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:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The metabolic and hormonal responses to exhaustive short-term supramaximal exercise were studied in 10 male physical education students. The exercise task was a single bout of running on the treadmill at 22 km X h-1 and 7.5% slope. It was performed with single oral doses of 100 mg Bupranolol (non-selective beta-blockade), 100 mg Metoprolol (beta-1-selective blockade), and placebo. Arterialized capillary and venous blood were sampled until 30 min post exercise. Time to exhaustion was 52.0 +/- 2.6, 47.6 +/- 2.0, and 46.0 +/- 1.9 s in the control, Metroprolol, and Bupranolol experiments. At cessation of exercise, adrenaline and noradrenaline were grossly elevated in all three conditions. Lactate and glucose increased markedly, this being accompanied by increasing insulin in the control and Metoprolol, but not the Bupranolol trials. Glycerol increased moderately, while FFA were depressed. Growth hormone showed a delayed increase at 15 and 30 min post exercise. Cortisol was unaffected by exercise. beta-blockade reduced the increases of lactate, glucose, glycerol, insulin, and growth hormone, exaggerated the
depression
of FFA and had no effect on cortisol. The results demonstrate that the strong sympatho-adrenal response to exercise of this nature is a major determinant of the increase of glucose at cessation of exercise. The
hyperglycemia
in concert with beta-2-adrenergic stimulation leads to elevation of insulin. Furthermore, lipolysis is controlled by beta-adrenergic stimulation. The delayed increase of growth hormone seems to be triggered by the declining glucose level during recovery.
...
PMID:Metabolic and hormonal responses to exhaustive supramaximal running with and without beta-adrenergic blockade. 614 64
Two cases of severe beta-blocker overdose are presented that were treated successfully with glucagon therapy. The effects of glucagon in reversing the cardiovascular
depression
of profound beta-blockade, including its mechanism of action, onset and duration of action, dosage and administration, cost and availability, and side effects are reviewed. Medical complications of beta-blocker overdose include hypotension, bradycardia, heart failure, impaired atrioventricular conduction, bronchospasm and, occasionally, seizures. Atropine and isoproterenol have been inconsistent in reversing the bradycardia and hypotension of beta-blocker overdose. Glucagon increases heart rate and myocardial contractility, and improves atrioventricular conduction. These effects are unchanged by the presence of beta-receptor blocking drugs. This suggests that glucagon's mechanism of action may bypass the beta-adrenergic receptor site. Because it may bypass the beta-receptor site, glucagon can be considered as an alternative therapy for profound beta-blocker intoxications. The doses of glucagon required to reverse severe beta-blockade are 50 micrograms/kg iv loading dose, followed by a continuous infusion of 1-15 mg/h, titrated to patient response. Glucagon-treated patients should be monitored for side effects of nausea, vomiting, hypokalemia, and
hyperglycemia
. The high cost and limited availability of glucagon may be the only factors precluding its future clinical acceptance.
...
PMID:Glucagon therapy for beta-blocker overdose. 614 98
To determine whether diabetes predisposes rats to hypertension, tail-cuff systolic pressures were measured in male rats made diabetic by pretreatment with streptozotocin. From Weeks 2 through 7, diabetic rats weighed less but had higher systolic pressures than nondiabetic ones. Further comparisons made while the rats were anesthetized with urethane showed that pressor and sympathetic nerve responses to ventromedial hypothalamic stimulation, as well as pressor responses to injected vasopressin, were significantly reduced in the diabetic group. A generalized reduction of cardiovascular reactivity was considered unlikely because systemic pressor responses to norepinephrine and tyramine were unimpaired. Yet reflex bradycardia elicited by norepinephrine was enhanced indicating that baroreceptor resetting had not occurred. Thus, diabetic rats were characterized by hypertension, narrowed pulse pressure, bradycardia with increased reflex responses to norepinephrine, and reduced pressor responses to hypothalamic stimulation and to vasopressin. The successful induction of diabetes was confirmed not only by the presence of
hyperglycemia
, hypoinsulinemia, glycosuria, and abnormal glucose tolerance, but also by reductions in pancreatic weight, insulin, and beta-cell content. Although our results suggest that diabetic rats are predisposed to become hypertensive, other mechanisms such as hypothalamic
depression
may be activated to restrict further elevations in blood pressure.
...
PMID:Streptozotocin diabetic rats are hypertensive despite reduced hypothalamic responsiveness. 621 80
The hypokalemic response was roughly proportional to the dose of insulin. The hypokalemia due to adding insulin to galactose or fructose loading was slightly greater than that with insulin and glucose or mannose loading, suggesting a hexose stereospecificity of the response. When epinephrine (13.6 nmol/kg, i.v.) was given after one of the hexoses plus insulin, the hyperkalemia with glucose and galactose was 2.5-3 mEq/l, about twice that due to fructose or mannose. The
hyperglycemia
was about 2 mmol/l for glucose, 1 mmol/l for galactose, mannose, fructose, and ouabain with glucose, and 0.25 mmol/l for phloridzin with glucose. Addition of epinephrine, isoproterenol, and cAMP caused a significant
depression
of Na+,K+-ATPase activity in rat liver (P < 0.01) but the addition of insulin did not. These results show that there was a relation between the levels of blood glucose and serum potassium after an insulin-containing hexose infusion and that membrane permeability was stereospecific.
...
PMID:Effects of hexose infusion with insulin and of additional epinephrtine injection on the levels of serum potassium and blood glucose in dogs. 625 74
Ten children with acute lymphocytic leukemia developed transient diabetes mellitus during treatment with L-asparaginase and prednisone. Serum glucose, plasma insulin, and plasma glucagon levels were measured when the patients were hyperglycemic. Six of the children were restudied several months later when there were no clinical or laboratory signs of glucose intolerance.
Hyperglycemia
induced by L-asparaginase and prednisone was associated with
depression
of plasma insulin and, despite the inhibiting action of L-asparaginase on protein synthesis, a corresponding elevation of plasma glucagon. Thus patients with diabetes mellitus induced by L-asparaginase and prednisone have relative hyperglucagonemia similar to other patients with diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Relative hyperglucagonemia in L-asparaginase-and prednisone-induced glucose intolerance in management of acute lymphocytic leukemia. 634 Sep 6
The present study was undertaken to devise an electrophysiological method for detecting diabetic retinopathy in rats. The electroretinogram (ERG) and visual evoked potential (VEP) were recorded from unanesthetized and unrestrained rats rendered diabetic with a single i.v. injection of streptozotocin (STZ) at 35 or 40 mg/kg. The STZ-treated rats showed signs of diabetes:
hyperglycemia
, glucosuria, hypoinsulinemia, polyuria and increased water intake. Amplitudes of the ERG a- and b-waves and oscillatory potentials (OPs) on the b-wave were decreased and latencies of these waves were prolonged gradually after STZ was administered. Especially, latencies of the OPs became significantly different from the pre-treatment values. Latency of the VEP N1 wave showed a slight prolongation, which might be secondary to the
depression
of retinal function. Histological examination showed swelling and proliferation of the lens epithelium and swelling and vacuolization of the lens fiber were observed in the eyeball 9 weeks after STZ-treatment. Moreover, thinning of each retinal layer was observed in a few rats. Daily s.c. injection of insulin at 10 units/rat/day started from the 4th week. The ERG values returned to the control values after 2-3 weeks of insulin therapy. These results indicate that the ERG and VEP recording procedure used in the present study is useful for early detection of the diabetic retinopathy in rats and that the OP of the ERG appears to be vulnerable to diabetes in the rat as it is in the human.
...
PMID:[An electrophysiological method for detecting diabetic retinopathy in rats]. 639 51
In contrast to previous studies of neutrophils from diabetic animals and humans in vitro and of macrophages from diabetic humans in vivo, which reported phagocytic
depression
, reticuloendothelial system (RES) hyperphagocytosis of colloidal carbon was observed in rats at 14 and 28 days after diabetes induction with streptozotocin (STZ). Carbon clearance half times were significantly enhanced to 6.3 +/- 0.79 and 8.1 +/- 1.04 min at 14 and 28 days post-STZ, respectively, compared with the nondiabetic value (12.7 +/- 0.98 min). The severity of uncontrolled STZ-induced diabetes in rats was confirmed by significant hypoinsulinemia, hyperglucagonemia,
hyperglycemia
, and hyperlipidemia. Although body weights of STZ-diabetic animals declined progressively, liver weights as a percent of body weight increased above the control value at 14 and 28 days post-STZ. In fact, expression of carbon phagocytosis as the corrected phagocytic index, which accounts for changes in liver and spleen weights relative to body weight, eliminated the significant difference between STZ-diabetic and nondiabetic animals. Antibiotic treatment of diabetic rats failed to alter the hyperphagocytosis, implying that a chronic bacterial infection was not the cause of phagocytic stimulation. Daily insulin replacements, but not a single large insulin dose to 14-day post-STZ rats, reversed the enhanced phagocytosis of colloidal carbon.
...
PMID:RES hyperphagocytosis by rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus. 645 65
Single intravenous doses of CDF1 mice, and single and five daily intravenous treatment schedules in beagle dogs and rhesus monkeys were used to evaluate the toxicity of Streptozotocin (SZN). The major target organs in the three species were liver, kidney, lymphoid tissue and pancreatic islet beta cells. Moderate bone marrow
depression
and gastrointestinal toxicity were observed in the large animal species after lethal doses. Monkeys were less sensitive than the dog to the hepatotoxic effects of SZN and clinical signs of liver dysfunction were more severe in dogs after multiple doses. Microscopic lesions in the renal proximal convoluted tubules were present in the three species; these lesions appeared to be irreversible for dogs. The toxic effect on the endocrine pancreas was manifest by
hyperglycemia
, glucosuria, islet atrophy and beta cell degranulation. Multiple dose regimens were less toxic than single doses in dogs and monkeys in terms of the total dose received.
...
PMID:Toxicologic evaluation of streptozotocin (NSC 85998) in mice, dogs and monkeys. 645 96
Strychnine toxicosis is characterized by inducible tetanic seizures and metaldehyde poisoning by fine fasciculations progressing to generalized tremors and seizures. Intoxication with 1080 causes seizures, random running movements, vomiting, defecation, urination, acidosis and
hyperglycemia
. Intoxication with rodenticides causing coagulopathy is characterized by hemorrhage into body cavities but not necessarily external hemorrhage. Anticholinesterase insecticides cause salivation, urination and defecation, while chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides cause CNS disturbances. Ethylene glycol intoxication results in ataxia,
depression
, coma, vomiting and tachypnea, followed by acute renal failure. Urea poisoning causes bloat and CNS signs in cattle. Monensin intoxication in horses lasts several days and causes stiffness, colic, uneasiness and recumbency. Salt poisoning results in
depression
, seizures and hypernatremia. Lead poisoning is associated with central and peripheral nervous system signs, as well as increased numbers of nucleated RBC and basophilic stippling of RBC. Arsenic poisoning results in GI pain, diarrhea, weakness and death. Copper toxicosis in sheep is manifested by hemolytic anemia, hemoglobinemia and hemoglobinuria. Plants that may intoxicate domestic animals include sorghum, greasewood, halogeton, water hemlock, Japanese yew, larkspur, lupine, milk-weed, philodendron, oleander, castor bean and precatory bean.
...
PMID:Practical toxicologic diagnosis. 649 3
The authors review the recent, conflicting findings of the effect of ECT on diabetes mellitus. To further explore this relationship, they present case reports of three adult-onset diabetic patients with varying degrees of diabetic management who were treated for
depression
with ECT. The results point to the variability of effects which ECT may have on blood glucose in diabetic patients. ECT may produce a potentially dangerous
hyperglycemia
in severely diabetic patients, but ECT does not appear to exert a major diabetogenic or diabetolytic effect on patients with mild diabetes mellitus. Possible mechanisms by which ECT affects blood glucose levels are discussed.
...
PMID:Effects of ECT on diabetes mellitus. An attempt to account for conflicting data. 649 56
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>