2 resultados para Sinus obliteration
em Aston University Research Archive
Resumo:
It has been shown that acute administration of ecothiopate iodine in vivo caused an approximate 80% depression of acetylcholinesterase activity in the diaphragms of mice. Inhibition of acetylcholinesterase was accompanied by an influx of calcium at the junctional region of the diaphragm, which continued during subsequent progressive development of a severe myopathy located in the same region. Myopathy was accompanied by loss of creatine kinase from the muscle and was represented, at the light microscope level, by hypercontraction, Procion Yellow staining and loss of cross striations within the muscle fibres. It appeared to reach a point of maximum severity approximately 3-6 hours after ecothiopate administration and then, by means of some repair/regeneration process, regained an apparently normal morphology within 72 hours of the intoxication. At the ultrastructural level, ecothiopate-induced myopathy was recognised by loss of Z-lines, swelling and vacuolation of mitochondria and sarcoplasmic reticulum, dissarray of myofilaments, crystal formation, and sometimes, by the complete obliteration of sarcomeric structure. The development of myopathy in vitro was shown to be nerve-mediated and to require a functional acetylcholine receptor for its development It was successfully treated therapeutically in vivo by pyridine-2-aldoxime methiodide and prophylactically by pyridostigmine bromide. However, the use of a range of membrane-on channel blockers, and of leupeptin, an inhibitor of calcium-activated-neutral-protease, have been unsuccessful in the prevention of ecothiopate-induced myopathy.
Resumo:
This article describes the process through which the subjectivity of the illegal immigrant is deconstructed and later reconstructed, as revealed by the Moroccan journalist and intellectual Rachid Nini in his book Diario de un ilegal/Diary of an Illegal Immigrant (2002), an account of the author's perils as an illegal immigrant in Spain. The analysis focuses firstly on the narrative form that Nini employs to give an account of his story, and secondly on the spatial displacement to which the subject and his subjectivity are exposed, which leads to the obliteration of his identity. The abrupt changes that the subject faces in a new location are paramount and impel him to a constant quest for self-definition and of negotiation with the new Other. Thus, the privileges that Nini enjoyed while in Morocco, those of a male journalist, poet, translator and intellectual with a university degree, disappear altogether once his plane has landed on the Canary Islands. In this new location, the place of origin and/or race are now what define his identity; he is now simply a moro - a Moor - he is not considered as an individual but, as will be shown, as a member of a homogenizing category which resists definition. The article finishes by addressing how Nini, in his quest to destroy homogenizing stereotypes, employs other stereotypes as though this were the only escape from the schizophrenic state the illegal immigrant identity had been forced into.