RESUMO
The effect of acrylamide on the central nervous system of rats was studied in order to determine its neurotoxicity effect. Seventy rats were used in the present study which were divided into three groups. The rats of group one were used as control while rats of group two were given acrylamide by intramuscular injection with a dose of 5 mg/kg body weight, and the rats of group three were given 25 mg/kg acrylamide twice weekly for one month. The rats were sacrificed after 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks of acrylamide injection and cervical spinal cord was removed and processed for histological, histochemical, and electron microscopical studies. Histological results showed mild degenerative changes of nerve fibers after one and two weeks of acrylamide injection while after three and four weeks severe changes were seen following both doses of acrylamide. Histochemical changes appeared in the decreased activities of cytochrome oxidase, RNA, and Nissl substances after one and two weeks of acrylamide injection and this decrease reached its minimal activity at the end of the experiment for the two doses while acetyl-cholinesterase and DNA were found to be increased. Electron microscopic study revealed irregular outline of nuclear envelop with some nuclear pores, vascular degeneration of cytoplasmic organelles, demyleinated and thinly myleinated axons, and many hypertrophied mitochondria. All these results indicated that acrylamide which is still used in the synthesis of polymers for a variety of industrial applications, is highly neurotoxic
Assuntos
Animais de Laboratório , Sistema Nervoso Central , Medula Espinal/patologia , Medula Espinal/ultraestrutura , Microscopia Eletrônica , RatosRESUMO
Problems related to the diagnosis of appendicitis are evidenced by the significant negative laparotomy rate. The present study sought to assess the feasibility of decreasing this diagnostic error by studying two groups of patients and identifying and weighing details of history, physical examination and laboratory findings utilizing 20 predictive factors, 100 patients who underwent operation because of suspicion of acute appendicitis constituted the study sample, and were classified into AAp and NAp groups based upon the results of histologic examination. Rates of occurrence for each predictive factor were determined separately for both groups. These were converted into weights which were then added to yield a diagnostic score for each patient. A cutoff point established the score which designated one group for observation and the other for surgery. Scores were assessed at three different points by balancing risks of missed diagnoses against benefits of avoiding unnecessary operations. Seven predictive factors had differentiating weights and reached statistical significance [p = 0.05] age, marital status, duration of symptoms, initial site of pain, course of pain, temperature and WBC count. Using these seven predictors, at a [-3] cutoff, 61% NAps would have been spared laparotomy and about 6% of the AAps would have been indicated for observation. Analysis indicated little risk in observing the 6% AAps [2 cases]. This simple scoring system could have eliminated over one third of the unnecessary laparotomies in the present sample, indicating potential value as an aid in surgical decision-making. Our own findings, and those of many other authors, would seem to indicate that very close attention to the patient's history and clinical examination, coupled with pre-operative specialist consultation and exclusion of gynecological conditions would improve the ability of the clinical score system to determine cases of true appendicitis and hence the rate of negative appendectomies can be reduced, to a point without an appreciable rise in perforation rate