scholarly journals The Branching Pattern of the Aortic Arch in Gallus Domesticus

Author(s):  
Irina ROMAN ◽  
Cristian MARTONOS ◽  
Cristian MARTONOS ◽  
Cristian DEZDROBITU ◽  
Cristian DEZDROBITU ◽  
...  

In birds, in contrast to mammals, two brachiocephalic trunks are the origin in the arch of aorta and give rise to the subclavian arteries and common carotid. The aim of this study was to investigate the vascular branching morphology of the aortic arch in Gallus Domesticus with the purpose of providing accurate data with regards to the arterial supply of these segments to researchers and clinicians. The biological material was represented by 10 adult chicken bodies with an average weight of 2 kg, females. After procurement of the biological material, the feathers, skin, muscles and sternum were removed for easy access to the heart. After left ventricular cannulation, epoxy resin mixed with red dye was injected. The body was immersed in 5% formaldehyde for 24 hours. Next, stratigraphic dissection was performed. Two brachiocephalic trunks branched continually from aortic arch caudoventral to the primary bronchi. The left subclavian artery gave rise to sternoclavicular, thoracic, axillary and intercostal and the same was observed to the right side. Due to this method we could observe the aortic arch of Gallus Domesticus being different from mammals in that the left and right brachiocephalic trunks are detached from it.

2006 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-53
Author(s):  
Piotr Lenartowicz

The sciences, from their ancient beginnings, use a double way of investigation. One was applied to mineral and astronomical bodies, another to living ones. A ruling, tacit, common sense methodological or epistemological principle was this: The method of description should respect the inner essential properties of the object. For instance, neither the movements of the astronomical bodies, nor the behavior of the living bodies should be described in the scale of subatomic interactions. In modern times quite another methodological principle has been enthroned. The cosmos, astronomical, mineral and alive bodies altogether, have, allegedly, to be considered as a single natural whole, ruled by essentially the same set of principles. The properties of the mineral world are accepted as a universal model of descriptive concepts, and the explanatory concepts proper to the mineral world are accepted as a universal model of explanation in biology. So, up to now, the academic sciences have been dominated by the philosophical option of materialist monism, or panmaterialism. This option—we may call it antiteleologism and fragmentarism—has a profound impact on empirical research and the way biological phenomena are described. This strange, unnatural, arbitrarily imposed conceptual framework ignores the most fundamental biological dynamisms, and precludes our intellect from seeing the right questions and striving towards the right answers. Consequently it arbitrarily reduces the range of “scientifically acceptable” explanations. This antiteleological methodology of sciences, imposed on biological mind by philosophers, led to major change in the ideas of philosophers of nature. The physiology and anatomy of the fully developed living bodies has become their central object of study. Much less attention is paid to developmental processes such as biosynthesis, morphogenesis, embryogenesis, phenotypic adaptation and regeneration. The fully shaped structures (biomolecular, cytological or anatomical) and their functional properties are considered a hopeful basis of all the necessary explanations. For instance the structure of tile DNA molecule has become more important than the problem of its origin, and the structure of the brain more important than the developmental processes which lead to its construction. However, the enormous progress of biological sciences in spite of the widespread, dominating antiteleological and fragmentarist approach corroborates the very ancient, Aristotelian insight, which put the principal stress on the developmental aspect of life. Aristotle, and his more modern followers, was fascinated by the integrated and intrinsically heterogenous tendencies visible in the course of life. Today, we can say that at least eight such tendencies are universal, i.e. appear in every single form of life (starting with bacteria tip to the biology of man): (a) The tendency to select the proper kind of raw material and the proper kind of raw energy present in the environment. (b) The tendency to synthesize new, highly selective forms of chemical structures (biological material). (c) The tendency to utilize biological material in the process of building the nano-, micro-, and macro-machines. (d) The tendency for a relatively rapid, continuous production and replacement of all the elements of the functional structures of the body (metabolic turnover). (e) The tendency for a relatively rapid, continuous modification of the functional structures in a way which makes them more efficient within a changing environment (a tendency for phenotypic adaptation). (f) The tendency to repair and to regenerate the damaged elements of the functional structures of the body. (g) The tendency for multiplication, which means the production of such structures and the depots of the biological material as seeds, eggs, spores or buds. These structures, providing the environmental conditions are favorable, are starting points of new instances of the above described tendencies. (h) The tendency—possibly universal—to provide all the structures of the body with the “recognition marks” which help to eliminate all the, “alien” bodies and to recognize members of the own kind. These tendencies are not homogeneous. Homogeneous tendencies can be illustrated by the tendency of bodies to attract one another. This kind of tendency was the empirical source of such abstract concepts as gravitation, electrostatic force or magnetic force. Biological tendencies are heterogeneous and, at the same time, integrated. Human intellect is capable of recognizing the fundamental indivisibility (integration) of the set. A great number of observations and experiments have revealed and verified the fundamental indivisibility of the whole set of these tendencies. The concrete, bodily outcomes of these tendencies, however, are quite different in different families and orders of living things. Because of these differences the existence of different kinds of integrative principles was postulated. In this way a plurality of living substances was assumed.


2005 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitri Novitzky ◽  
Edward G. Izzo ◽  
Mark J. Alkire ◽  
John C. Brock

An approach for the replacement of the distal ascending aorta-proximal arch and acute dissection is described. During the operation, the patient's entire body was continuously perfused, the aortic arch was excluded from the arterial circulation, and the aorta was not clamped at any time. To achieve continuous body perfusion, we independently cannulated the right axillary and the left femoral arteries. The right atrium was cannulated for systemic venous return, and the right radial artery was used for arterial blood pressure monitoring. The myocardium was protected with retrograde cardioplegia, and the body was protected with moderate hypothermia. Vascular clamps were placed to the proximal innominate, left carotid, and left subclavian arteries without discontinuing perfusion of the right axillary artery. A temporary clamp was applied to the femoral line, the aorta was transected, and a large Foley catheter was inserted through the true aortic lumen. The Foley bulb was positioned in the proximal descending thoracic aorta and distended with saline until the aortic blood return ceased. The femoral line clamp was removed from the cannula, and the entire body was perfused during the completion of the distal aortic anastomosis. At the completion of the anastomosis, the Foley bulb was slightly deflated. Once the inserted graft was filled with blood, a large vascular clamp was applied to the graft, and the previously placed clamps were removed from the arch branches. The femoral line was removed, and the body was perfused and rewarmed via the axillary cannulation. Following completion of the proximal graft-aortic anastomosis, the heart was reperfused, and all cannulas were removed in the usual fashion. Rapid recovery characterized the patient's initial postoperative course; however, multiple organ failure secondary to pump-induced inflammatory response followed. Aggressive medical management resulted in complete patient recovery. No neurologic deficits were observed, and the patient regained full cognitive function. This report describes a simple approach to facilitate repair of the aortic arch and minimize postoperative organ failure.


Experiments had repeatedly been carried out on dogs to test the assumption that goitre could be conveyed from man to animals by fæcal infection of the water supply, but with negative results. In the present experiments female goats were employed. The drinking water supplied to these goats was fouled by passing through a specially constructed box, which contained sterilised soil mixed with the fæces of goitrous individuals. In the case of one batch six goats, only this water was consumed. In the case of another batch of seven goats the box above referred to contained, in addition to the sterilised soil and fæces, 500 earthworms. These were added on the assumption that they might act as intermediate hosts to the infecting agent of the disease. The goats consumed this highly polluted water for 64 days, from October 13 to December 15, 1910. The results observed were (1) a loss of weight, due doubtless to confinement in a small hut for the 64 days of the experiment; (2) that many of them suffered from diarrhœa; and (3) that 50 per cent. of the animals showed enlargements of the thyroid gland, most marked on the right side. The thyroids of three control goats showed no alteration in size. The enlargement of the thyroid was observed to fluctuate in size considerably, a fact which had previously been noted in the case of experimentally produced goitre in man. The average weight of the normal thyroid of the goat in Gilgit is 1/10,000 part of the body weight. The enlarged glands of the goats in the experiment were found to weigh from 1/4,272 to 1/7,000 part of the body weight. In both batches drinking fouled water the results observed were the same.


2022 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Al-Bajuri Salwa Ismail Abd al-Qadir

Morphological study of the testis of adult Sudanese Chicken : gallus domesticus The adult chicken testes were two bean - shaped , large and soft , the left testis is usually higher in position and larger in size than the right one . The testis is active during cold weather with the mean diameter of the seminiferous tubules being 126^m in the chicken . it is less active during the hot season with the mean diameter of the seminiferous tubules being 135^m in the chicken. The non - breeding season seemed to be characterized by a decline in the spermatogenic activity only and not by complete spermatogenesis


2011 ◽  
pp. 483-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. KOBR ◽  
V. TŘEŠKA ◽  
J. MOLÁČEK ◽  
V. KUNTSCHER ◽  
V. LIŠKA ◽  
...  

The objective of our study was to compare Doppler echocardiography imaging with pulmonary artery thermodilution measurement during mechanical ventilation. Total 78 piglets (6 weeks old, average weight 24 kg, under general anesthesia) were divided into 4 groups under different cardiac loading conditions (at rest, with increased left ventricular afterload, with increased right ventricular preload, and with increased afterload of both heart ventricles). At 60 and 120 min the animals were examined by echocardiography and simultaneously pulmonary artery thermodilution was used to measure cardiac output. Tei-indexes data were compared with invasively monitored hemodynamic data and cardiac output values together with calculated vascular resistance indices. A total of 224 parallel measurements were obtained. Correlation was found between values of right Tei-index of myocardial performance and changes in right ventricular preload (p<0.05) and afterload (p<0.01). Significant correlation was also found between left index values and changes of left ventricular preload (p<0.001), afterload (p<0.001), stroke volume (p<0.01), and cardiac output (p<0.01). In conclusion, echocardiographic examination and determination of the global performance selectively for the right and left ventricle can be recommended as a suitable non-invasive supplement to the whole set of methods used for monitoring of circulation and cardiac performance.


Author(s):  
Gunnar Dahlberg

In two earlier publications the author has suggested a theory of genetically determined asymmetries. Inherited asymmetry may be of two types. Many characters are unilateral (e.g. the aortic arch or the tricuspid valve of the human heart) or in some other way placed asymmetrically (e.g. the differentiation of organs along the cephalad-caudad axis of the body). The orientation of such gross asymmetries is in general irreversible. The author has pointed out that the study of uniovular twins which exhibit mirror-image similarities draws attention to a smaller class of reversible asymmetries. While an asymmetrical disposition of such a character is transmitted, its orientation is not fixed in the process of transmission. Thus a character may show itself on the left side in one generation or in one individual of a litter, and on the right side in another generation or in a litter mate. The extreme types of variation between which many transitional forms may be found are:(a) From left to right, or vice versa.(b) From caudad to cephalad extremity, or vice versa.(c) From dorsal to ventral surface, or vice versa.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 240-247
Author(s):  
O. V. Filatova ◽  
E. Ivanova ◽  
V. Chursina

We conducted a retrospective study of EchoCG from 33 males who had the myocardial infarction. Patients with a diagnosis of "neurocirculatory dystonia" (30 people) entered the control group. We studied the size of the left ventricle, the left atrium, the right ventricle, their relationship to each other, the mass of the myocardium and the mass index of the myocardium of the left ventricle. The study of the morphological structures of the heart revealed a change in the size of the left ventricle, the left atrium and the right ventricle in patients who had an acute myocardial infarction, manifested by an increase in the end-diastolic and end-systolic dimensions of the left ventricle, the left atrium, and the right ventricle. In 2/3 of the patients who had an acute myocardial infarction, the normal geometry of the left ventricle was observed. Around one-quarter of the patients had a concentric remodeling (24%), an eccentric hypertrophy of the left ventricle was the least common (15%). The heart of patients who had an acute myocardial infarction demonstrates a lower functionality being compared to the subjects in the control group. In these groups, the maximum value of the DAC / DDR ratio is observed, the ejection fraction is reduced. To a greater extent, the onset of acute myocardial infarction was determined by the size and mass of the left ventricular myocardium. Important meaning had also the body weight, BMI, surface area of the body, the size of the left atrium, and the right ventricle.


1964 ◽  
Vol 207 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Hamlin ◽  
David L. Smetzer ◽  
C. Roger Smith

A semiorthogonal lead system for recording electrocardiograms from horses was designed. The X, Y, and Z axes of the body were monitored by leads I, aVF, and V10 (the unipolar lead taken from the dorsal spinous process of the seventh thoracic vertebra), respectively. Records were taken from 15 standing horses. Ventricular premature beats were elicited by pricking foci on the right and left ventricular epicardium. For normally conducted beats, two major vectors represented forces generating the QRS complex. Vector 1, probably representing excitation of the apical third of the interventricular septum from left to right, was relatively low in magnitude, and was oriented dextrad, ventrad, and craniad. Vector 2, probably representing depolarization of the basilar third of the interventricular septum from left to right and in an apicobasilar direction, was of greater magnitude and was oriented ventrad, sinistrad, and craniad. Occasionally a vector intermediate between vectors 1 and 2 was oriented caudad and dorsad. The origin of this vector is equivocal. Left ventricular premature beats generated vectors of great magnitude oriented dextrad and craniad. Right ventricular premature beats generated vectors of magnitude between those of sinus or left ventricular origin, and directed predominantly sinistrad.


1998 ◽  
Vol 275 (2) ◽  
pp. H378-H384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joachim Weil ◽  
Thomas Eschenhagen ◽  
Gerrit Fleige ◽  
Clemens Mittmann ◽  
Ellen Orthey ◽  
...  

The enkephalins are derived from a common precursor protein known as preproenkephalin (ppENK). Enkephalins appear to be one of the endogenous ligands for the opiate receptors. In the rat the ventricular myocardium contains more ppENK mRNA than any other tissue. To gain further insight into the role of cardiac enkephalins, the regional and developmental distribution of ppENK mRNA was studied by Northern blotting and in situ hybridization. In the early postnatal period, ppENK mRNA is low in atrial and ventricular myocardium. With maturation, ppENK expression increases threefold in left and right ventricular tissue, but not in the atria or cardiac conductive system. Interestingly, ppENK mRNA levels are four times higher in the left than in the right chamber. Thus, to our knowledge, ppENK is the only gene exhibiting marked differences in expression between the adult right and left ventricle. Given the left-side preference of ppENK expression, the possibility is raised that the left ventricle is an endocrine organ that supplies the body with enkephalins.


Author(s):  
C.D. Fermin ◽  
M. Igarashi

Otoconia are microscopic geometric structures that cover the sensory epithelia of the utricle and saccule (gravitational receptors) of mammals, and the lagena macula of birds. The importance of otoconia for maintanance of the body balance is evidenced by the abnormal behavior of species with genetic defects of otolith. Although a few reports have dealt with otoconia formation, some basic questions remain unanswered. The chick embryo is desirable for studying otoconial formation because its inner ear structures are easily accessible, and its gestational period is short (21 days of incubation).The results described here are part of an intensive study intended to examine the morphogenesis of the otoconia in the chick embryo (Gallus- domesticus) inner ear. We used chick embryos from the 4th day of incubation until hatching, and examined the specimens with light (LM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The embryos were decapitated, and fixed by immersion with 3% cold glutaraldehyde. The ears and their parts were dissected out under the microscope; no decalcification was used. For LM, the ears were embedded in JB-4 plastic, cut serially at 5 micra and stained with 0.2% toluidine blue and 0.1% basic fuchsin in 25% alcohol.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document