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Volume 117, Issue 1, Pages (July 1999)

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1 Volume 117, Issue 1, Pages 173-180 (July 1999)
Nitric oxide increases hepatic arterial blood flow in rats with carbon tetrachloride– induced acute hepatic injury  Noriko Tanaka*, Katsuaki Tanaka*, Yoji Nagashima‡, Masaaki Kondo*, Hisahiko Sekihara*  Gastroenterology  Volume 117, Issue 1, Pages (July 1999) DOI: /S (99) Copyright © 1999 American Gastroenterological Association Terms and Conditions

2 Fig. 1 Photomicrographs of the liver 24 hours after AG injection in CCl4-treated and control rats. (A) Normal control rats and (B) AG-treated control rats had no significant changes in the liver. (C) Centrilobular hepatocytes were damaged in CCl4-treated rats, and (D) AG treatment after CCl4 administration showed more severe hepatocyte degeneration with inflammatory infiltrates (H&E; original magnification 179×). Gastroenterology  , DOI: ( /S (99) ) Copyright © 1999 American Gastroenterological Association Terms and Conditions

3 Fig. 1 Photomicrographs of the liver 24 hours after AG injection in CCl4-treated and control rats. (A) Normal control rats and (B) AG-treated control rats had no significant changes in the liver. (C) Centrilobular hepatocytes were damaged in CCl4-treated rats, and (D) AG treatment after CCl4 administration showed more severe hepatocyte degeneration with inflammatory infiltrates (H&E; original magnification 179×). Gastroenterology  , DOI: ( /S (99) ) Copyright © 1999 American Gastroenterological Association Terms and Conditions

4 Fig. 1 Photomicrographs of the liver 24 hours after AG injection in CCl4-treated and control rats. (A) Normal control rats and (B) AG-treated control rats had no significant changes in the liver. (C) Centrilobular hepatocytes were damaged in CCl4-treated rats, and (D) AG treatment after CCl4 administration showed more severe hepatocyte degeneration with inflammatory infiltrates (H&E; original magnification 179×). Gastroenterology  , DOI: ( /S (99) ) Copyright © 1999 American Gastroenterological Association Terms and Conditions

5 Fig. 1 Photomicrographs of the liver 24 hours after AG injection in CCl4-treated and control rats. (A) Normal control rats and (B) AG-treated control rats had no significant changes in the liver. (C) Centrilobular hepatocytes were damaged in CCl4-treated rats, and (D) AG treatment after CCl4 administration showed more severe hepatocyte degeneration with inflammatory infiltrates (H&E; original magnification 179×). Gastroenterology  , DOI: ( /S (99) ) Copyright © 1999 American Gastroenterological Association Terms and Conditions

6 Fig. 2 Reverse-transcription PCR analysis of nNOS, iNOS, and eNOS in liver tissue from control and CCl4-treated rats 1 day after CCl4 administration. Ethidium bromide–stained agarose gel of the amplification products showed uniform levels of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase expression, used as a control (data not shown). Band sizes (arrows) were as follows: nNOS, 353 base pairs; iNOS, 675 base pairs; eNOS, 806 base pairs. Gastroenterology  , DOI: ( /S (99) ) Copyright © 1999 American Gastroenterological Association Terms and Conditions


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