Ingrassia was born five centuries ago in Regalbuto, a small town in the center of Sicily. After his medical course in Padua, under the guidance of Vesalius and Fallopius, he gained international fame as a physician and was recruited as a Professor of human anatomy in Naples and later in Palermo. He is remembered as "the new Galen" or "the Sicilian Hippocrates." He contributed to the knowledge of human anatomy through the description of single bones rather than the whole skeleton. In particular, he was the first to describe the "stapes," the "lesser wings of the sphenoid" and various other structures in the head (probably the pharyngotympanic tube) as well as in the reproduc…

MaleHistologySmall townmedia_common.quotation_subjectBone and BonesOsteologyHonestyWhole skeletonHumansMedicinehuman anatomy medicinSicilyCompetence (human resources)Ear Ossiclesmedia_commonOsteologybusiness.industrySettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaGeneral MedicineAnatomylanguage.human_languageScientific cultureHistory 16th CenturyHuman anatomylanguageAnatomybusinessSicilianClassicsPenis
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Expression of the rat connexin 39 (rCx39) gene in myoblasts and myotubes in developing and regenerating skeletal muscles: an in situ hybridization st…

2005

We report a detailed analysis of the expression pattern of the recently identified rat connexin gene, named rat connexin 39 (rCx39), both during embryonic development and in adult life. Qualitative and quantitative reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction analysis showed intense expression of rCx39 restricted to differentiating skeletal muscles, with a peak of expression detected at 18 days of embryonic life, followed by a rapid decline to undetectable levels within the first week of postnatal life. A combination of the in situ hybridization technique for the detection of rCx39 mRNA and immunohistochemistry for myogenin, a myoblast-specific marker, allowed us to establish that the mR…

MaleHistologyTime FactorsGap junctionMyoblasts SkeletalMolecular Sequence DataMuscle Fibers SkeletalConnexinIn situ hybridizationBiologyConnexinsPathology and Forensic MedicineSatellite cellsmedicineMyocyteAnimalsCell LineageTissue DistributionAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerRats WistarMuscle SkeletalMyogeninIn Situ HybridizationPhylogenyMessenger RNABase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidMyogenesisReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionRegeneration (biology)Skeletal muscleGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell BiologyMolecular biologyImmunohistochemistryProtein Structure TertiaryRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureMyogenesiMyogeninMyogenic cell lineageCell and tissue research
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Adaptation of the disector method to rare small organelles in TEM sections exemplified by counting synaptic bodies in the rat pineal gland

1997

The disector is the only objective method for quantifying particles of variable size in a given volume. With this method, cell organelles are identified on adjacent sections, but only those present in one section are counted. When counting extremely rare structures in transmission electron microscope sections (physical disector), the usual procedure of counting on electron micrographs is limited for economic reasons (e.g. micrographs highly outnumbering the investigated structures). Hence, to apply this unbiased stereological method, a modification of the physical disector concerning 3 aspects has been developed. (1) The prerequisite of screening large corresponding tissue areas (here appro…

MaleHistologyVariable sizePresynaptic TerminalsStereologyAdaptation (eye)BiologyPineal Glandlaw.inventionRat Pineal GlandRats Sprague-DawleyOpticslawOrganelleMicroscopyAnimalsMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbusiness.industryCell BiologyAnatomyRatsMicroscopy ElectronElectron micrographsAnatomyElectron microscopebusinessDevelopmental BiologyResearch Article
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A barium method for the cytochemical detection of sulfated glycosaminoglycans in mast cells and basophilic leukocytes.

1999

Barium ions precipitate inorganic as well as organic sulfate compounds and they can be detected by a reaction with sodium rhodizonate. In this work, we describe the use of a barium method for the selective demonstration of sulfated glycosaminoglycans in cytoplasmic granules of mast cells and basophilic leukocytes. Methanol-fixed smears of mouse peritoneal mast cells and rat bone marrow basophils were treated with 5% BaCl2 for 10 min, followed by staining with either 0.2% sodium rhodizonate in 50% ethanol for 2 h at 60 degrees C, or 0.01% brilliant green in distilled water for 1 min. Light microscopic observation revealed a strong staining reaction of the cytoplasmic granules of these cell t…

MaleHistologychemistry.chemical_elementBone Marrow CellsCytoplasmic GranulesGlycosaminoglycanchemistry.chemical_compoundMiceSulfationmedicineAnimalsPeritoneal LavageMast CellsRats WistarColoring AgentsPeritoneal CavityGlycosaminoglycansMice Inbred BALB CCyclohexanonesHistocytochemistryBariumCell BiologyGeneral MedicineMast cellMolecular biologyStainingBasophilsRatsBasophilicQuaternary Ammonium Compoundsmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryDistilled waterchemistryBrilliant greenBariumElectron Probe MicroanalysisActa histochemica
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