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  • 1985-1989  (4)
  • Embryonal neuroectodermal origin  (2)
  • Arachidic acid (ADA)  (1)
  • Essential hypertension  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1440
    Keywords: Glandular kallikrein ; Immunoreactive 6-keto PGF1α and thromboxane B2 ; Platelet aggregation ; Essential hypertension
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effects of orally administered glandular kallikrein on urinary kallikrein, aldosterone and prostaglandin E (PGE) excretion, plasma renin activity (PRA), immunoreactive 6-keto PGF1α and thromboxane B2 concentrations and platelet aggregation were studied in 12 patients with essential hypertension (EH). After a 2-week control period, each patient was given orally 450 KU/day of hog glandular kallikrein for 8 weeks. Urinary kallikrein, aldosterone and PGE excretion, and plasma 6-keto PGF1α and thromboxane B2 concentrations were measured by radio-immunoassay. Platelet aggregation was measured by the addition of ADP, collagen or ristocetin with an aggregometer. Urinary kallikrein excretion and plasma 6-keto PGF1α concentration were significantly decreased in patients with EH. There were no significant differences in PRA, urinary aldosterone excretion and plasma thromboxane B2 concentrations between control subjects and patients with EH. There was a significant decrease in blood pressure in patients with EH coinciding with significant increases of urinary kallikrein and PGE excretion and plasma immunoreactive 6-keto PGF1α concentration after administration of glandular kallikrein. There was also a significant inhibition of platelet aggregation induced by collagen in these patients. Thus, a suppression of the kallikrein-kinin-prostaglandin system in patients with EH was found, and a decrease in blood pressure with an increment of urinary kallikrein, PGE excretion, plasma immunoreactive 6-keto PGF1α and inhibition of platelet aggregation in vivo by the administration of glandular kallikrein.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 77 (1989), S. 244-253 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Adenovirus type 12 ; Experimental tumor induction ; Embryonal neuroectodermal origin ; Peripheral neuro-and medulloepitheliomas
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Human adenovirus type 12 (Ad 12) was inoculated intraperitoneally, intrapleurally, intramuscularly or subcutaneously into newborn rodents. Tumors developed preferentially in the peritoneal cavities in 93.9% of the hamsters and 82.6% of the mice, but none in rats; in contrast to the high incidence of brain tumors in rats when the virus is injected intracranially. Serial section of peritoneal tissues and muscle of hamsters revealed multicentric microtumors with a close relation to peripheral nerve fibers 10 to 35 days after virus inoculation. Histologically, most tumors consisted of closely packed, irregularly arranged, small spindle or tadpole-shaped cells. However, divergent morphological differentiation showing palisade arrangement of spongioblastic tumor cells forming trabeculae, pseudorosettes with or without central blood vessel, and true rosettes of immature ependymal (ependymoblastic) or medulloepithelial type were observed. No further differentiation was detected on immunohistochemical or electron microscopical examination of the tumor cells. The immature neuroepithelial phenotypes and the early stages of tumor development indicated that Ad 12 had a definite affinity for embryonic neuroepithelial elements that have migrated along the peripheral nerve fibers of newborn hamsters and mice, perhaps with cells of neural crest origin, and had induced primitive neuroectodermal tumors as observed in human peripheral neuroepithelioma and medulloepithelioma.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 78 (1989), S. 232-244 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Adenovirus type 12 ; Experimental tumor induction ; Central nervous tumors ; Embryonal neuroectodermal origin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Intracranial inoculation with human adenovirus type 12 (Ad12) induced tumors multicentrically in the brain and spinal cord of 37.2% of hamsters, 30.2% of mice, and in the brains of 91.0% of rats. Brain tumors developed preferentially at the olfactory bulb, lateral ventricular horns, tapetum region, and ventral and dorso-caudal aspects of the fourth ventricle. In the spinal cord, tumor developed on the dorsal aspect and, in hamsters, at the root of the cauda equina. Microtumors were found almost invariably in the subependymal areas and occasionally in the leptomeninges. The histological and ultrastructural features indicated extremely undifferentiated neoplasms analogous with the intraperitoneal tumors described in the companion report. Closely packed small polygonal or tadpole-shaped tumor cells resembled the subependymal cell remnants of normal perinatal brains. Divergent differentiation consisted in an intermingling of a fascicular or palisading arrangement of spongioblastic cells, of incomplete perivascular pseudorosettes and of neuroblastic (Homer Wright type) rosettes. Neither distinct neuronal nor neurogial fibrils were demonstrated. True ependymoblastomatous and medulloepitheliomatous rosettes were rarely encountered. These results indicate that Ad12-induced tumors in the central nervous system are of embryonal neuroectodermal origin and with limited differentiation, leading to divergent phenotypes corresponding to medulloblastoma, neuroblastoma, primitive spongioblastoma, ependymoblastoma and, rarely, medulloepithelioma.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Colloid & polymer science 266 (1988), S. 525-531 
    ISSN: 1435-1536
    Keywords: Arachidic acid (ADA) ; ω-tricosenoic acid (TSA) ; ω-tricocynoic acid (TCA) ; electron beam irradiation ; FTIR spectrophotometry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Abstract Studies have been carried out on electron beam induced polymerization of LB films of saturated and unsaturated long chain aliphatic acids, in an attempt to obtain information about the dose dependence of conversion in relation to molecular arrangement. The results indicate that polymerization of unsaturated aliphatic acid LB films occurred when irradiation was carried out in a nitrogen atmosphere and that the LB films of a disordered state are more sensitive to radiation than tightly packed LB films.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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