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Query: UMLS:C0009443 (cold)
92,137 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With use of the half-mouth technique, a pit and fissure sealant was applied to the permanent first molars of 200 children between 6 and 8 years of age in a community with fluoridated water in Colombia, South America. Complete retention of sealant at 12, 24, and 36 months after application was 91.6%, 88.9%, and 87.5%, respectively. Partial retention of sealant was 5.8%, 7.1%, and 8.5% at the same intervals. The incidence of caries in all sealant-treated teeth at 36 months was 8% vs 53% in untreated paired teeth. Of the 238 teeth that completely retained sealant, only one tooth had occlusal caries at 36 months. No statistically significant difference in complete retention between maxillary and mandibular molars was noticed at any examination. The study confirms that this cold-cured pit and fissure sealant is effective in protecting the occlusal surfaces of teeth against caries for at least three years.
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PMID:Effectiveness of a pit and fissure sealant in the prevention of caries: three-year clinical results. 38 88

Most of the previous literature concerning otologic problems in compressed gas environments has emphasized middle ear barotrauma. With recent increases in commercial, military, and sport diving to deeper depths, inner ear disturbances during these exposures have been noted more frequently. Studies of inner ear physiology and pathology during diving indicate that the causes and treatment of these problems differ depending upon the phase and type of diving. Humans exposed to simulated depths of up to 305 meters without barotrauma or decompression sickness develop transient, conductive hearing losses with no audiometric evidence of cochlear dysfunction. Transient vertigo and nystagmus during diving have been noted with caloric stimulation, resulting from the unequal entry of cold water into the external auditory canals, and with asymmetric middle ear pressure equilibration during ascent and descent (alternobaric vertigo). Equilibrium disturbances noted with nitrogen narcosis, oxygen toxicity, hypercarbia, or hypoxia appear primarily related to the effects of these conditions upon the central nervous system and not to specific vestibular end-organ dysfunction. Compression of humans in helium-oxygen at depths greater than 152.4 meters results in transient symptoms of tremor, dizziness, and nausea plus decrements in postural equilibrium and psychomotor performance, the high pressure nervous syndrome. Vestibular function studies during these conditions indicate that these problems are due to central dysfunction and not to vestibular end-organ dysfunction. Persistent inner ear injuries have been noted during several phases of diving: 1) Such injuries during compression (inner ear barotrauma) have been related to round window ruptures occurring with straining, or a Valsalva's maneuver during inadequate middle ear pressure equilibration. Divers who develop cochlear and/or vestibular symptoms during shallow diving in which decompression sickness is unlikely or during compression in deeper diving, should be placed on bed rest with head elevation and avoidance of maneuvers which result in increased cerebrospinal fluid and intralabyrinthine pressure. With no improvement in symptoms after 48 hours, exploratory tympanotomy and repair of a possible labyrinthine window fistula should be considered. Recompression therapy is contraindicated in these cases...
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PMID:Diving injuries to the inner ear. 40 82

Term, food-water deprived newborn rabbits exposed to a cold environment for 48 h demonstrated a significant decrease in total lung lipid (p less than 0.01), total triglyceride (p less than 0.001), total phospholipid (p less than 0.05), and total phosphatidylcholine (p less than 0.025). Disaturated phosphatidylcholine remained unchanged. Fatty acid methyl esters of total and disaturated phosphatidylcholine were not influenced by cold stress. Likewise, there was no alteration in pulmonary function as determined by deflation pressure-volume relationships.
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PMID:Cold stress influence on lung lecithin in the newborn rabbit. 42 Aug 91

Yersinia enterocolitica--recognized as a distinct taxonomic entity in 1964--belongs to the family of enterobacteriaceae. It has been isolated with increasing frequency from human and animal sources as well as from food and non-chlorinated water. Yersinia enterocolitica can produce enteritis in man, accompanied or followed in adults by erythema nodosum, arthralgia and/or acute arthritis. Rarely, septicaemia with a high mortality rate has been encountered. A cold-temperature enrichment method was used to examine 1135 faecal specimens; 11 were positive for Yersinia enterocolitica. Symptoms of enteritis were reported by all 8 patients whose faeces contained the bacterium; a brief description is given of the course of illness in each patient. Biochemical and serological properties of the isolates are discussed with special reference to some unusual results obtained with the commerical API-20 E system for identification of enterobacteriaceae when incubated overnight at 35 degrees C.
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PMID:[Yersinia enterocolitica--a still infrequently isolated pathogen in Austria (author's transl)]. 43 84

Methane was oxidized to carbon dioxide in the absence of oxygen by water samples from Lake Mendota, Madison, Wis. The anaerobic oxidation of methane did not result in the assimilation of carbon from methane into material precipitable by cold 10% trichloracetic acid. Only samples taken at the suface of the sediment of Lake Mendota were capable of catalyzine the anaerobic oxidation of methane. The rate of methane oxidation in the presence of oxygen was highest in samples taken from near the thermocline. Of the radioactive methane oxidized, 30 to 60% was assimilated into material precipitable by cold 10% trichloroacetic acid during aerobic incubation of the samples. These data support the conclusion that two distinct groups of methane-oxidizing organisms occur in stratifield lakes. Enrichments with acetate and methane as the sole sources of carbon and energy and sulfate as the electron acceptor resulted in the growth of bacteria that oxidize methane. Sulfate, acetate, and methane were all required for growth of enrichments. Acetate was not oxidized to carbon dioxide but was assimilated by cells. Methane was not assimilated but was oxidized to carbon dioxide in the absence of air.
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PMID:Oxidation of methane in the absence of oxygen in lake water samples. 43 9

In evlauating patients with neurologic lesions of the spinal cord and voiding abnormalities, it would appear from this study that distention is a more physiologic stimulus to bladder contraction than relatively smaller amounts of cold fluid. While the ice water test has speed and simplicity to recommend it, it should not be used as a sole means in determining whether or not a detrusor reflex is present. It may not uncover those patients with detrusor hyperreflexia or may fail to reveal a detrusor reflex. If iced contrast medium is to be used for voiding cystography, the volumes should approximate those used for regular cystometry.
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PMID:Cystometry and periurethral striated muscle electromyography using cold and room temperature fluid. 44 63

The relationship between thermoreception, hormonal secretion and muscular activity was studied. 6 men swam 60 min in 21, 27 and 33 degrees C water at a speed requiring 68% of VO2 max (determined in 27 degrees C water). Rectal temperature increased in 33 degrees C (1.3 +/- 0.2 degrees C, mean and S.E.) and 27 degrees C (0.7+/- 0.1 degrees C) expts. but decreased in 21 degrees C expts. (0.8 +/- 0.3 degrees C). Changes in esophageal and muscle temperatures parallelled changes in rectal temperature. Plasma noradrenaline was higher in 33 degrees C than in 27 degrees C expts. and growth hormone, cortisol and glucagon concentrations increased in 27 degrees C and 33 degrees C expts. only. Insulin concentrations were uniformly depressed during swimming at the different water temperatures. In 21 degrees C expts. noradrenaline and adrenaline concentrations were higher than in 27 degrees C expts. VO2, carbohydrate combustion and peak lactate were slightly lower in 33 degrees C expts. Plasma glucose decreased slightly and FFA and glycerol concentrations increased identically in all expts. Heart rate increased continuously during swimming in 27 degrees C and 33 degrees C expts., but not in 21 degrees C expts. In conclusion the rise in body temperatures normally observed during exercise enhances the exercise induced increases in the plasma concentrations of noradrenaline, cortisol, growth hormone and glucagon. Decreased body temperatures may elicit catecholamine secretion as a direct consequence of thermoreception. Shivering may account for previously observed decreases in insulin secretion during cold stress but not for increases in cortisol and growth hormone.
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PMID:The effect of water temperature on the hormonal response to prolonged swimming. 44 63

Several hundred thousand northern fur seals (C. ursinus) are born each summer during July at St. Paul Island in the Bering Sea. The weather in the area is usually cold, wet, and windy during the breeding season. At birth the pups are small (5--6 kg) and insulated only by a partly wettable pelt and a 2- to 4-mm layer of blubber. In air, the pups' lower critical temperature appears to be below the 6 degrees C 50-yr record low July temperature for the islands. During rainy weather much of the insulative value of the pelt is lost, and the pups, which already have a high resting metabolic rate of 3.5 W.kg-1, must increase heat production by shivering and/or nonshivering thermogenesis to maintain deep body temperature. The high level of metabolism (up to 18 W.kg-1) is supported by a very rich milk. The pups will, nevertheless, become hypothermic if their insulation is not improved through peripheral vasoconstriction and shedding of water from the pelt by periodic shudder. Even with these protections the newborn and very young pups are brought close to their limit of tolerance during rainy and windy days. Unfit pups are likely to succumb under such circumstances.
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PMID:Newborn northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus)--do they suffer from cold? 44 11

In acute experiments on white male rats the enzyme spectrum of pancreas homogenate was studied in the process of 30-day adaptation after 3-hour exposure to the muscular loading (compulsory swimming in the water at a temperature of 32 +/- 1 degree C), the heat (overheating at 40-41 degrees C) and the cold (cooling at -3-4 degrees C). It was shown that the initial periods of adaptation to the factors mentioned (2d-12th day) were characterized by a considerable decrease in the activity of all the enzymes under study. With subsequent adaptation of the animal body to these stresses the enzyme activity level recovered to the initial value (18-24th day) and remained more or less stable up to the end of the experiment (30th day). It is suggested that the alteration of the pancreatic enzyme spectrum proceeds with the participation of the hypothalamic-hypophyseal-adrenal systems as a general adaptation syndrome.
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PMID:[Pancreatic enzyme spectrum in chronic stress]. 45 15

Twenty-five years ago we described an extraction procedure for porcine secretin in which the intestinal tissue is briefly boiled in water and then extracted with dilute acid at low temperature. Boiling in water, which inactivates proteolytic enzymes, does not extract secretin, and extraction with acid in the cold will minimize cleavage of acid labile peptide structures. This extraction procedure has formed the basis for the isolation not only of secretin but also of cholecystokinin-pancreozymin (CCK) and, in collaboration with other laboratories, of the vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), the gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP), and motilin. Recently it has been used for the isolation of an N-terminally extended somatostatin from intestinal tissue, and of a peptide, from both nonantral gastric and intestinal tissues, with gastrin-releasing and probably cholecystokinin-releasing properties. A technique has been worked out permitting the chemical analysis, in certain cases, of polypeptide hormones in the presence of other polypeptides, the polypeptide mixture being exposed to fragmentation conditions known to result in characteristic hormone fragments, which are then extracted and quantitated. The technique can also be useful for the isolation of previously unknown peptides by identifying fragments of such and tracing them back to their peptides of origin.
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PMID:Some contributions to the chemistry of the gastrointestinal hormones. 45 17


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