Structure of Gastric Wall in Wistar Rats in Health and after Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury
MORPHOLOGY AND PATHOMORPHOLOGY
First Online:
Received:
- 45 Downloads
The structure of gastric wall was studied by histological methods in Wistar rats in health and after skull trephination and insertion of a needle into the brain. Experimental brain injury led to the development of destructive changes in the gastric wall (in the lymphoid structures located between the gland bottoms and muscle plate of the mucosa). Changes in the structure of cardiac glands and desquamation of the epithelium were detected. Microcirculation was disordered, signs of infl ammation appeared. The counts of medium-sized lymphocytes and plasma cells increased in the layer of lymphoid cells and in the submucosa.
Key Words
stomach traumatic brain injuryPreview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
- 1.A. Dzh. Arutyunyan, Morfologiya, 117, No. 3, 14 (2000).Google Scholar
- 2.E. A. Ivanova, Ibid., 113, No. 3, 52 (1998).Google Scholar
- 3.V. V. Kostyrkina, Ibid., 117, No. 3, 62 (2000).Google Scholar
- 4.M. R. Sapin, The Immune Structures of the Digestive System [in Russian], Moscow (1987), pp. 123-132.Google Scholar
- 5.S. P. Stepanov, Abstracts of the 10th All-Union Congress of Anatomists, Histologists, and Embryologists [in Russian], Poltava (1986).Google Scholar
- 6.E. V. Shvetsov, Al Rajash Salim, G. G. Aminova, and E. V. Koplik, Morfol. Vedomosti, Nos. 3-4, 76-77 (2007).Google Scholar
- 7.N. Yu. Shirokova, P. P. Potekhin, T. A. Kuznetsova, and E. A. Zhukova, Ibid., Nos. 1-2, 303-305 (2008).Google Scholar
- 8.E. F. Wijdicks, J. R. Fulgham, and K. P. Batts, Stroke, 25, No. 11, 2146-2148 (1994).PubMedCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Copyright information
© Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2011