The aim of this study was to describe and illustrate the morphology of the stomach, liver, intestine, and their vasculature to support the planning of surgical therapeutic methods in abdominal cavity. On adult Wistar rats corrosion casts were prepared from the arterial system and Duracryl Dental and PUR SP were used as a casting medium and was performed macroscopic anatomical dissection of the stomach, liver, and intestine was performed. The rat stomach was a large, semilunar shaped sac with composite lining. On the stomach was very marked fundus, which formed a blind sac (saccus cecus). The rat liver was divided into six lobes, but without gall bladder. Intestine of the rat was simple, but cecum had a shape as a stomach. The following variations were observed in the origin of the cranial mesenteric artery. On the corrosion cast specimens we noticed the presence of the anastomosis between middle colic artery (a. colica media) and left colic artery (a. colica sinistra). We investigated the second anastomosis between middle colic artery and left colic artery. The results of this study reveal that the functional anatomical relationship between the rat stomach, liver and intestine is important for the development of surgical research in human and veterinary medicine.
Our study suggests an association between systemic inflammation and systemic oxidative stress reflected by erythrocytic GPx in patients with acute exacerbations of COPD.
The study demonstrates the presence of oxidative/antioxidative imbalance in the systemic circulation in patients with COPD: compared with healthy subjects, COPD patients had higher serum MDA concentrations and lower GPX activity in erythrocytes. The magnitudes of the increase in MDA and reduction in GPX activity were similar in COPD patients with pulmonary hypertension and in those with normal pulmonary artery pressures.
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