Wound healing and survival of beheaded chaetognaths

Author(s):  
Michel Duvert ◽  
Yvan Perez ◽  
Jean-Paul Casanova

The observation in natural conditions of headless chaetognaths with healed scars and ripe gonads led us to reproduce this condition experimentally. Histological sections were made on specimens of Sagitta and Spadella at different times after beheading. The muscles contract and the gut closes the wound, so that by the end of the first two hours, the body wall and gut ‘basement membranes’ are in continuity, so restoring the integrity of the body. After two hours, the muscular layer of the body wall is reshaped and closes up the wound; the gut seals off, and a ‘clot’ is evident in the wound area. The benthic Spadella cephaloptera survives some 30 d or more after decapitation. Specimens carrying ripe ova were able to lay them, to mature and fill their seminal vesicles once or twice and to mate with normal mature specimens. Headless chaetognaths must take up nutrients through the integument. It appears that chaetognaths cannot really regenerate head or tail tip.

1878 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 372-381
Author(s):  
W. C. M'Intosh

FAM. EUPHROSYNIDÆ.—In Euphrosyne foliosa, Aud. and Ed., the separate nerve-cords are comparatively large, and lie quite within the body-wall, the oblique muscles, which generally bound the longitudinal ventral muscles, decussating beneath them.AMPHINOMIDÆ.—The cords are somewhat small and flattened in Chloeia, and occupy an area bounded internally by a transverse band of fibres, and externally by the circular muscular layer and the hypodermic basement-tissue. The oblique muscles are attached at the outer border of each trunk.


1924 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. Crozier ◽  
H. Federighi

1. The theory of animal phototropism requires for particular instances a knowledge of the action of light as exerted through each of two bilaterally located receptors functioning singly. The measurement of "circus movements" which this involves must be concerned with such aspects of the reaction as are demonstrably dependent upon the effect of light. 2. The negatively phototropic slug Limax maximus exhibits very definite and continuous circus movement under vertical illumination when one eye-tentacle has been removed. The amplitude of the circling movement, measured in degrees deflection per cm. of path as an index of maintained differential tonus, is intimately related to the concurrent velocity of creeping. Analysis of the orienting mechanism is facilitated by the fact that in gasteropods such as Limax the animal creeps by means of the pedal organ, but orients (turns) by a totally distinct set of muscles in the dorsal and lateral regions of the body wall. 3. The expression of the phototropic orienting tendency, with illumination constant, is greatly influenced by the temperature. Above a zone centering at 15°, the amplitude of turning (degrees per cm. of path) is determined by the temperature in accurate agreement with Arrhenius' equation for chemical reaction velocity, with the critical increment µ = 16,820; and the rate of creeping is progressively less as the temperature rises, µ for its reciprocal being 10,900. Below 15°, the velocity of creeping becomes less the the lower the temperature, µ being again 16,800; while the amplitude of orientation is limited merely by the velocity of creeping, its reciprocal being directly proportional thereto. 4. Measurements of Limax circus movements in terms of turning deflection as function of light intensity must therefore be carried out at a temperature well above 15°. 5. The analysis provides a gross physical model of how an end-result may be influenced by temperature according to the effect of temperature upon each of several interconnected processes when the "temperature vs. effect" curves for these processes dynamically intersect. 6. It is pointed out that a certain type of unpredictability (quantative variability) in animal behavior under "normal" natural conditions probably results from dynamic equilibrium there obtaining between diverse mechanisms competing for effector control (in the present case, the creeping mechanism and that for turning, in the range 14–16°C.). It follows that the unraveling of the elements of conduct necessitates experimentation under diverse abnormal conditions favoring individual mechanism of response.


1978 ◽  
Vol 56 (11) ◽  
pp. 2327-2332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven R. Scadding

This paper reports a histological study of the response of Amphiuma to simple limb amputation. The results of simple limb amputation in this species are variable. Some limbs undergo wound healing only, others regress, resulting in complete loss of the limb except for a residual rudiment embedded in the body wall, and still others produce heteromorphic limb regenerates of size comparable with the amputated limb. Heteromorphic limb regeneration when it occurs in Amphiuma is a very slow process compared with other urodeles. After 7.5 months (longest observed specimens in this study), the process was still not complete.


2021 ◽  
pp. 68-72
Author(s):  
P.I. Tkachenko ◽  
S.A. Belokon ◽  
N.M. Lokhmatova ◽  
O.B. Dolenko ◽  
Yu.V. Popelo ◽  
...  

The course of the wound healing process after surgical intervention on brancial cleft cyst excision should be considered as a stereotyped inflammatory-reparative reaction of the body, characterized by staged aseptic inflammation, regeneration and fibrosis. Clinically and even morphologically, it is difficult to determine the stages of the wound healing process in the temporal aspect, since they are consistent and interconnected. Purpose. The paper is aimed at evaluation of the wound healing process according to clinical indicators in children after branchial cleft cyst excision. Methods and Material. 26 children aged from 5 to 17 years old with branchial cleft cysts have been examined and treated. In the postoperative period, the nature, amount of exudate and its cell composition has been determined; skin contact thermometry has been performed at 4 points around the wound at a distance of 1 cm. Results. The first manifestations of the disease coincided with the course of acute respiratory viral diseases in 8 children (30.8%); association with ENT pathology was observed in 3 (11.5%) children and the cystic masses emerged spontaneously in 15 cases (57.7%). They were localized with almost the same incidence on the left and right, but the vast majority (21 cases (80.7%)) was located anteriorly the sternocleidomastoid muscle and in 5 (19.3%) cases behind it. Ultrasound examination, made in 21 patients (80.8%), has revealed the presence of cystic masses with clear contours, hypoechoic structure and fine-grained inclusions, and the wall thickness varied from 1 to 3 mm. In 5 doubtful cases (19.2%) a puncture biopsy was performed. On 1st day after surgery, hyperemia around the wound was moderate in 15 children (57.7%); it was insignificant in 8 (30.8%) children and it was absent in 3 (11.5%) children. At the same time all children experienced collateral edema of various localization and painful modality. In the impression smears, a significant number of neutrophils, a moderate number of lymphocytes and erythrocytes was detected, which were prominent against the background of a loose substrate. The temperature of the wound area was 36.24 ± 0.07˚C, which was higher compared to the control group (34.71 ± 0.12˚C). On 3rd day, the corolla of hyperemia around the wound was not detected in 18 patients (69.2%), and its narrowing was recorded in 6 (23.1%) cases and it was persistent in 2 (7.7%) cases. On palpation, severe, moderate and weak pain on the wound area was experienced by 2 (7.7%), 15 (57.7%) and 9 (36.4%) children, respectively. The cytograms of the exudate showed a reduced quantity of neutrophils, erythrocytes and lymphocytes. Two children showed elevated quantity of destructured neutrophils and local temperature to 37.21 ± 0.16 ° C, which required medical adjustments. A narrow corolla of hyperemia around the wound, slight edema and moderate pain was detected on 7th day only in 2 children. In all patients, palpation revealed tissue compaction along the wound canal, onset of epithelialization, and the cytograms revealed the presence of sporadic neutrophils. The temperature of the skin around the wound reached 35.74 ± 0.11˚C, which was almost similar to controls (34.21 ± 0.08˚C). In all cases, the wounds healed with primary tension. Thus, the nature of the dynamics of wound healing after brancial cleft cyst extirpation in children can be successfully controlled by the prominence of the main clinical signs, the findings of the study of cellular composition of wound exudate and local temperature measuring. The perspectives of further research are associated with availability and simplicity of the methods in terms of their application in everyday clinical practice.


1953 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 95 ◽  
Author(s):  
AM Olsen

In south-eastern Australian waters, 5835 school sharks have been tagged since 1947. The two techniques used and the effects of some of the tags on the fins and body walls are described. It was found that the percentage return from experiments using both internal and fin tags was three times that from experiments using only fin tags. No significant difference was found in the numbers of white and grey Petersen disc fin tags returned. No deterioration has been detected in these tags and the silver tagging wires have not shown any appreciable signs of wear. Under natural conditions the incision made in the body wall for this insertion of the internal tag has been found to have healed completely within 2 months. Often there is no sign of the scar after 12 months.


1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 617-624 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Moerman ◽  
Chris Van Geet ◽  
Hugo Devlieger
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Manoj Kumar ◽  
Amareshappa . ◽  
Anjali Bharadwaj ◽  
Shailaja S. V.

Wound healing has been the burning problem in a surgical practice because of a remarkable increase in the number of traumatic cases. A wound causes a number of changes in the body that can affect the healing process, including changes in energy, protein, carbohydrate, fat, vitamin and mineral metabolism. Various Ayurveda literatures, particularly, Sushruta Samhita, which is said to be an ancient textbook of surgery in Ayurveda, has mentioned about the diet for the person suffering from the wound, and the author said that diet plays a very important role in the wound healing process. Sushruta - The father of surgery has scientifically classified it in a systemic manner, whose wealth of clinical material and the principles of management are valid even today. Shalya Tantra (surgical branch in Ayurveda Science) is one of the important branch of Ayurveda, in which surgical and para-surgical techniques has described for management of various diseases. Vrana is the most important and widely described chapter of Shalya Tantra. Vrana (wound) is one of them, which have been managed by human being from starting of civilization. Under the circumstances, the first thing which the men came across was the injury from different sources which caused him the Vrana. Vrana is seen as debilitating and scaring disorder, usually seen affecting the human being at any age. Well balanced nutrition plays an essential role in the wound healing.


Genetics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 137 (2) ◽  
pp. 483-498
Author(s):  
J Ahnn ◽  
A Fire

Abstract We have used available chromosomal deficiencies to screen for genetic loci whose zygotic expression is required for formation of body-wall muscle cells during embryogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans. To test for muscle cell differentiation we have assayed for both contractile function and the expression of muscle-specific structural proteins. Monoclonal antibodies directed against two myosin heavy chain isoforms, the products of the unc-54 and myo-3 genes, were used to detect body-wall muscle differentiation. We have screened 77 deficiencies, covering approximately 72% of the genome. Deficiency homozygotes in most cases stain with antibodies to the body-wall muscle myosins and in many cases muscle contractile function is observed. We have identified two regions showing distinct defects in myosin heavy chain gene expression. Embryos homozygous for deficiencies removing the left tip of chromosome V fail to accumulate the myo-3 and unc-54 products, but express antigens characteristic of hypodermal, pharyngeal and neural development. Embryos lacking a large region on chromosome III accumulate the unc-54 product but not the myo-3 product. We conclude that there exist only a small number of loci whose zygotic expression is uniquely required for adoption of a muscle cell fate.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Ines Maria Niederstätter ◽  
Jennifer Lynn Schiefer ◽  
Paul Christian Fuchs

Usually, cutaneous wound healing does not get impeded and processes uneventfully, reaching wound closure easily. The goal of this repair process is to restore the integrity of the body surface by creating a resilient and stable scar. Surgical practice and strategies have an impact on the course of wound healing and the later appearance of the scar. By considering elementary surgical principles, such as the appropriate suture material, suture technique, and timing, optimal conditions for wound healing can be created. Wounds can be differentiated into clean wounds, clean–contaminated wounds, contaminated, and infected/dirty wounds, based on the degree of colonization or infection. Furthermore, a distinction is made between acute and chronic wounds. The latter are wounds that persist for longer than 4–6 weeks. Care should be taken to avoid surgical site infections in the management of wounds by maintaining sterile working conditions, using antimicrobial working techniques, and implementing the principles of preoperative antibiotics. Successful wound closure is influenced by wound debridement. Wound debridement removes necrotic tissue, senescent and non-migratory cells, bacteria, and foreign bodies that impede wound healing. Additionally, the reconstructive ladder is a viable and partially overlapping treatment algorithm in plastic surgery to achieve successful wound closure.


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