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1.
Folia Morphol (Warsz) ; 73(3): 239-46, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25242069

ABSTRACT

The widespread interest in anatomy in the 16th-century Europe echoed in Gdansk (Poland), where in 1552 anatomy was postulated as one of the subjects at the Protestant Academic Gymnasium. This demand was satisfied in 1568, 10 years after the opening of the school. Auditorium anatomicum, one of the early institutions of its kind in Europe, became a research centre before 1616 and its founding was closely connected with the activity of Joachim Oelhaf (1570-1630). The first (supposedly) public dissection of a man's head took place in 1605. In 1613 Oelhaf conducted an autopsy on a child with multiple congenital defects, which was probably the first public dissection in Central Europe. Auditorium's further development is attributed to Laurentius Eichstadt (1596-1660). Besides regular classes on anatomy, he performed three public autopsies at the auditorium (1651 and 1655), similarly to Georg Seger (1629-1678), Johannes Glosemeyer (1664-1711) and Johann Adam Kulmus (1689-1745). The dissections were solemn ceremonies attended by the municipal authorities. Auditorium functioned until 1741, when it was allocated for other purposes. Consequently, Gdansk was deprived of a permanent dissection room. Theatrum anatomicum was temporarily arranged in the Wide Gate but soon closed for financial reasons. An attempt to locate it in the Green Gate also failed. In 1778 autopsies were performed in the Bell-Founder's Gate. The gate, however, was demolished in 1803, and when Ephraim Philipp Blech (1757-1812), the last professor of anatomy, died no one was appointed to the vacancy. Eventually, the Gymnasium closed in 1817.

2.
Int J Clin Pract ; 62(7): 1044-9, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17573842

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Elevated gastrin concentration leading to gastritis is explained as the effect of change in the density of D and G cells. The aim of the study was to determine and compare fasting serum gastrin concentrations, G and D cell densities in gastric antrum mucosa in children with chronic gastritis and in children with no gastritis or Helicobacter pylori infection. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A total of 184 patients aged 6-18 years, with chronic abdominal pain underwent endoscopic examination. We created three groups: I--patients with chronic gastritis and H. pylori infection; II--patients with chronic gastritis but no H. pylori infection; III--patients with neither gastric mucosal abnormalities nor H. pylori infection. G and D cell densities were determined in the biopsy specimens (using Rbalpha H Gastrin & Somatostatin antibodies). Fasting serum gastrin concentrations were measured using a Beckmann gamma-counter and a GASK-PR kit. RESULTS: The mean serum gastrin concentration in group I was higher when compared with group II (p = 0.04) and group III (p = 0.019). No statistically significant differences were found between groups II and III (p = 0.91). There were no statistically significant differences in G and D cell densities between groups. CONCLUSION: The mean G/D cell ratios in groups I and III were almost identical. The mean fasting serum gastrin concentration was higher in children with both chronic gastritis and H. pylori infection compared with patients without infection or without antral inflammation. No difference in the G cell density or D cell density in children was found, regardless of the presence or absence of gastritis or H. pylori infection.


Subject(s)
Gastrins/blood , Gastritis/pathology , Pyloric Antrum/pathology , Adolescent , Cell Count , Child , Child, Preschool , Chronic Disease , Female , Gastrin-Secreting Cells/pathology , Gastritis/blood , Gastritis/microbiology , Helicobacter Infections/blood , Helicobacter Infections/pathology , Helicobacter pylori , Humans , Male , Somatostatin-Secreting Cells/pathology
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