نتایج جستجو برای: rabbit ear blastema

تعداد نتایج: 90629  

2012
Stephanie C. J. Keating Aurelie A. Thomas Paul A. Flecknell Matthew C. Leach

BACKGROUND Ear tattooing is a routine procedure performed on laboratory, commercial and companion rabbits for the purpose of identification. Although this procedure is potentially painful, it is usually performed without the provision of analgesia, so compromising animal welfare. Furthermore, current means to assess pain in rabbits are poor and more reliable methods are required. The objectives...

2018
Yanyan Lu Chunyan Hao Wubin He Can Tang Zhenya Shao

Various types of complications arising from intravenous indwelling needles have become a challenge in clinical care. It is urgent to seek a simple and cost-effective method for prevention and treatment of phlebitis. We investigated the roles of mirabilite in preventing and treating phlebitis caused by intravenous indwelling needles and provide guidance for prevention and treatment of mechanical...

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2009
Shahryar Khattak Maritta Schuez Elly Tanaka

After limb amputation, urodele amphibians can regenerate lost parts perfectly throughout their life. However, Xenopus laevis shows its characteristic limb regenerative ability. Although Xenopus tadpole has the capacity to regenerate their limbs after amputation, after amputation of a froglet (a small frog after metamorphosis) limb, it can regenerate only a spike-shaped cartilage which has no pa...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 1999
J P Corcoran P Ferretti

Formation of a regeneration blastema following limb amputation is believed to occur through a process of dedifferentiation. It has been suggested, however, that the cells contributed to the blastema by the stump muscle are satellite-like cells, rather than cells originated by dedifferentiation. We have previously shown that simple epithelial keratins 8 and 18 are expressed in the mesenchymal pr...

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2009
Shiro Ohgo Akari Itoh Hitoshi Yokoyama Koji Tamura

After limb amputation, urodele amphibians can regenerate lost parts perfectly throughout their life. However, Xenopus laevis shows its characteristic limb regenerative ability. Although Xenopus tadpole has the capacity to regenerate their limbs after amputation, after amputation of a froglet (a small frog after metamorphosis) limb, it can regenerate only a spike-shaped cartilage which has no pa...

Journal: :Circulation research 1971
J A Bevan J G Waterson

The perfused rabbit ear artery shows a biphasic contractile response to intraluminal norepinephrine and sympathetic nerve stimulation. The peak of the first phase occurs after approximately 10 seconds of exposure to NE, and the second, after IK to 2 minutes. The magnitudes of the two responses are similar. The time course of the second phase of contraction is similar to the rate of saturation o...

Journal: :The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume 1969
H E Ezra-Cohn P G Bullough J Trueta

Transparent regenerative chambers similar to the type originally developed by Sandison (1928), Kirby-Smith (1933) and Clark and Clark (1942), but with slight modifications of our own (Ezra 1966, 1967) were implanted in the central portion of the pinna (Fig. I). The table of the chamber was well vascularised and ready for bone implantation in three weeks. Autogenous bone was obtained from the sp...

Journal: :Development 2005
Esther Schnapp Martin Kragl Lee Rubin Elly M Tanaka

Tail regeneration in urodeles requires the coordinated growth and patterning of the regenerating tissues types, including the spinal cord, cartilage and muscle. The dorsoventral (DV) orientation of the spinal cord at the amputation plane determines the DV patterning of the regenerating spinal cord as well as the patterning of surrounding tissues such as cartilage. We investigated this phenomeno...

2016
Benjamin L. King Viravuth P. Yin

BACKGROUND Although regenerative capacity is evident throughout the animal kingdom, it is not equally distributed throughout evolution. For instance, complex limb/appendage regeneration is muted in mammals but enhanced in amphibians and teleosts. The defining characteristic of limb/appendage regenerative systems is the formation of a dedifferentiated tissue, termed blastema, which serves as the...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 1971
J. B. Hobbs W. J. Cliff

An in vivo microscopic and ultrastructural study of tissues transferred to the transparent rabbit ear chamber is presented. Fragments of liver, kidney, thyroid, and myometrium were successfully auto- or allografted into the chamber from donors of all ages and allowed continuous in vivo observation of parenchymal structure and function, as well as of the graft vasculature which plays such an act...

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