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 effect of changes in duration of the conditioning
tetanus
on the size of the testing depressor response was studied in rabbits anaesthetized with urethane. Depressor responses were evoked by stimulation of the aortic nerve. The interval between the conditioning and testing stimulation was fixed at 40 and 120 sec. Two frequencies of conditioning
tetanus
were employed. Brief conditioning tetani facilitate the testing response. With lengthening of the conditioning stimulation the size of the testing response is decreased and when duration of the conditioning amounts to 20-60 sec
depression
of the testing fall of blood pressure reaches a steady level. Further increase in duration of the conditioning
tetanus
to 180 sec does not affect the plateau of
depression
of the testing response. The longest duration of conditioning affecting the size of the testing response is considered to determine the range of control of the testing response exerted by preceding conditioning
tetanus
. Since the levels of plateau of
depression
are different for two used frequencies of conditioning, it is suggested that this factor may control the size of the testing response beyond the range of control executed by the duration of the conditioning
tetanus
.
...
PMID:Post-tetanic changes of depressor responses evoked by stimulation of the aortic nerve. 6 Sep 79
Cellular and humoral immune reactivity to primary and secondary challenge with
tetanus
toxoid, diphtheria toxoid and keyhole limpet hemocyanin was studied in normal dogs and canine bone marrow chimeras prepared for marrow grafting by lethal doses of cyclophosphamide. Short-term chimeras (less than 100 days postgrafting) showed general impairment of immune function as indicated by marked
depression
of skin test reactivity, lymphocyte blastogenesis in vitro and antibody formation. Long-term chimeras (more than 100 days post-grafting) demonstrated gradual improvement of immunologic capacity related to the stage of postgrafting. Prolonged immunoincompetence was suggested by decreased lymphocyte proliferation in vitro in response to stimulation with
tetanus
and diphtheria toxoids and by incomplete conversion from 19S to 7S antibody synthesis. Lymphocyte blastogenesis to specific antigens may prove a useful parameter for the in vitro evaluation of defects in cell-mediated immunity following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Our findings of prolonged immunodeficiency in the preclinical canine model point out the necessity for vigilance in early detection and treatment of infection and underline the importance of approaches aimed at accelerating immunologic reconstitution.
...
PMID:In vitro and in vivo immune response to specific antigens in canine marrow graft recipients. 7 95
The effect of changes in frequency of the conditioning
tetanus
on the magnitude of the testing depressor response was studied in rabbits anaesthetized with urethane. Conditioning and testing stimulations were applied to the same aortic nerve. The duration of the conditioning tetani was set at 3 and 60 sec and the interval between stimulations amounted to 40 and 120 sec. At the testing interval of 40 sec the increase in frequency both of short and long conditioning tetani reduces the magnitude of the testing response which attains a minimum at frequency of about 30 cycles/sec. Conditioning stimulations of higher frequency are gradually less effective and cause the testing response to increase. Similar
depression
is observed at the testing interval of 120 sec but only following long-lasting conditioning
tetanus
. Short conditioning trains at the testing interval of 120 sec facilitate the testing response. The frequency of the conditioning stimulation which produces the greatest reduction of the depressor response indicates the range of control exerted by the conditioning
tetanus
over the testing blood pressure effect. The size of this control is determined by the lowest level of
depression
and the highest value of facilitation of the testing response.
...
PMID:Effect of changing the frequency of conditioning tetanus on depressor responses evoked by stimulation of the aortic nerve. 8 59
The effects of enflurane on motor nerve terminals and muscle endplates were studied in the rat phrenic nerve-diaphragm preparation using standard microelectrode recording techniques. Muscle endplate interaction with enflurane was suggested by
depression
of the amplitude of miniature endplate potentials (MEPP's) without change in frequency, increased duration of MEPP's and endplate potentials (EPP's) increased threshold for generation of muscle action potentials, and inhibition of the endplate depolarization induced by succinylcholine. Evidence of nerve terminal effects of enflurane was limited to a greater relative decline of EPP amplitude during
tetanus
, indicative of failure to maintain transmitter output at rapid rates of stimulation. It is concluded that the depressant effect of enflurane on indirectly elicited muscle twitch is primarily due to an impairment of the action of muscle endplate on adjacent membrane; however, the relative importance of prejunctional
depression
, seen only during rapid nerve stimulation, cannot be assessed from the present data.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular transmission in a mammalian preparation during exposure to enflurane. 16 41
1. The process of synaptic
depression
and recovery were studied in the squid (Loligo pealii) giant synapse with intracellular recording and stimulating electrodes in the prescence of tetrodotoxin (10-minus 7 M). 2. When the synapse was stimulated at 50 Hz,
depression
occurred rapidly. Recovery after the
tetanus
was a first-order process with an average recovery time constant of 4-9 sec. The rate of recovery was independent of the amplitude of the post-synaptic potential (p.s.p.) or the degree of
depression
. 3. For the first five to seven p.s.p.s in the train there was a linear relationship between
depression
and the total amount of transmitter previously released. This may indicate that
depression
in this preparation was caused by the depletion of the presynaptic store of transmitter (S). 4. Assuming that this interpretation was correct, we could show that recovery from
depression
during the
tetanus
(i.e. 'mobilization') proceeded about 10 times faster than after the end of the
tetanus
. 5. When the amplitude of the p.s.p. was varied by changing the bathing calcium concentration, [Ca], the degree of
depression
was correlated to the amplitude of the p.s.p. 6. When the amplitude of the p.s.p. was increased by increasing pre-synaptic depolarization, synaptic
depression
was found to increase as well. However, synaptic
depression
increased less than the amplitude of the p.s.p., the relationship between these two measures being non-linear. 7. This finding is interpreted to indicate that the transmitter stores, S, are closely related to the area of the presynaptic membrane which is sufficiently depolarized to release transmitter.
...
PMID:Depression and recovery of transmission at the squid giant synapse. 16 84
The Mauthner fiber giant fiber synapses of the hatchetfish are chemically transmitting axo-axionic synapses in the medulla. Tetanic stimulation at room temperature depletes the presynaptic Mauthner terminal of vesicles and leads to the appearance of large numbers of irregular membraneous compartments in the terminal. Stimulation during cooling to 12 degrees C depletes the terminal of vesicles and greatly increases the external surface, which forms large whorls of invaginating double membranes. Many coated vesicles are attached to the surface and the invaginating whorls. It is concluded that vesicles are discharged by exocytosis and fusion of their membrane with the external surface, and that at room temperature, membrane is reinternalized by coated vesicles and formed into irregular compartments. In completion of the cycle, these compartments disappear, and the vesicle population recovers over an hour or two of rest. When the Mauthner fibers are stimulated at low rates, the p.s.p.'s in the giant fibers are large and suprathreshold. Minature p.s.p.'s are generated spontaneously or can be evoked by subthreshold depolarization or tetanic stimulation of the Mauthner fiber. Stimulation of the Mauthner fibers at gradually increasing frequencies depresses p.s.p. amplitude to or below the level of miniature p.s.p.'s, but no failures are observed. Small p.s.p.'s without failures suggest that the quantum number remains high but that quantal size is greatly reduced, either by partial filling, as is supported by the morphological observation of vesicle depletion, or by desensitization. When stimulation is stopped, recovery of p.s.p. amplitude occurs in 1 or 2 seconds, but if tetanic stimulation is resumed immediately, p.s.p. amplitude decreases again and much more rapidly than in the initial rundown. This result suggests that
depression
of p.s.p. amplitude is not due to desensitization and leaves partial filling as the most likely explanation of small quanta. Calculated quantal size following a
tetanus
recovers in 200-500 ms, which probably largely reflects the time for filling since enough vesicles can be supplied to prevent failures with much shorter intervals between stimuli. Because quantal size appears to decrease gradually as stimulation frequency increases, it appears that release of vesicles can interrupt filling, leading to the conclusion that filling and release sites are very close together. This conlusion is consistent with other data in the literature obtained by different techniques.
...
PMID:Stimulation-induced depletion of vesicles, fatigue of transmission and recovery processes at a vertebrate central synapse. 18 Nov 97
1. A comparison has been made of the effects of three acetylcholine antagonists--hexamethonium, tubocurarine and pancuronium--on maximal tetani of limb muscles of cats under chloralose anaesthesia. In most experiments, the indirectly stimulated soleus muscle was studied, but observations were also made on the tibialis anterior and flexor digitorum longus muscles. 2. When neuromuscular block was produced by intra-arterial injections of the acetylcholine antagonists, tetanic tension, though depressed in amplitude did not wane and there was little or no post-tetanic relief of the block as judged by the amplitude of subsequent twitches. On the other hand, during similar degrees of block produced by intravenous injections, tetanic tension rapidly waned, and, after the
tetanus
, transmission was temporarily facilitated, as evidenced by an increase in the amplitude of post-tetanic twitches. 3. Intravenously injected hexamethonium caused complete waning of tetanic tension in doses too small to depress twitch amplitude and which caused only a small
depression
of peak tetanic tension. In contrast, pancuronium caused only partial tetanic fade even in doses that produced pronounced depressions of twitch and tetanic tensions. The effects of tubocurarine fell between these extremes. 4. The results suggest that
depression
of peak tension and tetanic fade are independent effects of acetylcholine antagonists. It is postulated that the former is a consequence of block of post-junctional cholinoceptors, whereas the latter arises from an action of pre-junctional cholinoceptors. 5. The results obtained, together with those of other workers, led to the suggestion that transmitter acetylcholine, in addition to evoking the endplate potential, acts on the nonmyelinated nerve terminals in a positive feed-back mechanism that mobilizes transmitter to keep pace with release during high frequencies of stimulation.
...
PMID:Tetanic fade during partial transmission failure produced by non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs in the cat. 18 80
1. The fatigue in rat anterior tibial (a.t.) motor units was studied and related to microphotometric determinations of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity of the motor unit muscle fibres. 2. Anterior tibial contains fast-twitch type II fibre units with an average contraction time of 11 msec and about 5% slow-twitch type I fibre units with an average contraction time of 20 msec. 3. In type II fibres stained for SDH, absorbance varied continuously from 0.046 to 0.569 and inversely to fibre size, except for the largest fibres. 4. Resistance to fatigue of fast motor units to 100 Hz intermittent stimulation varied continuously within a wide range in near linear relations to absorbance for SDH of unit fibres and inversely to tetanic tension, except for motor units with the largest fibres and the largest tetanic tension. 5. Neither resistance to fatigue nor SDH activity lent itself to any categorization of motor units or fibres into well demarcated functional or histochemical types, since both parameters varied continuously in the unit and fibre population of the muscle. 6. The direct relation between resistance to fatigue of fast-twitch motor units and SDH activity of unit fibres appeared valid for fatigue resistance of: (a) neuromuscular transmission, tested with 100 Hz intermittent stimulation which gave concomitant failure of electrical and mechanical response, (b) excitation--contraction coupling, demonstrated by post-stimulatory
depression
of twitch tension with preserved maximum
tetanus
tension and action potential, and (c) contractile mechanism; excitation--contraction coupling?, tested with low frequency stimulation which gave decline of twitch and maximum
tetanus
tension with preserved action potential. 7. It is suggested that the endurance of each link in the chain of events leading to contraction, including neuromuscular junction and the excitation--contraction coupling system, is under aerobic conditions matched to the contractile capacity of the fibre expressed by its oxidative enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Transmission and contraction fatigue of rat motor units in relation to succinate dehydrogenase activity of motor unit fibres. 22 67
1. The velocity of shortening at zero load was studied during fused tetanic contractions and single twitches in isolated skeletal muscle fibres of Rana temporaria. 2. The technique used for determination of the speed of unloaded shortening consisted of a series of quick releases of different amplitudes applied at a given instant during activity. The time, delta t, needed for the fibre to take up the slack was plotted against the amplitude of release, delta L. The slope of the straight line relating delta t-delta L provided a measure of the velocity of shortening at zero load, V0. 3. V0 was compared with force-velocity data obtained at finite loads (load-clamp recordings). The predicted velocity of shortening at zero load, derived by hyperbolic extrapolation from velocities at low and intermediate loads, was not significantly different from V0. 4. The temperature dependence of isometric force and of shortening velocity was investigated between 2 and 12 degrees C in the same fibres. Q10 was 2.67 +/- 0.07 (S.E. of mean, n = 6) for V0 and 1.24 +/- 0.01 for tetanic force. 5. The velocity of unloaded shortening was determined at different sarcomere lengths in the range 1.4--3.1 microns. V0 was constant between 1.65 microns and approximately 2.7 microns. It decreased below 1.65 microns and increased above 2.7 microns. 6. The decrease in velocity at short sarcomere lengths probably reflects an increase of the passive resistance to shortening. The increase in velocity at long sarcomere lengths can be accounted for by the passive compressive force that is produced by the parallel elastic elements of the prestretched fibre. 7. V0 was determined at the peak of the twitch and during the plateau of the fused
tetanus
in the same fibre. Whereas the peak twitch force varied between 38 and 85% of the tetanic tension in the different fibres (mean: 71 +/- 5%, n = 8), V0 during the twitch was 99 +/- 2% of the value recorded during the
tetanus
.
Depression
of the isometric twitch amplitude to 10% of the control value by dantrolene did not cause any significant reduction of V0.
...
PMID:The velocity of unloaded shortening and its relation to sarcomere length and isometric force in vertebrate muscle fibres. 31 10
Immune function has been evaluated in 54 patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and 26 controls. Cell-mediated immunity was assessed by skin testing with ubiquitous antigens, and humoral immunity by antibody responses to
tetanus
toxoid and Salmonella typhi vaccinations, and resting titres of anti-Streptolysin O, anti-E Coli, and isohemagglutinins. The AS patients had reduced delayed hypersensitivity responses to Candida, augmented responses to Streptococcal antigen and relatively low ASO titres. There was no generalized
depression
of humoral immunity, as indicated by the normal
tetanus
and Salmonella O responses and hyper-response to Salmonella H antigen. The E. Coli and isohemagglutinin titres were normal. These results indicate that patients with AS present a complex immunological profile, including exaggerated responses to some antigens and impaired responses to others. In view of the very high incidence of HLA-B27 in AS, it is possible that these findings are related to the effects of HLA associated immune response genes.
...
PMID:Immune function in ankylosing spondylitis: apparent relationship between streptococcal responses and HLA B27. 32 6
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>