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  • 1980-1984  (2)
  • 1965-1969
  • 1,4-Dinitrosopiperazine  (1)
  • Nitrogen hypoxia  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1335
    Keywords: SEM observation ; Rat nasal cavity tumors ; Periodical observation ; 1,4-Dinitrosopiperazine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Epithelial lesions in the nasal cavity of male F344 rats appeared as papillary and nodular hyperplasias progressing to invasive carcinomas during administration of 1,4-dinitrosopepirazine (DNP) at a dose of 0.01% in the drinking water. Observations with specific attention to the cells covering the luminal surface of the mucosa were made by scanning electron microscopy at 10-week intervals. After administration of DNP for 20 and 30 weeks three different types of light microscopically identifiable focal lesions, i.e., papillary hyperplasia, nodular hyperplasia and papilloma, of the epithelium in the nasal cavity were distinguished, and after 40 and 50 weeks areas of squamous cell carcinomas were also observed. In the scanning electron microscope, papillary hyperplasia appeared as a nodular elevation of the surface with a smoother appearance than the surrounding nonnodular areas. Areas of nodular (inverted) hyperplasias had irregularly shaped indentions of the surface. Papillomas appeared as pedunculated projections of the surface. Carcinoma presented as a protrusion of irregular cell masses. The surface cells in the areas of papillary and nodular hyperplasias and of papilloma had numerous short microvilli rather uniform in shape (short-uniform microvilli), unlike the normal epithelium in the nasal cavity, which possesses cilia or olfactory vesicles. The microvilli of carcinoma cells were more irregular in shape and size than those of hyperplastic cells (pleomorphic microvilli).
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Carbon monoxide encephalopathy ; Nitrogen hypoxia ; Selective white matter lesion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Since in a previous study hypoxia and subsequent hypotension were considered to be essential for the pathogenesis of carbon monoxide encephalopathy (CO-encephalopathy), experiments were conducted to see whether a combination of nitrogen hypoxia and subsequent systemic hypotension of similar degree and duration as in the previous experimental CO poisoning could induce the same lesion in the CNS of cats. The partial pressure of blood oxygen was reduced to less than 26 mm Hg by increasing the concentration of nitrogen in N2/O2 gas to be inhaled in 1.5 h and then the aortic blood pressure (BP) was reduced to 60–80 mm Hg by blood depletion and ganglion-blockage for 1 h. In 11 of the 15 cats, lesions were produced in the CNS which were similar by light and electron microscopy to those in CO-encephalopathy. In control groups which were treated by hypoxemia only, hypotension only or a combination of CO2-gas inhalation and hypotension without hypoxemia, such lesions were not found in the cerebral white matter. Considering the pathogenesis of lesions in the cerebral white matter in both nitrogen hypoxia and CO-poisoning, two factors, i.e., hypoxemia and subsequent systemic hypotension, are common and essential. Further, the enormous vasodilation in the cerebral white matter induced by hypoxemia and subsequent drop in BP seem to cause a more severe circulatory disturbance in the cerebral white matter than in the cortex.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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