Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.4.1 (phosphodiesterase)
18,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pentoxifylline is a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, known to suppress tumour necrosis factor-alpha production and improve cardiopulmonary parameters and survival in animal models of sepsis. Using a porcine model of abdominal trauma resulting from the combined insults of haemorrhage and infection, a randomised placebo-controlled trial was conducted of pentoxifylline (20 mg/kg bolus followed by 20 mg/kg infusion over 1 h) administered in addition to a colloid resuscitation regimen. Female Large White pigs (45-60 kg) were bled 40% of their blood volume and peritonitis was induced using E. coli (O18: K1: H7) in an autoclaved faecal suspension. Animals were resuscitated with either colloid alone (n=5) or colloid plus pentoxifylline (n=5). Pentoxifylline attenuated increases in mean arterial and pulmonary artery pressures and reduced both systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance. It worsened the lactic acidosis associated with 'septic shock' and failed to reduce serum TNF-alpha levels. Pentoxifylline, in the high doses used in this study, does not have a role as an adjunct to resuscitation in this clinically relevant model of trauma.
...
PMID:Pentoxifylline fails to improve organ dysfunction and survival when used in the resuscitation of a porcine model of haemorrhage and abdominal sepsis. 1069 1

Heart failure (HF) is a complex syndrome characterized by myocardial dysfunction and a poor prognosis. Among multiple markers of severity, an exercise ventilation inefficiency has important clinical and prognostic value. The pathophysiology determining exercise ventilatory inefficiency is complex and not definitively clarified. Three different mechanisms have been identified: (i) increased dead space, (ii) early occurrence of lactic acidosis, and (iii) abnormal chemoreflex and/or metaboreflex activity. Besides its prognostic value, abnormal ventilation can be influenced by pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies such as beta-blockers, selective cyclic 3'-5' guanosine monosphosphate phosphodiesterase inhibitors, physical training, and nocturnal continuous positive airway pressure. There is an increasing interest for the exercise periodic breathing, which is frequently associated with HF syndrome and has prognostic importance. The precise mechanisms sustaining exercise periodic breathing are not fully defined but ventilatory and metabo-haemodynamic hypotheses have been proposed.
...
PMID:Exercise ventilation inefficiency in heart failure: pathophysiological and clinical significance. 1712 97