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  • 1
    ISSN: 1433-8580
    Keywords: Glucose metabolism ; Malignant tumors ; Glucose 6-phosphatase ; Autoradiography ; Enzyme histochemistry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Rous sarcoma cells were implanted into the kidney of rats. After 5 days of growth the renal tumor was used for comparing histology with glucose 6-phosphatase (G6Pase) enzyme histochemistry (EHC) and18F-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG) auroradiography (ARG). It was found that the regions of the kidney tumor that had retained normal kidney structures were devoid of FDG, whereas there was histochemical staining of normal cortical areas. Regions of tumor growth, on the other hand, retained FDG and lacked G6Pase. Necrotic areas did not accumulate FDG. There was a dramatic decrease in the areas of G6Pase activity as a result of tumor infiltration in the kidney. The results show that FDG, currently being evaluated as a tumor detecting radiopharmaceutical indeed accumulates into areas of vital malignant growth, and they indicate that FDG positron emission tomographic (PET) images reveal the true anatomic location of malignant tissue.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 66 (1987), S. 128-140 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Precision grip ; Motor control ; Human hand ; Cutaneous mechanoreceptors ; Tactile sensibility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Impulses in single tactile units innervating the human glabrous skin were recorded percutaneously from the median nerve using tungsten electrodes. The units were classified as belonging to one of the four categories: fast adapting with small receptive fields (FA I), fast adapting with large receptive fields (FA II), slowly adapting with small fields (SA I), and slowly adapting with large fields (SA II). A small test object was lifted, positioned in space and replaced using the precision grip between fingers and thumb. The grip force, the load force (vertical lifting force), the vertical movements of the object and vibrations (accelerations) in the object were recorded. After being virtually silent between lifts, the FA I units whose fields contacted the object became highly active during the initial period of grip force increase (initial response). This was also true for most SA I units. Accordingly, most of the skin deformation changes took place at low grip forces (below ca. 1 N). Later, while the load and grip forces increased in parallel during isometric conditions, the FA I and SA I units continued firing but generally at declining impulse rates. As long as the object was held in the air, the SA I units generally maintained firing with a tendency to adaptation. A minority of the FA I unit also discharged, especially during periods of pronounced physiological muscle tremor. The SA I units usually became silent when the grip and load forces in parallel declined to zero during isometric conditions after the object had contacted the table. However, during the very release of the grip the FA I units and some SA I units showed brief burst discharges (release response). The FA II units responded distinctly to the mechanical transients associated with the start of the vertical movement and especially with the sudden cessation of movement at the terminal table contact. FA II units whose end organs were remotely located in relation to the skin areas in contact with the object also responded. Most FA II units also discharged at the initial touch and at the release of the object, albeit less reliably than the type I units. In addition to weak dynamic responses during the phase of isometric force increase, the SA II units showed comparatively strong tonic responses while the object was held during static conditions. High firing rates also were maintained during long-lasting lifts. Moreover, it was established that the signals in SA II afferents were related to the three dimensional force profile in the grip. The results are discussed with regard to the possible implications for the control of precise manipulative movements.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 72 (1988), S. 204-208 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Mechanoreceptors ; Man ; Face ; Infraorbital nerve ; Microneurography ; Trigeminal nerve ; Tactile sensibility ; Cutaneous sensibility ; Oral mucosa
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The feasibility of adopting the microneurography technique (Vallbo and Hagbarth 1968) as a tool to investigate the mechanoreceptive innervation of peri- and intra-oral tissues was explored. Multi-unit activity and impulses in single nerve fibers were recorded from the infraorbital nerve in healthy volunteers. The innervation territories of individual nerve fascicles were mapped. These varied considerably but most fascicle fields comprised the corner of the mouth. Twenty-four single mechanoreceptive units were recorded. Eighteen innervated the skin of the face, and six innervated the mucous membranes of the lips or cheeks. A majority of the mechanoreceptive afferent units were slowly adapting with small and well defined receptive fields. It is suggested that the various slowly adapting responses may originate from two different types of afferent units. No afferents showed response properties similar to typical Pacinian-corpuscle afferents.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Precision grip ; Motor control ; Human hand ; Somatosensory input ; Long latency reflexes ; Motor programs ; Sensorimotor memory ; Mechanoreceptors
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Small objects were lifted from a table, held in the air, and replaced using the precision grip between the index finger and thumb. The adaptation of motor commands to variations in the object's weight and sensori-motor mechanisms responsible for optimum performance of the transition between the various phases of the task were examined. The lifting movement involved mainly a flexion of the elbow joint. The grip force, the load force (vertical lifting force) and the vertical position were measured. Electromyographic activity (e.m.g.) was recorded from four antagonist pairs of hand/arm muscles primarily influencing the grip force or the load force. In the lifting series with constant weight, the force development was adequately programmed for the current weight during the loading phase (i.e. the phase of parallel increase in the load and grip forces during isometric conditions before the lift-off). The grip and load force rate trajectories were mainly single-peaked, bell-shaped and roughly proportional to the final force. In the lifting series with unexpected weight changes between lifts, it was established that these force rate profiles were programmed on the basis of the previous weight. Consequently, with lifts programmed for a lighter weight the object did not move at the end of the continuous force increase. Then the forces increased in a discontinous fashion until the force of gravity was overcome. With lifts programmed for a heavier weight, the high load and grip force rates at the moment the load force overcame the force of gravity caused a pronounced positional overshoot and a high grip force peak, respectively. In these conditions the erroneous programmed commands were automatically terminated by somatosensory signals elicited by the start of the movement. A similar triggering by somatosensory information applied to the release of programmed motor commands accounting for the unloading phase (i.e. the parallel decrease in the grip and load forces after the object contacted the table following its replacement). These commands were always adequately programmed for the weight.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 71 (1988), S. 72-86 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Precision grip ; Motor control ; Human hand ; Somatosensory input ; Long-latency reactions ; Anticipatory mechanisms ; Sensori-motor memory
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A test object (grip apparatus) was held at its upper part using a precision grip. Small balls were dropped into a target cup at the bottom of the apparatus. The grip force, the load force (vertical lifting force) and the vertical movement were measured. Electromyographic activity (e.m.g.) was recorded from four antagonist pairs of hand/arm muscles primarily influencing the grip force or the load force. The balls were dropped either by the subject during a bimanual task, or unexpectedly by the experimenter. When the subject dropped the ball, preparatory actions occurred before the rapid increase in the vertical load caused by the impact. These actions appeared ca. 150 ms prior to the impact and involved a grip force increase and a lifting movement of the grip apparatus. The e.m.g. activity increased in all eight of the hand and arm muscles, indicating a general stiffening of the hand/arm system prior to the impact. Furthermore, the preparatory actions were programmed adequately for the size of the load force step at the impact, i.e. an adequate safety margin to prevent slips was preserved during the critical period of the impact. Thus, variations in this step caused by changes in (i) the weight of ball, (ii) the weight of the grip apparatus and (iii) the length of the drop were adequately taken into account during the programming of these actions. In addition, the frictional condition between the skin and the grip surface was also taken into account. The relevant sensory information apparently was obtained during the handling of the ball and the grip apparatus prior to the drop. There were also task-related automatic muscle responses triggered by the impact. These responses, which also served to stiffen the hand/arm system, were most pronounced during unexpected load changes, but they appeared too late to prevent slips. However, if no overall slip occurred, the triggered responses were functional in the sense that they helped to quickly restore the safety margin and the vertical position of the object.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 66 (1987), S. 141-154 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Precision grip ; Motor control ; Human hand ; Cutaneous mechanoreceptors ; Exteroceptive reflexes ; Sensori-motor memory
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary While human subjects lift small objects using the precision grip between the tips of the fingers and thumb the ratio between the grip force and the load force (i.e. the vertical lifting force) is adapted to the friction between the object and the skin. The present report provides direct evidence that signals in tactile afferent units are utilized in this adaptation. Tactile afferent units were readily excited by small but distinct slips between the object and the skin revealed as vibrations in the object. Following such afferent slip responses the force ratio was upgraded to a higher, stable value which provided a safety margin to prevent further slips. The latency between the onset of the a slip and the appearance of the ratio change (74 ±9 ms) was about half the minimum latency for intended grip force changes triggered by cutaneous stimulation of the fingers. This indicated that the motor responses were automatically initiated. If the subjects were asked to very slowly separate their thumb and the opposing finger while the object was held in air, grip force reflexes originating from afferent slip responses appeared to counteract the voluntary command, but the maintained upgrading of the force ratio was suppressed. In experiments with weak electrical cutaneous stimulation delivered through the surfaces of the object it was established that tactile input alone could trigger the upgrading of the force ratio. Although, varying in responsiveness, each of the three types of tactile units which exhibit a pronounced dynamic sensitivity (FA I, FA II and SA I units) could reliably signal these slips. Similar but generally weaker afferent responses, sometimes followed by small force ratio changes, also occurred in the FA I and the SA I units in the absence of detectable vibrations events. In contrast to the responses associated with clear vibratory events, the weaker afferent responses were probably caused by localized frictional slips, i.e. slips limited to small fractions of the skin area in contact with the object. Indications were found that the early adjustment to a new frictional condition, which may appear soon (ca. 0.1–0.2 s) after the object is initially gripped, might depend on the vigorous responses in the FA I units during the initial phase of the lifts (see Westling and Johansson 1987). The role of the tactile input in the adaptation of the force coordination to the frictional condition is discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Mechanoreceptors ; Man ; Infraorbital nerve ; Microneurography ; Trigeminal nerve ; Speech gestures ; Mandibular movements ; Chewing ; Tactile sensibility ; Cutaneous sensibility ; Oral mucosa
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The method of microneurography was used to record activity in trigeminal cutaneous and mucosal mechanoreceptive afferents during natural orofacial behaviors such as speech gestures, chewing, licking and swallowing. Multi-unit activity and impulses in single nerve fibers were recorded from the infraorbital nerve. It appeared that these mechanoreceptors respond to contact between the lips, air pressures generated for speech sounds, and to the deformation/strain changes of the facial skin and mucosa associated with various phases of voluntary lip and jaw movements. The relatively vigorous discharge of cutaneous and mucosal afferents during natural movements of the face are consistent with the claim that mechanoreceptors found within the facial skin provide proprioceptive information on facial movements.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Psychopharmacology 94 (1988), S. 237-241 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Chronic schizophrenia ; High doses ; Fluphenazine ; Pharmacokinetics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Six chronic schizophrenics — earlier refractory to recommended doses of neuroleptic drugs but eventually responding to 250 mg fluphenazine heptanoate weekly — participated in a pharmacokinetic study. Five out of the six patients showed rather constant steady state plasma fluphenazine values on a 250 mg depot weekly. After depot drug withdrawal, the single oral dose pharmacokinetics on 400 mg fluphenazine showed the same variations in C max, t max, t 1/2 and AUC as are observed when recommended doses of fluphenazine are used. We thus could not demonstrate any dose-dependent pharmacokinetics on high oral fluphenazine doses. In half the patients, a biphasic decay in the plasma concentration curve indicated at least two compartments. The patients were then studied for up to 2 years on 200–500 mg fluphenazine as a single daily dose. The fluphenazine plasma levels were rather constant in the individual patients during this period. The plasma prolactin values were related to the fluphenazine values even in the high value area, thus showing a persistent pharmacodynamic variation capacity. The clinical part of the study did not show any relevant findings.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    The @Anatomical Record 218 (1987), S. 66-72 
    ISSN: 0003-276X
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Early cytodifferentiation of human fetal mammary gland was studied at the time of the beginning of the sexual differentiation during the sixth to eleventh developmental weeks. The gland appeared as a solid epithelial ingrowth into the underlying mesenchyme on both sides of the thoracic wall at the age of 5 weeks in both sexes. These ingrowths contained primitive glycogen-rich cells with large nuclei. The surrounding mesenchymal cells gathered around the basal lamina. These cells differentiated into fibroblasts, and collagen fibers were seen in the mesenchyme near the mammary buds. No lumina appeared within the buds during this study. Differences between the male and female mammary epithelium or mesenchyme were not observed, although androgen synthesis and secretion in the fetal testis had already begun. The close connections and concomitant differentiation of the mammary bud epithelium and mesenchyme during the early embryogenesis in this study suggest that epithelio-mesenchymal interaction plays an important role in the differentiation of human mammary gland.
    Additional Material: 4 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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