The effects of parenteral aspirin (ASA) or sodium salicylate (SA) on the gastric mucosa were investigated in anesthetized pylorus-ligated rats 3 h after a bolus intravenous injection of ASA or SA, 150 mg/kg, or NaCl (control). Aspirin or SA produced similar extensive gross mucosal hemorrhagic lesions and similar microscopic damage in the presence of luminal acid (luminal pH 1.3 +/- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 79-year-old Armenian-born woman with stable, long-term familial Mediterranean fever had progression of chronic renal failure concurrently with two types of skin lesions. One lesion resembled erysipelas, which is quite common in familial Mediterranean fever, whereas the other was panniculitis, only occasionally described in familial Mediterranean fever. The unique histopathologic features of the latter are presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistologic examination of "suspension" diffusion-chamber (DC) cultures of normal murine bone marrow cells demonstrates that hemopoietic cell growth in this system takes place in clonal form. Soon after implantation, marrow cells are arrayed on the filter membranes in a circumferential fashion adjacent to the surrounding lucite ring. Colonies of granulocytic cells soon form in this location and increase in size and number with increasing time of culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of 20 mM aspirin (ASA), 20 mM sodium salicylate (SA), or 10(-4) M indomethacin placed in the nutrient solution (N) to stimulate systemic administration were investigated at pHN 7.3 in Ussing-chambered amphibian gastric mucosae. In histamine-stimulated tissues, the initial rise and subsequent rapid fall in potential difference, rise in resistance, and inhibition of hydrogen ion (H+) secretion induced by SAN did not occur with ASAN unless hydrolysis of ASAN produced a SAN of greater than 3 mM.
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