RESUMO
This study was designed to examine the effects of histamine on gastric motility and its specific receptor in the circular smooth muscle of the human gastric corpus. Histamine mainly produced tonic relaxation in a concentration-dependent and reversible manner, although histamine enhanced contractility in a minor portion of tissues tested. Histamine-induced tonic relaxation was nerve-insensitive because pretreatment with nerve blockers cocktail (NBC) did not inhibit relaxation. Additionally, K(+) channel blockers, such as tetraethylammonium (TEA), apamin (APA), and glibenclamide (Glib), had no effect. However, N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and 1H-(1,2,4)oxadiazolo (4,3-A) quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ), an inhibitor of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), did inhibit histamine-induced tonic relaxation. In particular, histamine-induced tonic relaxation was converted to tonic contraction by pretreatment with L-NAME. Ranitidine, the H2 receptor blocker, inhibited histamine-induced tonic relaxation. These findings suggest that histamine produced relaxation in circular smooth muscle of human gastric smooth muscle through H2 receptor and NO/sGC pathways.
RESUMO
This study presents a straightforward approach to computer-aided polyp detection and explores its advantages and future potential. A straightforward computer-aided polyp detection (CAD) scheme was developed that consisted of colon wall segmentation, a polyp-specific volumetric filter, and the counting and thresholding of cluster volume sizes. 65 patients had undergone the bowel cleaning scheme without fecal tagging and the optical colonoscopy (OC) and CT colonography (CTC) were performed. The polyp sizes determined by OC were used as reference measurements. The CTC dataset with 103 polyps were divided into training and test datasets. After tuning for the optimal parameter settings, the per-polyp sensitivities of the developed CAD scheme for clinically relevant polyps (≥ 6 mm) were 100% at 8.5 false positives (FPs)/patient using the training dataset, and 93.3% at 7.7 FPs/patient using the test dataset. The developed CAD scheme was found to have a relatively high detection performance, easily optimized parameter settings, and an easily understood internal operation.