30 results match your criteria: "Henry Ford Health Science Center[Affiliation]"

We investigated the effects of F(ab')2 fragments of anti-CD11b and anti-CD18 monoclonal antibodies on ischemic cell damage in the rat when administered upon reperfusion and at 2 h of reperfusion after transient (2 h) middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. 2 h of MCA occlusion was induced by intraluminal insertion of a monofilament. The following groups of animals were investigated.

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Purpose: We studied a two-generation family with an inherited syndrome of prominent corneal nerves and lesions of the tongue resembling neuromas without the characteristic neoplasms of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2B syndrome. Several different point mutations in the RET proto-oncogene on chromosome 10 have been associated with the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 syndromes. Molecular genetic studies of families with partial phenotypic expression of these syndromes may aid in further understanding the origin of the variety of clinical manifestations observed in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2.

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Background And Purpose: The induction of neuronal necrosis has been studied after various durations of transient middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in the rat. The objective of the present study was to measure the numbers and anatomic distribution of cells exhibiting apoptotic bodies as an indication of DNA fragmentation and apoptotic cell death as a function of duration of transient MCA occlusion in the rat.

Methods: The MCA of male Wistar rats (n = 24) was occluded for 10, 20, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes (n = 4 per group) with the use of an intraluminal monofilament, and reperfusion was instituted for 48 hours.

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Induction of the 72-kDa heat shock protein expression is thought to protect neurons against the subsequent effects of ischemia. However, it is not clear whether the induction of 72-kDa heat shock protein expression by an ischemic event improves neuronal survival. To address this question, we outlined the temporal profile of neuronal induction and expression of the 72-kDa heat shock protein in a model of transient focal ischemia in the rat.

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We report the results of brain metabolic studies (using magnetic resonance spectroscopy) in three groups of individuals: (1) demented patients with multiple subcortical ischemic lesions (n = 18); (2) nondemented, age-matched controls (n = 21); and (3) demented patients with neurodegenerative disease, probably of the Alzheimer type (n = 19). Patients with dementia with subcortical vascular lesions, as demonstrated by appropriate imaging studies, had an increase of phosphate energy charge in areas of the cerebral cortex (especially prominent in the frontal regions) superficial to and excluded from the subcortical lesions. We hypothesize that this increased energy charge might be caused by reduced metabolic activity of disconnected brain tissue or by astrocytic hypertrophy and hyperplasia that accompanies subtle ischemic, cortical alterations.

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