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1.
Braz. j. morphol. sci ; 28(1): 72-75, Jan.-Mar. 2011. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-644126

ABSTRACT

The digastric muscle is a suprahyoid muscle composed of two bellies connected by an intermediate tendon.This muscle participates in deglutition and mandibular movements. The anterior belly of the digastric muscleis localized superficially to the mylohyoid and deeply to the platysma muscle. During dissection of this regionof an embedded cadaver, an accessory anterior belly of digastric muscle was observed bilaterally. The accessorybellies were similar but not symmetrical. They were composed of two segments, one long and one short, onboth sides, and when observed together these appeared to form the letter “X”. The accessory fibers, on bothsides, originated from the anterior digastric muscle and inserted medially to the digastric fossa. Anatomicvariations of the digastric muscle may influence mastication and deglutition. Moreover, the accessory digastricmuscle affects diagnostic imaging and therapeutic procedures in head and neck surgery and must be consideredin procedures involving this area.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Adult , Deglutition/physiology , Mastication , Pharyngeal Muscles/anatomy & histology , Pharyngeal Muscles/physiopathology , Cadaver , Dissection
2.
Int. j. morphol ; 25(1): 117-120, Mar. 2007. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-626884

ABSTRACT

Anatomical brain asymmetries are subtle and still little studied in humans. Among all the animals, humans have the most asymmetric brains Crow (2004). The language faculty and handedness are localized on the left side. The objective this paper is to verify whether the temporal lobes are anatomically different. Our sample was composed of 40 post mortem adult brains of both sexes, which were investigated at the Human Anatomy Laboratory of the Nove de Julho University Center in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The brains were fixed in a solution of 5% paraformaldehyde. Three different measurements were taken using a pachimeter (Mitutoyo) and a goniometer (Card) on both hemispheres: Ml - the length of the lateral sulcus; M2 - the distance from the lateral sulcus to the inferior margin of the inferior temporal gyrus, and M3 - the angle formed between the lines of the collateral sulcus and the inferior margin of the inferior temporal gyrus. Results were submitted to a statistical analysis (ANOVA) and demonstrated that Ml was larger in the left hemisphere, by contrast with the data obtained for M2 and M3, which were larger in the right hemisphere. The measurements taken showed differences between the right and left temporal lobes.


Las asimetrías anatómicas del cerebro humano son sutiles y aún poco estudiadas. Entre todos los animales, el Hombre es el que presenta el cerebro más asimétrico (Crow, 2004). En el lado izquierdo del cerebro se localiza la facultad del lenguaje, como también de la lateralidad manual. El objetivo del trabajo fue verificar si los lóbulos temporales son anatómicamente diferentes. La muestra estuvo compuesta de 40 encéfalos adultos, post mortem, de ambos sexos, del Laboratorio de Anatomía del Centro Universitario Nove de Julho, en Sao Paulo, SP, Brasil. Los encéfalos fueron fijados en solución de formalina al 5%. Fueron realizadas 3 medidas diferentes utilizando un pié de metro Mitutoyo y goniómetro (Carci), en ambos hemisferios: medida MI, largo del surco lateral; medida M2 distancia del surco lateral hasta el margen inferior del giro temporal inferior y la medida M3 el ángulo formado entre las líneas del surco colateral y margen inferior del giro temporal inferior. Los resultados se sometieron a análisis estadístico y mostraron que MI era mayor en el hemisferio izquierdo, en contraposición a los datos obtenidos en M2 y M3, que fueron mayores en el hemisferio derecho. Las medidas realizadas presentaron diferencias entre los lóbulos temporales derecho e izquierdo.

3.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 6(4): 756-765, 2007. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-520066

ABSTRACT

The production of nucleic acid sequences by automatic DNA sequencer machines is always associated with some base-calling errors. In order to produce a high-quality DNA sequence from a molecule of interest, researchers normally sequence the same sample many times. Considering base-calling errors as rare events, re-sequencing the same molecule and assembling the reads produced are frequently thought to be a good way to generate reliable sequences. However, a relevant question on this issue is: how many times the sample needs to be re-sequenced to minimize costs and achieve a high-fidelity sequence? We examined how both the number of re-sequenced reads and PHRED trimming parameters affect the accuracy and size of final consensus sequences. Hundreds of single-pool reaction pUC18 reads were generated and assembled into consensus sequences with CAP3 software. Using local alignment against the published pUC18 cloning vector sequence, the position and number of errors in the consensus were identified and stored in MySQL databases. Stringent PHRED trimming parameters proved to be efficient for the reduction of errors; however, this procedure also decreased consensus size. Moreover, re-sequencing did not have a clear effect on the removal of consensus errors, although it was able to slightly increase consensus.


Subject(s)
Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Consensus Sequence , Base Pair Mismatch , Base Sequence , Plasmids/genetics
4.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 6(2): 256-261, 2007.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-482045

ABSTRACT

We have previously shown evidence of strong sex-biased genetic blending in the founding and ongoing history of the Brazilian population, with the African and Amerindian contribution being highest from maternal lineages (as measured by mitochondrial DNA) and the European contribution foremost from paternal lineages (estimated from Y-chromosome haplogroups). The same phenomenon has been observed in several other Latin American countries, suggesting that it might constitute a universal characteristic of the Iberian colonization of the Americas. However, it has also recently been detected in the Black population of the United States. We thus wondered if the same could be observed in American Caucasians. To answer that question, we retrieved 1387 hypervariable I Caucasian mitochondrial DNA sequences from the FBI population database and established their haplogroups and continental geographical sources. In sharp contrast with the situation of the Caucasian population of Latin American countries, only 3.1% of the American Caucasian sequences had African and/or Amerindian origin. To explain this discrepancy we propose that the finding of elevated genomic contributions from European males and Amerindian or African females depends not only on the occurrence of directional mating, but also on the [quot ]racial[quot ] categorization of the children born from these relations. In this respect, social practices in Latin America and in the United States diverge considerably; in the former socially significant [quot ]races[quot ] are normally designated according to physical appearance, while in the latter descent appears to be the most important factor.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Black or African American/genetics , Sex Characteristics , Gene Flow , White People/genetics , Databases, Nucleic Acid , Algorithms , Brazil , Chromosomes, Human, Y , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , United States
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