Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.1.1.27 (lactate dehydrogenase)
29,211 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects on myocardial function, metabolism and ultrastructure of 60 minutes of reperfusion, instituted after 30, 60 and 90 minutes of occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary artery, were studied in 48 dogs. Twelve sham-operated dogs served as controls. Coronary occlusion for 60 or 90 minutes caused significant depression in the first derivative of left ventricular pressure (dP/dt) (P less than 0.05) that could not be reversed by reperfusion. Upon reperfusion, creatine phosphate stores in myocardium made ischemic for 30 and 60 minutes, but not for 90 minutes, returned toward control levels, but stores of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and total nucleotides and the ATP/adenosine diphosphate ratio of myocardium subjected to 60 and 90 minutes of ischemia were further decreased. After 60 and 90 minutes of ischemia, swelling of the sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondrial damage (swelling, decreased matrix density and partial loss of cristae) were seen. Myofibrils were relaxed in all these groups. Reperfusion produced gross contraction of myofibrils and aggravated these changes in mitochondria and sarcoplasmic reticulum. In the hearts subjected to 90 minutes of ischemia these changes were gross. The levels of creatine phosphokinase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase and lactic dehydrogenase in the coronary sinus blood increased dramatically (P less than 0.05) upon reperfusion after 60 or 90 minutes of occlusion, indicating severe impairment of cell membranes. This secondary rise in serum enzyme activity during reperfusion should be taken into consideration when estimating the size of a myocardial infarct from enzyme changes alone. It appears that 60 and 90 minutes of ischemia cause severe myocardial damage that is not reversed by reperfusion maintained for 1 hour although longer periods of reperfusion may be beneficial.
...
PMID:Alterations in energy metabolism and ultrastructure upon reperfusion of the ischemic myocardium after coronary occlusion. 108 Mar 52

Twenty-four dogs were divided into five groups. Under pentothal sodium anesthesia, those in the control group received no further manipulation; another group underwent laparotomy only; and dogs in the last three groups had induced pancreatitis, intestinal ischemia and duodenal perforation, respectively. An analysis was made of serum and peritoneal lavage fluid in the dog of each group at 30 minute intervals for four and one-half hours. Parameters which were significantly elevated in dogs with pancreatitis compared with other groups included fluid amylase, lactate dehydrogenase, proteolytic activity and intestinal alkaline phosphatase and serum amylase. We judge that these biochemical differences in the lavage fluid, when taken with the physical characteristics of the fluid and the clinical symptoms, can significantly aid the clinician in arriving at the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Use of peritoneal lavage in the diagnosis of experimental acute pancreatitis. 112 80

The involvement of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) in reperfusion-mediated vascular injury was studied in a model of ischemia and reperfusion in rabbit hindlimb. Ischemia was induced by 4-h occlusion of the left iliac artery followed by 4-h reperfusion. Plasma creatine kinase (CK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities, hindlimb vascular resistance (HVR), and myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in the postischemic extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle were measured to evaluate the extent of vascular and skeletal muscle injury. In addition, the ischemia/reperfusion-induced injury of the hindlimb vasculature was evaluated by electron microscopy. Ischemia and reperfusion (n = 10) was associated with an increase in CK (6,380 +/- 1,346 U/L, p < 0.05) and LDH (552 +/- 76 U/L, p < 0.05) activities which were significantly greater than those observed in sham-operated control animals (CK 1,651 +/- 207 U/L, LDH 246 +/- 14 U/L; n = 6). HVR in sham-operated animals decreased by 20 +/- 3%, but increased in the ischaemic group by 56 +/- 16% (p < 0.05). MPO activity of EDL muscle increased from 7.3 +/- 3.9 U per muscle (sham) to 28.0 +/- 5.9 U per muscle (p < 0.05) after ischemia and reperfusion. Morphologic analysis did not show any alteration in the microvascular bed of the hindlimb. Moreover, 1 mg/kg/h intravenous (i.v.) cloricromene, an antithrombotic drug that inhibits superoxide anion production as well as PMN adhesion to endothelium, reduced the increase in plasma CK and LDH and the increase in MPO and HVR observed in animals subjected to hindlimb ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of cloricromene during ischemia and reperfusion of rabbit hindlimb: evidence for an involvement of leukocytes in reperfusion-mediated tissue and vascular injury. 128 1

It has been suggested that depletion of donor hepatic glycogen reserves deleteriously affects the resistance of the hepatic graft to ischemic episodes. In this study, performed in the pig model, we showed that it is possible to enhance the quality of the graft at the time of reperfusion by using a method which rapidly restores the donor hepatic glycogen reserves. With the aid of an isolated liver perfusion model, we compared grafts (n = 24) harvested from pigs fed (group N), fasted for 24h (group J), or fasted with a restoration of glycogen reserves (group P). After the grafts were subjected to 8 hours of cold ischemia, the release of alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase and lactic dehydrogenase in the perfusate increased in group J (P < 0.05 vs group N); the increase was corrected in group P (P < 0.05 vs group J). When the grafts were subjected to 15 minutes warm ischemia prior to the liver harvest, the production of bile was reduced in group J (P < 0.05 vs group N); bile production was reestablished in group P (P < 0.05 vs group J). The clinical application of such a method of donor nutritional conditioning, in the hours which precede organ harvesting, may enhance the quality of the hepatic graft at the time of transplantation.
...
PMID:[Enhancement of the quality of hepatic graft by restoration of hepatic glycogen reserves in the donor]. 129 69

Indapamide, a nonthiazide chlorosulfamoyl diuretic, which possesses well-known antihypertensive properties, is able to scavenge free radical intermediates involved in lipid peroxidation. In this respect, it has almost the same level of action as alpha-tocopherol. Using an isolated working rat heart preparation, we investigated the effect of indapamide on the myocardial resistance to global total normothermic ischemia followed by reperfusion. The heart, isolated at the end of chronic oral pretreatment (7 day at 3 mg/kg body weight/day), was submitted to ischemia for 15 min and then reperfused. The main results were as follows: in the indapamide-treated group, 1) postischemic recovery of cardiac function was significantly better as compared to the untreated control group; 2) lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release measured after 15 min of reperfusion was significantly reduced; 3) the myocardial content of organic hydroperoxides (HPO), taken as an index of lipid peroxidation, was significantly lowered, whereas the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) remained unchanged; and 4) electron spin resonance (ESR) analysis of coronary effluents, collected during the first minutes of reperfusion in the presence of the spin-trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO), revealed a significant modification in the treated group. These findings suggest that indapamide treatment is able to afford some protective effect to cardiac tissue during the early stage of postischemic reperfusion, and that this effect might be related to the antioxidant properties of inadapamide.
...
PMID:Beneficial effect of indapamide in experimental myocardial ischemia. 131 Jun 2

To elucidate the pathophysiological role of the hydroxyl radical (.OH) during the postischemic reperfusion of the heart, we measured the .OH product in the coronary effluent from isolated perfused rat heart during a 30-minute reperfusion period after various ischemic intervals of 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 60 minutes. Salicylic acid was used as the probe for .OH, and its derivative, 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (2,5-DHBA), was quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection. 2,5-DHBA was negligible in the effluent from nonischemic hearts, but a significant amount was detected from the hearts rendered ischemic for 10 minutes or longer. The peak of 2,5-DHBA was seen within 90 seconds after the onset of reperfusion in every group. The accumulated amount of 2,5-DHBA was maximal in the group with 15-minute ischemia (6.73 +/- 1.04 nmol/g wet heart wt after 30 minutes of reperfusion); it decreased as the ischemic time was prolonged and was 2.38 +/- 0.84 nmol/g wet wt after 30 minutes of reperfusion in the group with 60-minute ischemia. In the model of 15-minute ischemia/30-minute reperfusion, there was no correlation between the accumulated amount of 2,5-DHBA and functional recovery (+/- dP/dt, heart rate, and coronary flow), lactate dehydrogenase release, and morphological damage. Although treatment with 0.5 mM deferoxamine, an iron chelator, significantly decreased 2,5-DHBA (from 6.73 +/- 1.04 to 2.29 +/- 0.80 nmol/g wet wt after 30 minutes of reperfusion, p less than 0.01), it failed to reduce the postischemic myocardial injury in the group with 15-minute ischemia. The results suggest that .OH production is influenced by the preceding ischemic interval and that .OH does not exert an immediate direct effect on postischemic damage during early reperfusion in the isolated perfused rat heart, although a possibility remains that the small portion of .OH trapped by salicylic acid may not be intimately associated with myocardial injury.
...
PMID:Quantification of hydroxyl radical and its lack of relevance to myocardial injury during early reperfusion after graded ischemia in rat hearts. 131 98

The purpose of this study was to assess whether proximal renal tubules generate excess hydroxyl radical (.OH) during hypoxia/reoxygenation or ischemia/reperfusion injury, thereby supporting the hypothesis that reactive oxygen species contribute to the pathogenesis of postischemic acute renal failure. In the first phase of the study, rat isolated proximal tubular segments (PTS) were subjected to hypoxia (95% N2- 5% CO2) for 15, 30, or 45 min, followed by 15 to 30 min of reoxygenation in the presence of sodium salicylate, a stable .OH trap. Cellular injury after hypoxia and reoxygenation was assessed by lactate dehydrogenase release; .OH production was gauged by hydroxylated salicylate by-product generation (2,3-, 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acids (DHBA); quantified by HPLC/electrochemical detection). Continuously oxygenated PTS served as controls. Despite substantial lactate dehydrogenase release during hypoxia (8 to 46%) and reoxygenation (8 to 11%), DHBA production did not exceed that of the coincubated, continuously oxygenated control PTS. In the second phase of the study, salicylate-treated rats were subjected to 25 or 40 min of renal arterial occlusion +/- 15 min of reperfusion. No increase in renal DHBA concentrations occurred during ischemia or reperfusion, compared with that in sham-operated controls. To validate the salicylate trap method, PTS were incubated with a known .OH-generating system (Fe2+/Fe3+); in addition, rats were treated with antioxidant interventions (oxypurinol plus dimethylthiourea). Fe caused marked DHBA production, and the antioxidants halved in vivo DHBA generation. In conclusion, these results suggest that exaggerated .OH production is not a consequence of O2 deprivation/reoxygenation tubular injury.
...
PMID:Evidence against increased hydroxyl radical production during oxygen deprivation-reoxygenation proximal tubular injury. 131 20

Reactive oxygen metabolites have been reported to be important in the pathogenesis of ischemia/reperfusion-induced and alcohol- and drug-induced liver injuries. We investigated the role of superoxide dismutase, cellular and extracellular, in preventing reactive oxygen metabolite-induced cytotoxicity in cultured rate hepatocytes. Cells were exposed to reactive oxygen metabolites enzymatically generated by hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase. Cytotoxicity was quantified by measuring 51Cr release from prelabeled cells and lactate dehydrogenase release. Reactive oxygen metabolites caused dose-dependent cytotoxicity. Good correlation was found between the values for 51Cr and lactate dehydrogenase release. Reactive oxygen metabolite-induced cell damage was reduced by catalase but not by superoxide dismutase. Cellular superoxide dismutase and catalase activities were not increased after incubation with exogenous superoxide dismutase and catalase for up to 5 hr. Pretreatment with diethyldithiocarbamate inhibited cellular superoxide dismutase activity without inhibiting other antioxidants such as catalase, glutathione, glutathione reductase and glutathione peroxidase and sensitized cells to reactive oxygen metabolite-induced cytotoxicity. We conclude that hydrogen peroxide is an important mediator in hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase-induced cell damage and that superoxide dismutase plays a critical role in cellular antioxidant defenses against hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase-induced cytotoxicity in cultured rat hepatocytes in vitro.
...
PMID:Role of cellular superoxide dismutase against reactive oxygen metabolite-induced cell damage in cultured rat hepatocytes. 131 53

We assessed the effects of the calcium channel blocker verapamil on postischemic oxidative injury in the rat liver. In the untreated rats, the values of tissue lipid peroxidation products (thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances) remained unchanged during 90 min of warm ischemia. However, the values increased significantly after the next 60 min of reperfusion compared with those in the sham-operated rats (P less than 0.01). Intravenous infusion of verapamil (5 micrograms.kg-1.min-1) significantly reduced the extent of lipid peroxidation during reperfusion compared with that in the untreated rats (P less than 0.02). The percentages of tissue water content and the serum lactate dehydrogenase activities after 60 min of reperfusion were significantly lower in the treated rats than in the untreated rats (P less than 0.02 and P less than 0.01, respectively). We also investigated the influence of verapamil on superoxide-generating activity determined by the superoxide-dependent cytochrome c reduction of peritoneal polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) harvested from normal, non-ischemic, and non-treated rats in vitro. This demonstrated that there was no apparent effect with the highest verapamil concentration level (8 microM) observed in the rat plasma during our experiment. These findings suggest that verapamil might reduce the postischemic oxidative injury in the rat liver by mechanisms perhaps not related to the suppression of rat PMNs superoxide-generating activity.
...
PMID:Verapamil attenuates postischemic oxidative injury in the rat liver. 132 83

To investigate a possible protective role of Na+/H+ exchange inhibition under ischemic conditions isolated rat hearts were subjected to regional ischemia and reperfusion. In these experiments all 6 untreated hearts suffered ventricular fibrillation on reperfusion. Addition of 1 x 10(-5) mol/l amiloride or 3 x 10(-7) mol/l 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl)amiloride (EIPA) markedly decreased the incidence and duration of ventricular fibrillation or even suppressed fibrillation completely as in the case of 1 x 10(-6) mol/l EIPA. Both compounds diminished the activities of lactate dehydrogenase and creatine kinase in the venous effluent of the hearts during ischemia. At the end of the experiments tissue contents of glycogen, ATP and creatine phosphate were increased in the treated hearts as compared to control hearts. In an additional experiment the beneficial effects of Na+/H+ exchange inhibition during ischemia was confirmed in vivo with anaesthetized rats undergoing coronary artery ligation. In these animals amiloride or EIPA pretreatment caused a marked reduction of ventricular premature beats and ventricular tachycardia as well as a complete suppression of ventricular fibrillation. The concentration dependent inhibition of Na+ influx via Na+/H+ exchange by amiloride and EIPA was investigated in erythrocytes from hypercholesterolemic rabbits with Na+/H+ exchange activated by exposure to hyperosmotic medium. Furthermore the inhibition of Na+ influx by EIPA after intracellular acidification was studied in cardiac myocytes of neonatal rats. Both agents were effective in the same order of potency in the ischemic isolated working rat heart as in the erythrocyte model in which they inhibited Na+/H+ exchange.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of Na+/H+ exchange inhibitors in cardiac ischemia. 132 56


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>