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  • Electronic Resource  (2)
  • 1990-1994  (2)
  • Cerebral endothelium  (1)
  • Reconstruction  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1068
    Keywords: Tumor ; Knee ; Reconstruction ; Prosthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Les auteurs étudient une série de 14 prothèses de reconstruction du genou , effectuées aprés résection d'une tumeur maligne. Il s'agissait de 13 ostéosarcomes et d'une tumeur maligne des parties molles. Le recul moyen est de 4,3 ans. La prothèse utilisée était 13 fois une Guepar et 1 fois une GSB. Ils ont observé 3 complications peropératoires sans conséquence, 7 complications postopératoires qui n'ont pas nécessité de réintervention, 4 complications à distance qui ont nécessité une réintervention. Ni infection, ni descellement symptomatique ni fracture de tige ne sont survenus. Ces résultats encourageants les confortent dans leur opinion que la reconstruction par prothèse est dans cette indication préférable à la reconstruction par allogreffe.
    Notes: Summary The authors reported on a series of 14 reconstructions around the knee by metallic prostheses for malignant tumors. The diagnosis was an osteosarcoma in 13 cases and a malignant soft tissue tumor in one. The mean follow-up was 4 years 3 months. The prosthesis was a Guepar device in 13 cases and a GSB in one. They particulary studied their complications: 3 minor peroperative, 7 postoperative complications which needed no reoperation and 4 postoperative complications which needed a further surgical procedure. They had no infection; no symptomatic loosening, nor fracture of the stem was observed. These results encouraged the authors to choose a metallic reconstruction rather than an allograft reconstruction for these indications.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    American Journal of Anatomy 193 (1992), S. 152-163 
    ISSN: 0002-9106
    Keywords: Cerebral endothelium ; Development ; Immunocytochemistry ; Rat ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A constant supply of blood-borne glucose is vital to cerebral metabolism. Although transport of glucose into the nervous tissue, effectively separated from the blood by a functional barrier (the blood-brain barrier, BBB), is one of the essential properties of the cerebral endothelium, little is known about its metabolic regulation and developmental expression in the BBB. In this study we provide evidence by immunocytochemistry that the pattern of the brain endothelial glucose transporter in rat brains (BBB-GT), immunologically homologous with the human hepatoma (G2), human erythrocyte transporter (Glut 1), changes with BBB maturation. While the neuroepithelium at embryonic days 12 and 13 shows a high incidence of immuno-detectable BBB-GT, vascularisation of the cerebral anlage and subsequent development of vascular tightness, as evidenced by intravascularly applied horseradish peroxidase and fluorescinated dextrans, is accompanied by a significant reduction BBB-GT expression in neuroepithelial cells and confinement of BBB-GT expression to the cerebral endothelium. Immunoblots and Northern blots of embryonic brain homogenates corroborate this change in BBB-GT expression in the brain anlage at the time of BBB maturation. However, low molecular weight glucose transporters, presumed to be of non-endothelial origin, are less dramatically reduced. The development of BBB tightness, therefore, seems to play a pivotal role in the pattern of BBB-GT expression during brain differentiation.
    Additional Material: 6 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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