Publications by authors named "Copeland D"

Female AKR/J mice were challenged with the Washington strain of Legionnaires' disease (LD) bacteria. Nonimmunized mice inoculate intraperitoneally with 2 x 10(8) colony forming units became ill within 4 h and died within 24 h. Progressive histopathologic changes initiated as early as 2 h after inoculation involved the lymphoid organs, the crypts of the small intestine, and the liver.

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Cloacogenic carcinoma is a rare tumor of the anorectal region originating from a persistant remnant of the cloacal membrane of the embryo. The tumor accounts for 2-3% of anorectal carcinomas and occurs more than twice as often in women. Most tumors present as fungating or ulcerating lesions, but the tumor may arise in anal ducts and present as a submucosal mass.

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Desmosomes, gap junctions and tight junctions are intercellular specializations which have been described in human meningiomas. We report, in five of five meningiomas, including a pulmonary metastasis from a malignant intracranial meningioma, a fourth type of intercellular specialization which is similar to but not identical with the hemidesmosome of the epidermis. Idential intercellular specializations have been described between arachnoidal cells, but not between dural fibroblasts.

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Intracerebral inoculation of avian sarcoma virus (ASV) in postnatal animals induces gliomas and sarcomas but no neuronal tumors. High titer Bratislava-77 strain ASV was inoculated intracerebrally in fetal F-344 rats between 17 and 20 days of gestation: a time of active neuronal proliferation. Following birth inoculated rats developed gliomas and sarcomas but no neuronal tumors.

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Flattened cells are dispersed in an overlapping fashion within the submucosa of closed (physoclistous) swimbladders. Within the cells are located round platelets best seen by phase or interference type microscopy. At the electron microscope level the platelets are revealed as repeated, numerous layers of membranous discs.

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This report describes, for the first time, an analysis by electron microprobe of concretions in the brain of an individual with striopallidodentate calcification. We also report the unique association of this intracranial syndrome with hidrotic ectodermal dysplasia. An institutionalized male with impaired intellectual function and hidrotic ectodermal dysplasia was known since the age of 3 years to have bilateral radiopaque densities in the region of the basal ganglia on skull roentgenogram.

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Overlapping platelets are layered within the connective tissue of the wall of a closed (physoclistous) swimbladder. The close, staggered arrangement of the platelets is viewed as a physical barrier that can interfere with the diffusion pathway of gas molecules. The result is a more efficient retention of gas pressures within the swimbladder.

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Intracranial neoplasms were induced by intracerebral inoculation of a standardized, cell-free inoculum of the Bratislava-77 strain of avian sarcoma virus in F344 rats at 1, 9,97 to 99, and 528 days of age. Deaths from diseases that occur spontaneously in aged F344 rats complicated assessment of tumor incidence in rats inoculated at 528 days; 20 of 30 rats inoculated at this age developed brain tumors. All rats inoculated at age 1 day (47 rats), at age 9 days (37 rats), and at 97 to 99 days of age (41 rats) developed brain tumors.

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F-344 rats were inoculated intracerebrally at 1 and at 133 days of age with the Bratislava-77 strain of avian sarcoma virus. Groups of rats were sequentially sacrificed following inoculation so that early stages of microtumor formation could be evaluated. In neonatally inoculated rats incipient tumors developed in the subependymal region of the lateral ventricles in close juxtaposition to clusters of poorly differentiated germinal cells.

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Groups of F-344 rats were inoculated with the Bratislava-77 strain of avian sarcoma virus (B-77 ASV) within 24 hours of birth, at 9 days of age, or between 97 and 119 days of age. Intracranial tumors developed in each age group. Multiple tumors with mixed histologic patterns developed in rats inoculated at 1 or 9 days of age.

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Conditions permitting survival (colony formation) of E. coli after treatment with colicin K have been found. Survival required K+ and Mg2+ at concentrations high enough to replace the intracellular ions lost from colicintreated cells.

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The induction of intracranial neoplasms following the intracerebral inoculation of avian sarcoma virus (ASV) in neonatal mammals is well established. The present study demonstrates the susceptibility of adult rats and compares the incidence and morphology of tumors induced by a uniform inoculum of the Bratislava-77 strain of ASV in adult, neonatal, and fetal Fischer 344 rats. Post-inoculation mortality varied significantly between groups inoculated at 1, 10 and 100 days and was most precipitous in perinatally inoculated rats.

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