Publications by authors named "G L MYAGKAYA"

The 'nothing dehyrogenase' reaction is defined as the reduction of tetrazolium salts in media lacking specific substrates for dehydrogenases. In this investigation, the kinetics of the 'nothing dehydrogenase' reaction were studied in cryostat sections of rat heart and liver with the use of various polyvinyl alcohol-containing incubation media. Formazan production was measured at 585 nm with a cytophotometer.

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The lead salt method of Wachstein and Meisel15 has been applied using incubation media containing polyvinyl alcohol for the localization and quantification of 5'-nucleotidase (E.C.3.

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The ultrastructural alterations in liver tissue induced by in vitro ischemia at 4 degrees C under conditions commonly used for transplantation (Euro-Collins perfused and stored liver tissue) have been compared with changes due to hypothermic in vitro ischemia in non-perfused liver. It was found that the process of cell deterioration in non-perfused liver occurred very slowly; signs of irreversible damage appeared in sinusoidal lining cells before hepatocytes (after 24 and 96 h, respectively). Liver perfused with, and stored in Euro-Collins solution showed acceleration of the ischemical damage in both types of cell (irreversible damage to sinusoidal lining cells after 12 h and to hepatocytes after 52 h), compared with non-perfused liver.

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Changes in the activity of three mitochondrial enzymes in rat liver after in vitro ischemia have been determined by enzyme histochemical methods. The changes were correlated with the appearance in the electron microscope of flocculent densities in the mitochondria indicative of irreversible cell injury. The flocculent densities were observed in rat liver after about 2 h of ischemia in vitro at 37 degrees C.

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The development of flocculent densities in mitochondria as a sign of irreversible cell injury in rat hepatocytes has been studied by quantitative electron microscopy during in vitro ischemia under both normothermic (37 degrees C) and hypothermic (4 degrees C) conditions. At 37 degrees C flocculent densities first appear after 1 h ischemia; at this stage they are small in diameter (170 nm) and occur in only 8% of mitochondria. After 1.

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