Embalmed cadaver tissues and organs that are dissected in gross anatomy laboratories lack many characteristics of fresh or living tissues. The purpose of this study was to assess the educational value of allowing first-year medical students to experience first-hand the color, texture, delicacy and other qualities of living porcine tissues and organs that are similar to those of human tissues. Guided by a laboratory protocol, medical students palpated and inspected organs of the opened thorax, abdomen and pelvis of anesthetized pigs on pulmonary ventilators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPostnatal development and maturation of the human sternum are highly variable. Endochondral ossification centers (sternebrae) form within each cartilaginous segment of the sternum, with each center enveloped by a spherical growth plate. Within a cartilaginous center there may be either one or two ossification centers, those with two centers retaining and reflecting features of their bilateral embryonic origin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Forensic Med Pathol
June 1996
The contemporary trend of converting departments of anatomy into departments of cell biology has brought with it the task of examining archive collections and storage facilities to figure out how to best utilize the available space. During one such inspection at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, a human sternum containing a dull metal projectile was uncovered. The projectile was easy to characterize as a bullet that had been deeply embedded in the bone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper reports dioxygenase activity in rat embryos and demonstrates for the first time the ability of rat embryo lipoxygenase (LO) to oxidize xenobiotics in vitro. Significant dioxygenase activity towards linoleic acid was found in cytosol isolated from rat embryos in different developmental stages on day 9 and 10 of gestation. All four xenobiotics tested were oxidized at significant rate by the LO in the presence of linoleic acid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe embryotoxic effects of ethylene dibromide (EDB) bioactivation, mediated by purified rat liver glutathione S-transferases (GST), were investigated using rat embryos in culture. Significant EDB metabolism was observed with rat liver GST purified by affinity chromatography (specific activity of 188 +/- 11.3 nmol/min/mg protein).
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