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

Peritonitis in rats was produced by cecal ligation and puncture. Sixteen hours following cecal ligation and puncture, the gangrenous cecum was removed and the animals received either 4 ml saline (nontreated), 0.75 ATP-MgCl2 (100 mumoles ATP plus 50 mumoles MgCl2), and 2.0 ml of 50% glucose or 2.0 ml of 50% mannitol and 1.25 ml saline. Two hours after the removal of the cecum, RES function was evaluated by measuring the intravascular clearance of a 131 I triolein-labeled gelatinized test lipid emulsion. The intravascular half-time (t1/2) in the nontreated animals was double that of sham-operated animals, suggesting that significant depression in RES function occurred during sepsis. Administration of ATP-MgCl2 plus glucose following sepsis resulted in t1/2 values similar to those of sham-operated animals, indicating that the impairment of pagocytic activity of the RES was reversed with treatment. The beneficial effect of treatment following sepsis does not appear to be due to hypertonicity, since administration of 50% mannitol failed to decrease the t1/2. The precise mechanism of the beneficial effect of ATP-MgCl2 + glucose on restoration of RES function is not known.
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PMID:Impairment of reticuloendothelial system function with sepsis and its improvement with ATP-MgCl2 plus glucose administration. 26

Data concerning immunologic changes in postoperative peritonitis and the most common causes of their occurrence are set forth. The report is grounded on the observation over 112 patients and on the experiments on 60 dogs. The depression of the immunoreactivity and sensitization of the organism and its autoallergization with tissue decay products against the background of postoperative peritonitis have been found. It is advisable to use the desensitizing and detoxicating therapy together with relaparotomy and correction of metabolic disorders in postoperative peritonitis.
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PMID:[Early postoperative peritonitis]. 44 3

Sequential chemotherapeutic regimens, primarily used in the treatment of hematopoietic malignancies, and employing ara-C as a basic antineoplastic agent induce mucosal alterations in the entire gastrointestinal tract. These are characterized by surface and glandular epithelial atypia, immaturity, and necrosis. Glandular regeneration is characteristically delayed leading to a state of intestinal aproliferative cytopenia. Other toxic intestinal changes include telangiectasia of blood vessels and the formation of intramural hematomas. Intestinal infections develop frequently and are complicated by peritonitis, liver abscesses, pneumatosis cystoides in testinalis and sepsis. These intestinal lesions are accompanied by a predictable clinical syndrome which begins concomitantly with ara-C infusions and is characterized by diarrhea, ileus, abdominal pain, hematemesis and melena, severe hypokalemia, hypocalcemia and a protein-losing enteropathy. Additional toxic manifestations induced by ara-C include transient weight gains, fever elevations and severe bone marrow depression. The genesis of the intestinal lesions is linked to the three day dose schedule of ara-C infusions which insures both arrest of the cycling intestinal cells in the S-phase and a high cytotoxic index. The severity of these lesions is markedly augmented by prior treatment with ara-C and cyclophosphamide which causes synchronization and probable recruitment of intestinal stem cells, respectively.
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PMID:Cytosine arabinoside induced gastrointestinal toxic alterations in sequential chemotherapeutic protocols: a clinical-pathologic study of 33 patients. 70 32

In order to complete previous results of the efficacy of the horse chestnut saponin escin, its activity was tested on two further models of inflammation: the rat serous peritonitis provoked by i.p. injection of formalin solution, and the rat serous pleurisy provoked by intrapleural injection of Evans Blue/carrageenan. The results showed escin to be an anti-exudative substance with regard to its exudation inhibitory effect determined by the reduction of exudative fluid. As to peritonitis the diminution of protein permeation into the abdominal cavity was determined: with increasing doses escin tended to prevent more efficiently the diffusion of small molecules than the permeation of large molecules. The hypothesis that escin has an effect on the vascular walls in the sense of a "sealing" effect on the capillaries was tested on the following model: the permeability of the plasma-lymph barrier of the hind leg of the rabbit was enhanced by injection of bradykinin. Escin antagonised the bradykinin effect dose-dependently determined by the depression of the raised lymph-flow by about 70%.
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PMID:[New findings on the efficacy and mode of action of the horse chestnut saponin escin]. 94 3

The clinical and pathologic findings in a case of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) in a 1-year-old male cat are described. The cat had been sick for about 3 weeks and presented itself clinically with depression, anorexia, dehydration, mild icterus and acites and a temperature of 39.5 degrees C. The sedimentation rate was elevated to 80 mm/30 min. An exploratory laparotomy was performed and ascitic fluid, found to be bacteriologically sterile, was collected. Pathologically, lesions involved both abdominal and thoracic serious membranes and viscera, especially the liver. They ranged from acute, focal necrosis or fibrino-necrotic changes to proliferative inflammation mainly characterized by infiltration with mononuclear cells. An identical disease was produced experimentally by intraperitoneal inoculation of ascitic fluid from the clinical case into 2 healthy cats. This is the first published report of the occurrence of FIP in Scandinavia.
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PMID:The occurrence of feline infectious peritonitis in Denmark. 101 12

The correlation of endotoxin (ET), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and cellular immune parameters with multiple organ failure and lethal outcome in intraabdominal infections was studied in a group of 18 patients with peritonitis, abscess or pancreatitis. Of these patients, 7 developed respiratory failure and 5 died due to multiple septic organ failure. The peak levels of ET (2.7 +/- 1.3 ng/ml) in the course of the disease were followed by moderate increases of TNF-alpha (mean 147 +/- 41 pg/ml) and IL-6 (170 +/- 61 pg/ml) within 2 days. Analysis of the parameters for the last 12 days prior to death or discharge showed, that the patient group with lethal outcome was characterized by significant lower mean plasma levels of TNF-alpha (less than 75 pg/ml versus greater than 160 pg/ml) and IL-6 (less than 130 pg/ml versus greater than 270 pg/ml), as well as high rates of unstimulated thymidine uptake into peripheral mononuclear blood cells (greater than 44000 cpm/8 x 10(6) PMBC/18 h versus less than 24000 cmp), T-lymphocyte depression (CD3; approximately greater than 40% reduction) with lower T-helper/inducer subset cell numbers (mean CD:CD8 ratio 1.0 +/- 0.55 versus 1.8 +/- 0.2) and lower lectin (PHA) stimulation values (1.9 +/- 1.4 versus 4.1 +/- 1.0). These data demonstrate an anergic immune status with low mediator levels and depressed T-lymphocyte function in patients with poor prognosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Endotoxin, TNF-alpha, interleukin-6 and parameters of the cellular immune system in patients with intraabdominal sepsis. 150 42

Lymph nodes of 30 patients operated because of acute diffuse peritonitis are studied histologically and immunologically. Two types of the lymph node response are found during the reactive stage. The response of the 1st type (the beginning of peritonitis) is characterized by the activation of T- and B-immunity systems. The signs of the depression are characteristic for the 2nd type. Immunodeficiency is enhanced in toxic and terminal stages. The most informative index of the immunodeficiency degree is a decrease of the ratio T-helper/T-suppressor cytotoxic lymphocytes. There is a close correlation between the state of patients and immunomorphological changes of lymph nodes and blood. Peritonitis results in the development of vitium cordis when intoxication associated with immune disturbances strengthens both the inflammation and intoxication.
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PMID:[Morphology of lymph nodes in secondary immunodeficiency provoked by acute diffuse peritonitis]. 174 71

Clinical and immunological studies of 65 patients with extremely severe disseminated suppurative peritonitis have revealed profound disturbances in their immune status. A considerable (2.5-3-fold) decrease in phagocytosis and complement activity, a drastic drop in T-, B-lymphocyte and T-helper content and a depression in T-lymphocyte functional activity have been observed. All this was accompanied by the activation of allergic and autoimmune reactions. Single transfusion of extracorporally X-ray-irradiated autoblood (5-7% of circulating blood volume) promoted an earlier normalization of the patients' critical condition and a prompt correction of the immune shifts.
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PMID:[Immune shifts and their correction in the extremely severe course of diffuse suppurative peritonitis in children]. 176 46

Within the health care of the elderly with prevention, diagnosis, therapy, rehabilitation, nursing care and social service, diagnostic procedures are of great importance to avoid under- and over-diagnosis. Many diagnostic difficulties exist in elderly patients such as changed reference values, changed normal values and changed signs and symptoms. Well-known examples of conditions which are likely to be under-diagnosed include depression and urinary incontinence. Examples are given from the cardiopulmonary field where e.g. dyspnoea showed to be very common, but in only 36% of males and 52% in females related to cardiac failure or pulmonary disease. The most common symptom of acute myocardial infarction in elderly patients was shown to be dyspnoea, whereas chest pain occurred in only one fifth of the cases. In another study of patients with ulcer disease loss of appetite and weight, nausea and anemia were more common than abdominal pain and heartburn. In peritonitis patients, abdominal pain was observed in only just more than half of the cases and guarding and/or abdominal rigidity in about one third. In patients with suspect age dementia a detailed investigation showed the prevalence of organic dementia to be 89% whereas 3% had treatable dementia and 8% non-dementia conditions. In geriatric long-term patients the mean hearing loss in the speech area was about 50 dB, in spite of the fact that only about 10% of the patients had hearing aids. The need for nursing diagnosis is also obvious. It is concluded that a detailed multidisciplinary diagnostic investigation procedure is very important in geriatric medicine.
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PMID:The importance of diagnostic procedures to ensure quality of health care in geriatric medicine. Examples from recent studies. 198 60

The values of cellular and humoral immunity were studied in 53 patients with postoperative peritonitis during open treatment and after closure of the abdominal cavity. Analysis of the results showed that postoperative peritonitis is attended by marked depression of cellular and humoral immunity, and by suppression of functional activity of mononuclear phagocytes. When the open method is applied in conjunction with specific combined and nonspecific immunotherapy restoration of cellular immunity begins on the 5th-7th day after relaparotomy and restoration of humoral immunity on the 3rd-4th day. In successful treatment the immune status is normalized on the 8th-10th day. In unfavourable outcomes depression of cellular and humoral immunity increases continuously and death occurs.
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PMID:[Dynamics of the immune status of patients with postoperative peritonitis during treatment by the open method]. 206 44


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