Results 331 to 340 of about 960,379 (379)
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Innervation of the gastric mucosa

Microscopy Research and Technique, 2000
A plethora of neuronal messengers ("classical" transmitters, gaseous messengers, amino acid transmitters, and neuropeptides) are capable of mediating or modulating gastric functions. Accordingly, the stomach is richly innervated. Gastric nerves are either intrinsic to the gastric wall, i.e., they have their cell bodies in the intramural ganglia and ...
Frank Sundler, Q. Mei, Eva Ekblad
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The Gastric Mucosa

2010
The development and differentiation of the gastric mucosa are controlled by a complex interplay of signaling proteins and transcriptional regulators. This process is complicated by the fact that the stomach is derived from two germ layers, the endoderm and the mesoderm, with the first giving rise to the mature epithelium and the latter contributing the
Shradha S. Khurana, Jason C. Mills
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Alcohol and Gastric Mucosa

Digestion, 1972
Effects of alcohol on the gastric mucosa in man as well as in experimental animals are reviewed.
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Human Gastric Mucosa

Carbohydrate Research, 1972
Abstract Different methods for extracting mucin components from human gastric mucosa have been evaluated. An extensive fractionation study of a product solubilised by pronase digestion is described. By chromatography of the crude extract on Bio-Gel P-30, a neutral glycopolypeptide fraction ( DP-1 ) of molecular weight >300,000 was obtained which had ...
J.V.S. Jones, Leslie Hough
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The Cells of the Gastric Mucosa

1981
Publisher Summary This chapter describes the structure of the normal adult mammalian gastric mucosa, The interior wall of the gastric mucosa is thrown into folds, rugae, or plicae gastricae, which as a rule are longitudinally oriented and sometimes branching.
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Heterotopic Gastric Mucosa in the Duodenum

Digestion, 1970
Islets of fully developed gastric mucosa i.e. containing parietal cells and sometimes pepsinogen cells were found in the duodenal cuff in 52 outof 158 gastric resection specimens.
openaire   +4 more sources

Gastric Cardiac Mucosa

2013
In the seventh edition of the Cancer Staging Manual from the American Joint Committee on Cancer published in 2010, the cardia is defined as the proximal 5 cm of the stomach. This is a gross designation that surgeons and many endoscopists use.
Scott R. Owens, Henry D. Appelman
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Microvasculature of the Gastric Mucosa in Dogs

Cells Tissues Organs, 1997
A corrosion casting technique was used to study differences in the microvascular architecture of the pars cardiaca, the fundus ventriculi, the corpus ventriculi and the pars pylorica of the canine gastric mucosa. This technique revealed an unusual arrangement of the microvascular architecture in the nonglandular region surrounding the esophageal ...
R. Martin   +4 more
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Methylation of Histamine in the Gastric Mucosa [PDF]

open access: possibleDigestion, 1977
Methylation of histamine in the gastric mucosa of various species has been studied in vitro and in vivo. When gastric mucosal homogenates of rat, guinea pig, cat, dog, and pig were incubated with 14C-histamine in the presence of S-adenosyl methionine Ntau-methylhistamine was formed as the only methylated histamine derivative. Excessive concentration of
K.-Fr. Sewing   +3 more
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Sulfatides of hog gastric mucosa

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1974
Abstract Mono-, di- and trihexose sulfatides have been isolated from hog gastric mucosa lipids by the procedure involving column fractionations on DEAE-Sephadex, silicic acid and thin-layer chromatography. Desulfation of mono-, di- and trihexose sulfatides with methanolic HCl resulted in the formation of galactosylceramide, lactosylceramide and ...
Bronislaw L. Slomiany   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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