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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 177 (1977), S. 415-429 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Plica sublingualis ; Taste area ; Aotus ; Alouatta ; Platyrrhini, primates
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary A conspicuous accumulation of taste buds occurs in the rostral part of the plica sublingualis (“frenal lamella”) of Alouatta and Aotus forming taste areas (area gustatoria) superficially situated in the oral mucous membrane. They are found in close vicinity to the orifices of the sublingual salivary glands, but are lacking in the aboral part of the plica sublingualis. They do not occur in all primate species studied. A taste area does not projects above the surface of the surrounding tissue like a papilla. The taste buds open not in crypts or furrows of the oral mucosa, but directly into the spatium sublinguale of the oral cavity proper. In the anterior part of the cavum oris proprium different kinds and very differentiated qualities of sensorial information are perceived (touch, taste, olfaction, temperature). It is conceivable that the taste areas play an important role in perceiving fresh saliva, together with the other sensorial structures in this part of the mouth. This problem can be solved experimentally and by behavioral studies. In addition to its topographical relation to the tongue, the organon sublinguale of Callicebus is structurally very similar to the plica sublingualis of Aotus and Alouatta. Since a sublingua does not occur in New World monkeys, it can be concluded that this organ represents a plica sublingualis which became adherent to the undersurface of the tongue. This study was carried out at the Delta Regional Primate Research Center, Covington, Louisiana, U.S.A., and the Department of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy of the University of Kassel, Germany. The study was supported by NIH Grant No. 5-RO1-DEO 3665-02 DEN and by a “U.S. Senior Scientist Award” from the Humboldt Foundation (Bonn, Germany)
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1435-2451
    Keywords: Trauma ; Wundheilung ; Granulozytenfunktion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Es wurde die Trauma-bedingte Auswirkung auf Migrationsparameter neutrophiler Granulozyten (PMN) und auf die PMN-Elastase-Freisetzung untersucht, mit dem Ziel, eine akute Entzündungsreaktion von Anbeginn an bis zur Erholungsphase im Verlauf zu kontrollieren. 15 Patienten, die sich einem unfallchirurgischen Eingriff, gefolgt von blander Wundheilung, unterzogen, dienten als Entzündungsmodell. Die Erfassung des PMN-Aktivierungsgrads erfolgte im Vollblut durch Messung ihrer Migrationsbereitschaft (TMI) und ihres Eindringvermögens (DC) in ein Membranfiltersystem, welches ein Chemotaxindepot (FMLP) beinhaltete. Kontrollkammern waren FMLP-frei und charakterisierten die Spontanmigration. Bei der gesunden Kontrollgruppe (n=64) nahm die Zahl der ins Filtersystem eingedrungenen PMN kontinuierlich von der oberflächlichsten bis zur tiefsten Schicht ab. FMLP beeinflußte die Mobilisierungsrßte der vom Blut ins Filtersystem eingewanderten PMN nicht, aber jene Zellen, die wanderten, drangen tiefer vor (p 〈 0.05). Nach dem Tauma war die spontane und FMLP-stimulierte DC erhöht (p〈0.05). Es war eine Tendenz, die PMN-Migrationsaktivität episodisch zu hemmen, bemerkbar. Eine Depression der unspezifischen Immunfunktion (niedrige TMI-Werte) fanden sich am 3. (p 〈 0.0001) und 12. postoperativen Tag (p 〈 0.01). Es bestand keine Korrelation zwischen den Migrationsparametern und dem Entzündungsmarker PMN-Elastase. Vorläufige Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, daß die Analyse von PMN-Migrationsparametern im Vollblut-membranfilterassay ein wertvolles Attribut in der Verlaufskontrolle Trauma-assoziierter immunologischer Veränderungen repräsentieren könnte.
    Notes: Abstract We examined the effects of trauma on polymorphonuclear leucocyte (PMN) migratory parameters and PMN elastase release, with the aim of tracing an acute inflammatory reaction from its very beginning to the phase of recovery. Fifteen patients who underwent monotrauma surgery, followed by uneventful healing, served as inflammation model. PMN activation was studied by measuring their readiness to migrate (TMI) and their penetration potency (DC) in a whole blood membrane filter device, in which a chemoattractant depot (FMLP) was integrated. Control chambers lacking FMLP provided parameters of the spontaneous migration. In healthy controls (n = 64), the numbers of invading PMNs decreased continuously from the outermost layer towards the interior of the filter device. FMLP did not influence the mobilization rate of PMNs immigrant from the blood into the filter, but those cells that did migrate penetrated deeper (P 〈 0.05). After trauma, the spontaneous and FMLP-stimulated DC was increased (P〈0.05). Trauma also tended to inhibit PMN migratory activity episodically; depression of the unspecific immune function (low TMI values) was found on the 3rd (P〈0.0001) and 12th (P〈0.01) postsurgical days. There was no correlation between the migratory parameters and the inflammation parameter, PMN elastase release. Preliminary results indicate that analyses of PMN migratory parameters by a whole blood membrane filter assay could provide a valuable adjunct in monitoring trauma-associated immunologic changes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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