Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four kochia grazing trials were completed over a period of 3 years. Yearling steers were allowed to graze pure stands of irrigated and fertilized kochia (Kochia scoparia) for periods of 14 to 105 days. A total of 116 steers were given kochia as their sole forage. Twenty control steers were allowed to graze native grass pasture, and 20 steers were allowed to graze both native grass and kochia pastures. Steers grazing only kochia lost weight or gained poorly compared with control steers grazing native grass. Steers that grazed both kochia and native grass had intermediate rates of gain. Signs of toxicosis were observed only in steers grazing kochia alone. Considerable variability in the degree of toxicosis was observed from one year to another. Morbidity in the steers grazing only kochia varied from 0% (Trial 4) to 28% (Trial 1), and mortality varied from 0% (Trials 3 and 4) to 10% (Trial 2). The most common signs observed in clinically affected steers were depression, dehydration, weight loss, muscular weakness, photosensitization, ocular discharge, and crusty muzzle. In all 4 trials, significant elevations in serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT) and serum gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) were observed in steers grazing kochia. In 3 of the 4 trials, significant elevations in serum bilirubin, serum calcium, and serum protein were also observed in kochia-fed steers. Necropsies were performed on 6 of 9 steers that died or were euthanized. The primary pathologic findings were severe chronic nephrosis (5 steers) and degenerative hepatopathy (5 steers).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Kochia (Kochia scoparia) toxicosis in cattle: results of four experimental grazing trials. 271 5

Eight dogs with ethylene glycol intoxication were treated with 4-methylpyrazole, an alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor. Dogs had clinical signs referable to ethylene glycol ingestion including ataxia, depression, vomiting, polyuria, and dehydration. Metabolic abnormalities included high anion gap metabolic acidosis, serum hyperosmolality, isosthenuria, and monohydrate and dihydrate calcium oxalate crystalluria. Serum and urine ethylene glycol concentrations were determined to confirm ingestion of ethylene glycol. A 50-mg/ml solution of 4-methylpyrazole in propylene glycol was administered iv as follows: initial treatment, 20 mg/kg of body weight; at 17 hours after admission, 15 mg/kg; at 25 hours after admission, 5 mg/kg. By 24 hours after admission, all dogs had clinical and metabolic improvement. Of the 8 dogs, 7 were released within 3 days of admission. Four of the 8 dogs returned for follow-up evaluation, at which time biochemical or hematologic abnormalities were not observed.
...
PMID:4-Methylpyrazole as treatment for naturally acquired ethylene glycol intoxication in dogs. 258 8

Four isolates of Campylobacter jejuni were studied to determine changes in virulence following six serial passages in chicks. Chicks that received invasive isolates exhibited diarrhea and depressed weight gain. Immature mice were used to assess virulence of the passaged isolates of C. jejuni. Nine-day-old mice infected with passaged isolates showed lethargy, dehydration, depression, decreased weight gain, and occult blood in feces. Mouse pups inoculated with the third and sixth chick passage levels of an invasive isolate showed significant depression in mean daily weight gain and elevated mortality compared with controls and subjects inoculated with unpassaged isolates. This study demonstrated enhancement of virulence in a C. jejuni isolate following chick passage. In contrast, three other passaged isolates failed to show any consistent increase in virulence.
...
PMID:Enhancement of Campylobacter jejuni virulence by serial passage in chicks. 277 92

Several chemotherapeutic protocols for the treatment of malignancies include administration of methotrexate (MTX) during or shortly after total anesthesia. Clinical observations in patients treated for breast carcinoma or childhood cancer have shown unexpected myelosuppression and mucosal damage. This phenomenon may be attributed to the synergistic effects of nitrous oxide, which inactivates the cobalamin coenzyme of methionine synthase, and MTX, which inhibits dihydrofolate reductase, on folate metabolism. However, no quantitative data on dose-effect relationships are available regarding the combined toxicity of MTX and N2O. We investigated the effect of exposure to N2O on the toxicity of MTX. Groups of male Wistar rats were exposed to either 50% N2O/50% O2 or air for 12-48 h. Subsequently, a single i.p. injection of 10, 20, 40, or 80 mg MTX/kg body weight was given. Gastrointestinal toxicity resulted in diarrhea and weight loss in all groups for 5 days after MTX administration. Concomitantly, bone marrow depression with leukocytopenia and thrombocytopenia occurred. Exposure to N2O did not alter the plasma clearance of MTX. No substantial liver or kidney toxicity could be detected, but the 50% lethal dose for MTX was reduced from 60 mg/kg to 10 mg/kg if rats had been exposed to N2O for 48 h; the main causes of death were dehydration and bleeding. The administration of 5-formyl-tetrahydrofolate (4 x 10 mg i.p.) but not 5-methyltetrahydrofolate protected completely against the lethal effect of the drug combination. Altogether, cytotoxic effects of MTX on proliferating cells are potentiated by N2O. Therefore, the use of this anesthetic shortly before or during MTX administration should be avoided.
...
PMID:Toxicity of methotrexate in rats preexposed to nitrous oxide. 280 78

Mice ingesting 30 to 50% D2O (heavy water, deuterium oxide) developed a dose-dependent depression of formed peripheral blood elements in 4 to 9 days. The principal mechanism of anemia and thrombocytopenia is impaired hematopoiesis. Despite pancytopenia in the peripheral blood, bone marrow cellularity and morphology remained normal. Upon replacement of D2O with tap water, platelet and neutrophil concentrations returned to normal within 48 to 72 hr. In contrast, blood lymphocyte concentrations remained low for several weeks. B-lymphocytes may be more affected by deuteration than other lymphocyte subsets. In vivo reticuloendothelial cell function, as assessed by 51Cr-labeled sheep erythrocyte clearance, was unaffected by D2O. Although a dose-dependent decrease in fluid intake occurred during deuteration, hematocytopenia was not a consequence of dehydration. In view of the known kinetics of D2O in biological systems, the rapid response of myeloid elements to deuteration must be due primarily to the solvent (nonmetabolic) isotope effect. Prolonged deuteration has proven toxic when included in regimens for treatment of neoplasia, including leukemia, in animal models. The present study shows that modulation of hematopoiesis by D2O is possible without invoking the toxicities associated with prolonged deuteration.
...
PMID:Effects of deuteration on hematopoiesis in the mouse. 283 49

Two foals aged 35 and 48 h from 2 Thoroughbred studs died several hours after developing clinical signs of depression, severe haemorrhagic diarrhoea and dehydration. Both foals had an acute haemorrhagic enteritis extending from the anterior jejunum to the terminal ileum which was characterised histologically by villus necrosis. Necrotic villi were surrounded by large numbers of rod-shaped Gram positive bacteria. Clostridium perfringens was recovered from the intestines of both foals and the isolates were considered to be C. perfringens type C. Other cases of diarrhoea were also observed in foals of the same age on these 2 studs, but the aetiology of these was not determined.
...
PMID:Haemorrhagic necrotising enteritis in foals associated with Clostridium perfringens. 286 48

1. The pH- and activator-dependence of toad plasma cathepsin activity assayed by hemoglobin digestion was characteristic of cathepsins B1 and D. 2. Dehydration, even to the point of death, did not produce a significant elevation of plasma cathepsin activity over controls. 3. Toads were remarkably resistant to the effects of splanchnic artery ligation, which also did not produce significantly higher plasma cathepsin levels. 4. Cardiac depression via the production of a myocardial depressant factor by cathepsins does not appear to be an important factor in dehydrational death in toads.
...
PMID:Plasma cathepsin activity and the role of hypovolemic shock in dehydrational death in the toad, Bufo marinus. 290 97

Acid-base balance was evaluated in calves with experimentally induced viral diarrhea. When blood pH decreased to less than 7.200, calves were assigned to treatment groups and fed milk replacer, electrolyte solution without bicarbonate, or electrolyte solution containing bicarbonate. Calves in the electrolyte treatment groups had lower mortality (P less than 0.05), were better hydrated (P less than 0.05), and were less acidotic (P less than 0.05) than calves fed milk replacer. Bicarbonate-containing electrolyte solution restored acid-base balance (P less than 0.05) and corrected depression better (P less than 0.05) than electrolyte solution that did not contain bicarbonate. Both electrolyte solutions were equally good at correcting dehydration.
...
PMID:Correction of metabolic acidosis in diarrheal calves by oral administration of electrolyte solutions with or without bicarbonate. 303 7

To evaluate the hypothesis that depressed neuromuscular transmission causes dithiobiuret (DTB)-induced muscle weakness in rats, the temporal development of impaired treadmill performance and deficits in the nerve-elicited muscle contractions were compared during daily treatment with the toxicant (DTB, 1 mg/kg/day X 6 days). Diminished treadmill test performance after 4 days of treatment marked the initial detection of impaired motor function. At this time fading (loss of tension during tetanus) of gastrocnemius contractions elicited in response to 100-Hz sciatic nerve stimulation occurred in DTB-treated rats but not in controls. After 5 and 6 days of treatment, treadmill failure became complete, tetanic fade worsened dramatically, and peak contractile tension measured during trains of nerve stimulation (10-250 Hz) decreased progressively. Appearing by Day 6 were marked body weight loss, dehydration, hypothermia, and a depression in serum concentrations of thyroid hormones. Total oxygen content of the blood was not reduced at any time during treatment, and serum concentrations of glucose, sodium, potassium, calcium, chloride, and phosphorus in DTB-treated rats on Day 6 were similar to those of control animals. Therefore, hypoxia, hypoglycemia, or a serum electrolyte imbalance do not initiate or modulate the neuromuscular toxicity. Light microscopic evaluation of liver, kidney, lung, thyroid, and other organs in intoxicated rats was unremarkable and in skeletal muscles and selected sites of brain, spinal cord, and sciatic nerve no morphologically significant lesions were observed. Even when DTB-intoxicated rats were maintained in a state of flaccid muscle weakness for 5 continuous days, peripheral nerve lesions proximal to the intramuscular nerves were not detected. Thus, depressed neuromuscular transmission appears to be the primary cause of the flaccid muscle weakness and no evidence was obtained that nonneural effects of DTB initiate or modulate this effect.
...
PMID:Temporal analysis of dithiobiuret neurotoxicity in rats and assessment of potential nonneural causes. 311 11

Ehrlichia risticii has a close antigenic relationship to E. sennetsu. Sera of ponies experimentally infected with E. risticii, the etiologic agent of Potomac horse fever, consistently reacted with E. sennetsu, a human pathogen, in indirect fluorescent-antibody (IFA) testing, while human E. sennetsu convalescent serum reacted with E. risticii by IFA testing and immunoferritin labeling of cells infected in vitro. Two ponies injected intravenously with live E. sennetsu did no develop clinical illness. Subsequent injection with live E. sennetsu did not develop clinical illness. Subsequent injection with live E. risticii also did not induce any disease, in contrast to two control ponies given E. risticii without prior exposure to E. sennetsu. Both controls developed fever, anorexia, depression, dehydration, and diarrhea, which are typical clinical signs of Potomac horse fever, and had characteristic lesions of enteritis and lymph node histiocytosis at postmortem examination. E. sennetsu-exposed ponies had normal gastrointestinal morphologies and lymph node hyperplasia. Ponies primed with E. sennetsu before E. risticii challenge developed high titers of immunoglobulin G antibody which reacted against both E. sennetsu and E. risticii antigens by IFA testing. The most prominent antigenic polypeptide in Western (immuno-) blot analysis of sera collected from ponies primed with E. sennetsu before subsequent challenge with E. risticii was present in lysates of both Ehrlichia species and had an apparent molecular mass of 44 kilodaltons. This band was not prominent in Western blots performed with sera of ponies injected with E. risticii alone. Thus, injection of E. sennetsu protects ponies from clinical and pathological manifestations of the disease induced by injection with E. risticii. Immunologic cross-reactivity of the two organisms with IFA testing and strong immunologic recognition by ponies of the 44-kilodalton antigen common to the two organisms may be related to the development of protective immunity against E. risticii.
...
PMID:Clinical, histopathological, and immunological responses of ponies to Ehrlichia sennetsu and subsequent Ehrlichia risticii challenge. 316 93


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