Spelling suggestions: "subject:"rate -- anatomy.""
1 |
Development of opiate receptors in rat brain.January 1979 (has links)
by Shi-chung Ng. / Thesis (M.Phil.) - Chinese University of Hong Kong. / Bibliography: leaves 91-105.
|
2 |
Morphometric studies of the microvilli of the small intestine of rats in the presence of cyclosporine and its formulation excipients : pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic considerationsYin, Wei 10 May 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
|
3 |
Hippocampal structure and function in the albino ratFial, Ronald Augustine January 1970 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii, 1970. / Bibliography: leaves [74]-79. / viii, 79 l illus., charts, tables
|
4 |
Carcass nitrogen as a predictor of lysine requirement in the adult female ratBoyko, Jeffrey M. January 1987 (has links)
Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats, age 10 months, were used to estimate the minimum dietary lysine requirement for tissue maintenance. Ten animals were assigned to one of eight treatment groups by weight. The dietary lysine levels ranged from 0.06 to 0.36 % of diet and the feeding period lasted 56 days. Carcass and liver nitrogen and total serum proteins were determined, and a dietary lysine requirement was estimated from the data obtained.
Carcass and liver analysis included weight, total nitrogen, percent protein, percent water and percent fat. Using a one-way analysis of variance, results showed no significant differences in carcass or liver composition between the treatment groups.
The data indicated that the mature female rat has a dietary lysine requirement lower than 0.06 % of diet, or less than 20.1 mg/day/kg0.75. Since previous investigators used a protein based diet, a possible cause for the insignificant differences between values seen in this study may be a consequence of using a nonprotein, amino acid mix base supplemented with lysine.
In future studies for determining the dietary lysine requirement in the adult female rat, dietary lysine levels below 0.06 % of diet must be included when using a nonprotein based diet. / M.S.
|
5 |
A behavioral and anatomical examination of the intramodal and intramodal effects of early stimulation history and selective posterior cortical lesions in the ratBuhrmann, Kristin January 1990 (has links)
The aim of this study was to investigate the intra- and intermodal impact of different kinds of early sensory experience on the development of specific neural/perceptual systems. The manipulations of the rats' early experience involved a combination of early binocular deprivation through dark-rearing, somatosensory restriction through cauterization of mystacial vibrissae, and multimodal enrichment through rearing in a complex environment. Specific lesions to somatosensory (Parl) and visual (Oc2M) cortex in differentially reared animals were included in an attempt to gain further insight into the plasticity surrounding manipulations of early stimulation history.
Five tasks were used to assess these effects of early rearing condition in combination with later cortical lesions. Behavioral assessment focused on the ability of the animals to encode, abstract, and remember specific relationships between stimuli within the deprived modality itself, their ability to do so with information presented in other modalities, and on the basic species specific behavior. The only effect found was a main effect for rearing condition. Basically, complex-reared rats were more competent on several of the behavioral tasks than were dark-reared rats. However, this result provided little behavioral support for ideas of modality interdependence.
Dendritic proliferation is considered to be a general mechanism supporting behavioral change. The subsequent neuroanatomical assessment focused on dendritic branching of neurons in specific cortical areas thought to be most affected by early environmental manipulations. Animals that were raised in a complex environment, but had experienced early tactile restriction through cauterization of vibrissae, showed significantly more dendritic branching than animals from all other rearing conditions in all cortical areas measured. This finding is consistent with ideas of both intra- and intermodal compensation following damage to an early developing modality, as well as behavioral demand acting as a significant factor in determining the impact of early somatosensory restriction.
It is reasonable to assume that anatomical changes should be manifested behaviorally. Suggestions for smaller, more restricted studies, that would be more effective in describing the behavioral impact of early manipulations of the environment, were outlined. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
|
6 |
The rat ovarian surface epithelium in vitroAdams, Anne Theresa January 1982 (has links)
The ovarian surface epithelium, a very small portion of the total mass of the ovary, is generally thought to be the site of origin of over 85% of ovarian cancers. Such cancers are classified with the "Common Epithelial Tumours" of the ovary. In most industrialized countries, malignancies of the ovary rank fourth in cancer deaths in women; over 70% of these neoplasms have spread beyond the ovary when first diagnosed.
Experimental approaches to the study of carcinogenesis in this tissue have been limited by the lack of pure populations of ovarian surface epithelial cells. Studies done on rodents in vivo suggest that both chemicals and C-type RNA viruses can induce ovarian cancers similar to those which are said to arise from the surface epithelium. However, the cell of origin cannot be proven in such studies.
The purpose of this project was to develop a model for ovarian cancers of surface epithelial origin based on-carcinogenesis in vitro. To this end a method was devised to culture the rat ovarian surface epithelium in pure form. These cultured cells, whose identity has been confirmed by morphological, histochemical and ultrastructural means, are polygonal with clear cytoplasm, have well-defined borders, and grow in confluent monolayers. Their morphology is quite distinct from those of other ovarian cells in vitro. Cultured rat ovarian surface epithelial cells are histochemically positive for 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, and negative for
Δ5-3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, the same as in frozen sections of whole rat ovary. Ultrastructurally, cultured surface epithelial cells have basal laminae, microvilli, apical intercellular junctions, large nuclei, abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi complexes, perinuclear bundles of microfilaments, and numerous vesicles.
Although the ovarian suface epithelium is suspected of being an estrogen target tissue, there is no previous report of estrogen receptors in these cells. In this study cultured rat ovarian surface epithelial cells have been shown by autoradiographic means to exhibit estrogen receptor-like activity. Translocation of tritiated estradiol from cytoplasm to nucleus, and estrogen-specific binding have been demonstrated. Estradiol was shown to be mitogenic for cultured ovarian surface epithelial cells. From these results, the surface epithelial .cells of the ovary should be considered an estrogen target tissue.
Kirsten murine sarcoma virus was used to produce three transformed cell lines from pure, first passage cultures of these cells. These three lines retained 170-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity and showed slight Δ5-3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity. Tumours resulting when these cells were injected into immunosuppressed female rats were highly malignant and resembled histologically human endometrioid stromal sarcomas of the ovary. This neoplasm is classed with the "Common Epithelial Tumours" of the ovary, but is generally not
considered a derivative of the surface epithelium. In light of this study, perhaps this tumour should: be considered, to be of surface epithelial origin.
A continuous cell line arising from pure cultures of rat ovarian surface epithelial cells produced structures in vitro resembling those found in ovarian serous papillary cystadenomas of borderline malignancy. This tumour is classed as a common epithelial ovarian tumour.
Hence, in this study the rat ovarian surface epithelium has been cultured in pure form, has been characterized for a number of properties by several investigative techniques, and has been shown to be susceptible to transformation by an oncogenic virus; This work supports the theory that the "Common Epithelial Tumours" of the ovary are, in fact, derived from the surface epithelium. The availability of cultured ovarian surface epithelial cells should allow investigation into factors which make this tissue so susceptible to malignant transformation. From such cultures could come markers suitable for use in tests to detect ovarian cancers at an early stage. The culture of pure rat ovarian surface epithelium, as described herein, could readily be used to study chemical, physical and viral carcinogenesis in this tissue to produce experimental models of cancers arising in the ovarian surface epithelium. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate
|
7 |
Structural aspects of the "blood-brain barrier" area in rat cerebrumFox, Geoffrey Quentin, 1938- January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
|
8 |
Age-related changes in kidney function in female pigmented Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) ratsMinchev, Kiril M. January 2000 (has links)
The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rat is an established animal model used to study human retinal dystrophies. This study investigated whether kidney dysfunction accompanies the eye abnormalities seen in this model. Overnight urine collection procedures were used to measure protein excretion in 2, 12, and 22 month old female pigmented RCS rats and control rats (RDY). Clearance experiments were performed in anesthetized rats to measure glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal plasma flow rate (RPF). There was an age-related increase in protein excretion in both RCS and RDY rats, but the protein excretion was significantly higher in the RCS rats at 2 and 22 months of age. Whole kidney GFR and RPF were significantly lower in the 22 month old RCS rats, when compared to age-matched RDY rats. These findings suggest that the RCS rat exhibits both kidney and eye abnormalities. / Department of Physiology and Health Science
|
9 |
Functional properties of the noradrenergic and cholinergic nervous systems in rat colonic mucosa /Wu, Ze-Ai Chang January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
|
10 |
Observations of idazoxan and xylazine on the myometrial response of the normal, cycling virgin rat in vitroRichey, Meghan 29 September 2009 (has links)
The aim of this study was to determine the contractile responses of normal virgin rat uterine smooth muscle to the ⍺₂ adrenergic agonist, xylazine HCl, in the presence or absence of the selective ⍺₂ adrenoceptor blocker, idazoxan HCl. Sections of full thickness uterus measuring 5 x 1 x 1 mm taken from mature, virgin Sprague-Dawley rats were used in isolated tissue baths containing 37°C Krebs-bicarbonate solution, and continually aerated with 95% O₂ and 5% CO₂. Following stabilization of spontaneous contractions, the tissues were exposed to either no idazoxan (control), 10⁻⁵ M idazoxan (low), 10⁻⁴ M idazoxan (medium), or 10⁻³ M idazoxan (high). Five minutes later, xylazine was added to all baths in a cumulative manner at quarter log increments from 1 x 10⁻⁵ through 1 x 10⁻³ M. The % response in peak developed tension and effective concentration resulting in a 50% response (EC₅₀) for the four treatment groups were examined. Results indicated that xylazine alone, at a concentrations greater than 1 x 10⁻⁴ M, caused a significant negative inotropic response. Pre-treatment with idazoxan at a concentration greater than 10⁻⁴ M enhanced the negative inotropic effect of xylazine in a dose-dependent manner. The mechanism of this synergism is unknown but is proposed to be a local anesthetic action due to sodium channel blockade. / Master of Science
|
Page generated in 0.071 seconds