Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0009443 (
cold
)
92,137
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. This study examines the effect of chronic
cold
exposure during pregnancy, induced by winter shearing twin-bearing ewes 4 weeks before predicted lambing date, on O2 consumption and
CO2
production during non-rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep in lambs maintained for at least 1 h at warm (28-18 degrees C) and
cold
(14-5 degrees C) ambient temperatures at 1, 4, 14 and 30 days of age. This was combined with measurement of the thermogenic activity (GDP binding to uncoupling protein in mitochondrial preparations) of perirenal adipose tissue from lambs immediately after birth and at 33 days of age. 2. Lambs born from shorn (
cold
-exposed) ewes were 15% heavier (P < 0.01) and possessed 21% (P < 0.01) more perirenal adipose tissue that contained 40% more protein and mitochondrial protein than unshorn (P < 0.05) controls. Total GDP binding in perirenal adipose tissue was 40% greater (P < 0.05) in lambs born from shorn ewes but there was no difference in lipid content of this tissue between the two groups. 3. At 1 day of age, lambs born from shorn ewes exhibited a 16% higher (P < 0.05) rate of O2 consumption (per kilogram bodyweight) at the warm temperature and a 40% greater metabolic response to the
cold
ambient temperature. All lambs born from shorn ewes responded to
cold
exposure without shivering (i.e. via non-shivering thermogenesis) whilst shivering was measured in four out of seven lambs in the unshorn group. These differences had disappeared by 4 days of age as a result of a 25% increased (P < 0.01) rate of O2 consumption in the warm in lambs born from unshorn ewes and a 20% decrease (P < 0.05) in the response to the
cold
in lambs from shorn ewes. Shivering during
cold
exposure was measured in six out of nine lambs born from shorn ewes indicating a rapid alteration in thermoregulatory responses to
cold
during the first few days of life. 4. The levels of GDP binding and mitochondrial protein in perirenal adipose tissue fell by one-third in both groups of lambs during the first 33 days of life whereas lipid content either increased or was unchanged. This indicated that brown adipose tissue (BAT) was developing the characteristics of white adipose tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of maternal cold exposure on brown adipose tissue and thermogenesis in the neonatal lamb. 148 61
Bilateral lung transplantation (BLT) is a recently described procedure based on two sequential single-lung transplantations (SLT), which are performed by a transverse sternobithoracotomy. It does not require either cardiac arrest or routine use of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The intraoperative management of 10 patients suffering from end-stage pulmonary disease is reported. Implantation of the first graft is quite similar to a SLT. Problems encountered during this procedure (ie, hypoxemia, hypercapnia, or low cardiac output) were due to restricted pulmonary and cardiac reserve. Preoperative and intraoperative assessment of the recipient's respiratory and cardiac status was, therefore, of prime importance. Mild preoperative pulmonary hypertension, well-preserved right ventricular function, and removal of the less well-perfused lung limited these difficulties; no patient required partial CPB at this stage. During the second lung implantation, gas exchange was provided by the first grafted lung. Measurements of pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), venous admixture (Qva/Qt), and dead space (VD/VT) assessed with the arterial-to-end-tidal
CO2
difference were used to confirm the adequacy of perfusion and V/Q matching. In one patient, partial CPB was instituted because of surgical difficulty related to inadequate size matching of the lungs. In the other patients, first graft function was satisfactory and the second graft was implanted without CPB. With chest closure, PVR returned to nearly normal values (range, 57-293, mean 167 dynes.s.cm-5) and Qva/Qt increased (range, 3 to 36, mean 20%). This limited series demonstrates that CPB is optional during this procedure. Good selection of recipients and donors, good lung preservation methods, and a short duration of
cold
ischemia are essential to success.
...
PMID:Anesthesia for bilateral lung transplantation without cardiopulmonary bypass: initial experience and review of intraoperative problems. 149 95
Chemical peeling promotes formation of new epidermis and new dermal collagen, resulting in skin shrinkage, reduction of wrinkling and crepe paper skin, softening of crow's feet, and, when desired, lightened eyelid color. Chemical peeling may be performed as the only eyelid procedure, simultaneously with
CO2
laser surgical blepharoplasty, after healing of
cold
-steel-scalpel or
CO2
-laser blepharoplasty, and as a repeated procedure to achieve maximal results.
...
PMID:Chemical peeling of eyelids and periorbital area. 153 47
The reactivity of 40 panic disorder patients on mental arithmetic,
cold
pressor, and 5%
CO2
inhalation stressors was tested before and after 8 weeks of treatment with imipramine, alprazolam, or placebo. Mean levels of subjective and physiological stress measures were compared during a baseline before any stressors were given, and at anticipation, stressor, and recovery periods for each stressor. After treatment, imipramine patients differed from the other two treatment groups on the prestressor baseline in showing higher systolic blood pressure (mean difference about 10 mmHg), higher diastolic blood pressure (10 mm Hg), higher heart rate (15 bpm), less respiratory sinus arrhythmia, shorter pulse transit time, and lower T-wave amplitude. Respiratory measures, electrodermal measures, body movement, and self-reported anxiety and excitement did not distinguish the groups. Reactivity to the stress tests was unaffected by the medications, but tonic differences present in the baseline persisted.
...
PMID:Imipramine and alprazolam effects on stress test reactivity in panic disorder. 154 96
This article describes the method of isocapnic hyperventilation, where
cold
air (-22 degrees C) containing 5%
CO2
is used to induce a temporary obstruction of airways in patients with bronchial hyperreactivity. The method is quick, has few side effects and is suitable both in the diagnosis and assessment of asthma. Tested out on ten current asthmatics and 14 controls, a median fall in forced expiratory volume (FEV1) of 21.7% was observed in the asthmatic group as against a median fall in FEV1 of 1.4% among the controls.
...
PMID:[Cold provocation test. A method for diagnosis of bronchial asthma]. 155 28
This study compares and contrasts the use of the
CO2
laser with the conventional
cold
-steel scalpel and electrocautery in cosmetic blepharoplasty. Ten patients underwent bilateral, upper, and lower eyelid cosmetic blepharoplasty using the
CO2
laser as the exclusive cutting and cauterizing instrument for one eye, and the
cold
-steel scalpel and electrocautery as the exclusive cutting instrument and cauterizing tool for the remaining eye. This comparison evaluated administrative factors, procedural ease, and long- and short-term results. The benefits of using the
CO2
laser rather than the
cold
-steel scalpel in blepharoplasty are reduced operative time, less bleeding, superior intraoperative visibility, less bruising and swelling, no pain or discomfort, and a shorter recuperation period. There were no complications with either the scalpel or the laser. Using the laser with standard safety protocols presents no greater risk to the patients undergoing blepharoplasty than does using the
cold
steel scalpel with an electrocautery device. The disadvantages of using the laser compared with the steel scalpel include the cost of purchasing and maintaining the laser equipment, the need for additional and extensive laser training for surgeons and assistants, and the need for two assistants rather than the one needed for scalpel surgery.
...
PMID:CO2 laser blepharoplasty. A comparison with cold-steel surgery. 849 95
1. In four awake dogs we measured EMG activity of three inspiratory and four expiratory muscles during sustained central chemoreceptor stimulation (
CO2
inhalation), and peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation (intravenous infusion of almitrine bismesylate (almitrine)). By using this selective pharmacological stimulation of the peripheral chemoreceptors and reversibly
cold
-blocking pulmonary stretch receptors, we were able to determine the effects of each type of stimulation on respiratory muscle recruitment in the absence of such complicating influences as pulmonary stretch receptor feedback, cerebral hypoxia or hypocapnia, and differences in breathing pattern. 2. During 10 min of steady-state hyperpnoea (minute ventilation VI, approximately twice eupnoea) caused by either hypercapnia or isocapnic stimulation of the carotid bodies with almitrine, all three inspiratory and all four expiratory muscles demonstrated significant and sustained elevations in EMG activity. 3. With both types of chemoreceptor stimulation, as tidal volume, VT, increased, so did the mean electrical activities of the crural diaphragm (r = 0.88), costal diaphragm (r = 0.93), parasternals (r = 0.82), triangularis sterni (r = 0.74), transversus abdominis (r = 0.77), external obliques (r = 0.68) and internal intercostals (r = 0.75). 4. In each dog, the response of ventilation and of the diaphragmatic EMG to a given level of central or peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation is highly reproducible from one test day to the next. On the other hand, accessory inspiratory and expiratory abdominal and rib cage muscles in two of the four dogs showed highly significant changes from day to day in the amount of their EMG activity at any given VT. 5. During steady-state ventilatory stimulation, 2 min intervals were chosen during which the two types of chemoreceptor stimulation had caused hyperpnoeas with similar values for VT, total time per breath (TTOT) and inspiratory time divided by the total time (TI/TTOT). Comparison of EMG activities during these matched hyperpnoeas revealed that there were no differences in the activities of any of the muscles between the two forms of stimulation. We conclude that peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation causes significant and sustained recruitment of expiratory muscles even in the absence of pulmonary feedback and that both expiratory and inspiratory muscles are recruited to the same extent during peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation as they are during an identical hyperpnoea caused by central chemoreceptor stimulation.
...
PMID:Respiratory muscle recruitment during selective central and peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation in awake dogs. 159 81
A possible explanation for the cause of some cot deaths is examined by placing an appropriate cot death model on a
cold
wet sheet so that its "breath" is directed downwards across the sheet, thereby being cooled and becoming heavy enough to stay trapped in the hollow of the mattress. The breath is then available for rebreathing by the model. The level of carbon dioxide (
CO2
) "inhaled" is showed to be lower in nostril breathers, singletons and in bassinets and higher with mouth breathing models, in "twins", and in carry cots, especially if the model's head is accidentally covered. Under these conditions a living infant would become progressively acidotic due to inability to adequately excrete its metabolic
CO2
. This must inevitably be accompanied by increasing hypoxia. If left undisturbed in this predicament, it would rebreathe its own breath for the period of time between feeds and develop increasing degrees of asphyxia, depending on the circumstances outlined.
...
PMID:Distribution of expired air in carry cots--a possible explanation for some sudden infant deaths. 174 79
Piry virus mutants selected for altered growth properties in Drosophila melanogaster have previously been designated agD mutants. This paper presents a classification scheme for grouping some of these mutants and also presents the characteristics of some members of each group. Analysis, for each agD clone, of the mean incubation time at 20 degrees C relative to the mean incubation time at 28 degrees C (t20,t28), compared to the range of similar data for wild-type virus enabled us to define 4 classes of agD mutant: (1) mutants equally affected at both temperatures, (2)
cold
-sensitive mutants in drosophila (csD), (3) heat-sensitive mutants in drosophila (tsD) and (4) mutants whose mean incubation time could not be estimated at either 20 or 28 degrees C. All agD mutants are listed. The majority of them were also ts in chicken embryo cells (CEC), and some were classified into complementation groups. Some correlations were noted. For example, the agD mutants that were ts+ in CEC were frequently (7 out of 12) weakly
cold
-sensitive in drosophila. Those tsD mutants which were also ts in CEC, all belonged to complementation group I (L protein). True csD mutants, whose divergence of incubation time with wt regularly increased, and which were also ts in CEC, all belonged to group I except for one which belonged to group V (G protein). Three mutants fell into a distinct sub-class of csD mutants, characterized by a defect in the
CO2
sensitivity symptom expression below a definite temperature. One of these which was further characterized was shown to be in complementation group V. Some mutants of the fourth class were examined for their fly-invading capacity. This was found to be more-or-less strongly affected. Among these mutants, independent of this phenomenon, mutations were assigned to L, N and G proteins, suggesting that different physiological defects are involved. A comparison was made of the phenotypes in drosophila of some of the agD mutants with other members of the vesiculovirus family. The analogy of sigma rhabdovirus with tsD mutants is also reported.
...
PMID:[A genetic study of the interaction of Piry virus with drosophila]. 179 17
The effects of some technologies (cooling, freezing, salting, packaging, fermentation,
cold
smoking, heat treatment) on the survival of Campylobacter jejuni were investigated. The different technological procedures can be considered as barriers influencing to a certain degree the survival of C. jejuni. The low value aw on the surface of chilled meat and oxygen presence reduce the occurrence of C. jejuni, but the low storage temperature prolongs the survival of C. jejuni to two days. In chilled poultry the high relative water content is combined with the low temperature and C. jejuni is able to survive even for five days. In the freezing process the low temperature has only partial effects on C. jejuni devitalization; C. jejuni can survive in this case for two to eight weeks. The survival of C. jejuni is prolonged considerably by packaging: six to seven days in polyethylene sheet, 10 days in vacuum packing and 10 to 13 days in gas packing (80% N2 and 20%
CO2
). NaCl can partly devitalize C. jejuni, and in comminuted meant it survives for five to seven days. In the non-precooked meat products (TNMV) and with the minimally fortnight time of ripening a number of barriers play their role which are destroying C. jejuni (aw, pH, antagonistic microflora). Due to these barriers C. jejuni was isolated in these products maximally for seven days. In this type of products with short durability (two to three days) the action of barriers is limited, that means C. jejuni could be demonstrated for two to six days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The effects of some technologies on survival of Campylobacter jejuni in food of animal origin]. 180 34
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>