International journal of experimental pathology
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Acute tissue injury is often considered in the context of a wound. The host response to wounding is an orchestrated series of events, the fundamentals of which are preserved across all multicellular organisms. ⋯ In this review, we consider the elements of injury, resolution and repair as they occur in the lung. We specifically focus on the role of the macrophage, long considered to have a pivotal role in regulating the host response to injury and tissue repair.
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Comparative Study
Intestinal epithelium is more susceptible to cytopathic injury and altered permeability than the lung epithelium in the context of acute sepsis.
Mitochondrial morphology and function are altered in intestinal epithelia during endotoxemia. However, it is unclear whether mitochondrial abnormalities occur in lung epithelial cells during acute sepsis or whether mitochondrial dysfunction corresponds with altered epithelial barrier function. Thus, we hypothesized that the intestinal epithelium is more susceptible to mitochondrial injury than the lung epithelium during acute sepsis and that mitochondrial dysfunction precedes impaired barrier function. ⋯ In contrast, mitochondrial ΔΨ and epithelial barrier functions were preserved in HLEC following cytomix. These findings indicate that intestinal epithelium is more susceptible to mitochondrial damage and dysfunction than the lung epithelium in the context of sepsis. Early alterations in mitochondrial function portend subsequent epithelial barrier dysfunction.
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Transgenic mice are important tools for our study of breast cancer pathobiology. In order to evaluate changes in cell phenotype with breast cancer progression, we examined vascular and progenitor cell characteristics in tumours derived from MMTV-PyVmT mice. We performed dual-immunofluorescence staining for Tie2, pTie2Y1100, VEGFR2 and PDGFR-β and the pan-endothelial marker PECAM-1 (CD31) in 39 tumours from MMTV-PyVmT transgenic mice grouped by nuclear grade and tumour morphology. ⋯ We observed a decrease in the average number of Aldh1a1-positive cells in tumours with a non-invasive vs. solid morphology (P=0.03), and in the average number of Aldh1a1-positive mammary tumour cells in low vs. intermediate and low vs. High-nuclear grade tumours (P<0.001). Our findings suggest heterogeneous expression of several molecules important for tumour angiogenesis and tumour progression that are currently under investigation as therapeutic targets for metastatic breast cancer.
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Summary An evaluation was made of the local action of alendronate sodium (A), hydroxyapatite (HA) and the association of both substances (A + HA), in different molar concentrations, on the femur bone repair of ovariectomized rats. Ninety-eight animals were divided into seven groups: control (C), starch (S), alendronate 1 mol (A1), alendronate 2 mols (A2), hydroxyapatite 1 mol (HA1), hydroxyapatite 2 mols (HA2) and the association of alendronate + hydroxyapatite (A + HA). Rats weighing about 250 g were ovariectomized and 2.5-mm diameter bone defects were made on the left femur 30 days later. ⋯ There was no significant difference among groups A1, A2 and A + HA in the two study periods. It was concluded that alendronate, either isolated or in association with hydroxyapatite, had an adverse effect on bone repair in this experimental model. Moreover, the hydroxyapatite used here proved to be biocompatible and osteoconductive, with group HA2 showing the best results.
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Comparative Study
Single dose intravenous thioacetamide administration as a model of acute liver damage in rats.
Thioacetamide (TAA) has been used extensively in the development of animal models of acute liver injury. Frequently, TAA is administered intraperitoneally to induce liver damage under anaesthesia. However, it is rarely administered by intravenous injection in conscious rats. ⋯ The levels of histopathological damage in the liver after intravenous TAA administration were also increased with a dose-dependent trend and more increased at 60 h after TAA administration. The levels of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) detected by IHC in the liver after intravenous TAA administration were also increased with a dose-dependent trend and more increased at 1 h after TAA administration. Single intravenous TAA administration without anaesthesia is a restorable animal model which may be used to investigate acute liver damage.