National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
CONTRACTILE FUNCTIONS AND SYMPATHETIC INNERVATION OF THE ALBINO RAT DIABETIC HEART
Švíglerová, Jitka ; Pučelík, Pavel (advisor) ; Ošťádal, Bohuslav (referee) ; Pelouch, Václav (referee)
Contractile functions and sympathetic innervation of the albino rat diabetic heart Thesis Summary: The aim of this thesis was to describe: 1. The impact of untreated long-termed diabetes induced by streptozotocin on cardiac contractile functions and their sympathetic regulation in rat. 2. The effect of insulin on cardiac contraction in control and diabetic myocardium. In the diabetic group, the contraction force was significantly decreased compared to control group. The norepinephrine-releasing mechanisms were altered in chronically diabetic rats and may contribute to the decreased norepinephrine concentration in the diabetic heart. Insulin exerted a significant negative inotropic effect in rat myocardium, both control and diabetic. This effect was probably related to processes of SR Ca2+ release triggering, whereas SR Ca2+ loading is not involved. MUDr. Jitka Švíglerová Plzeň, 2006
CONTRACTILE FUNCTIONS AND SYMPATHETIC INNERVATION OF THE ALBINO RAT DIABETIC HEART
Švíglerová, Jitka ; Pučelík, Pavel (advisor) ; Ošťádal, Bohuslav (referee) ; Pelouch, Václav (referee)
Contractile functions and sympathetic innervation of the albino rat diabetic heart Thesis Summary: The aim of this thesis was to describe: 1. The impact of untreated long-termed diabetes induced by streptozotocin on cardiac contractile functions and their sympathetic regulation in rat. 2. The effect of insulin on cardiac contraction in control and diabetic myocardium. In the diabetic group, the contraction force was significantly decreased compared to control group. The norepinephrine-releasing mechanisms were altered in chronically diabetic rats and may contribute to the decreased norepinephrine concentration in the diabetic heart. Insulin exerted a significant negative inotropic effect in rat myocardium, both control and diabetic. This effect was probably related to processes of SR Ca2+ release triggering, whereas SR Ca2+ loading is not involved. MUDr. Jitka Švíglerová Plzeň, 2006

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