Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Cytosine arabinoside induced gastrointestinal toxic alterations in sequential chemotherapeutic protocols: a clinical-pathologic study of 33 patients. 70 32
A study was made of some nonspecific immunity indices in staphylococcus
sepsis
and gastroenterocolitis during the infectious process in young children. Results of these investigations pointed to the
depression
of bactericidal and lysozyme activity of the blood serum and of the immunoadherence reaction at the acute period of the disease, and to some increase at the phase of recovery. There was also found an elevation of the phagocytic activity (of the phagocytolysis percentage) at the acute phase of the staphylococcus
sepsis
and gastroenterocolitis Antistaphylococcus gamma-globulin produced a positive effect on the lysozyme and bactericidal activity of the blood sera and promoted an increase of the blood phagocytic activity in the sick children.
...
PMID:[Several indices of non-specific immunity in staphylococcal sepsis and staphylococcal gastroenterocolitis in children of different ages]. 98 93
In preparation for the use of bovine thymosin, a thymic hormone, as a specific T cell stimulator in immunodepressed patients, we studied its effect on E rosette formation of peripheral lymphocytes from patients with (1) advanced malignancies, (2) extensive burns, and (3) septicemia. E rosette formation in vitro with and without thymosin was evaluated in 52 patients with carcinoma of the breast (25) or lung (27) in relation to adjuvant therapy and/or surgery. The
depression
of E rosettes in cancer patients was most striking when adjuvant therapy, irradiation, and/or chemotherapy were used; in 20 patients this was elevated by incubation with thymosin. There was a delay in recovery of depressed E rosette levels after radical mastectomies in four patients, recovery being accelerated by thymosin. In ten burn patients (40 to 80 percent of body surface area, second and third degree burns), the
depression
in E rosette levels occurred in the first week and was most marked in 3 to 4 weeks. In eight patients this was elevated by thymosin in vitro. In four septic patients, all undergoing operation, serial studies suggested that recovery from
sepsis
was accompanied by spontaneous rise in E rosette levels. This process was accelerated by thymosin in vitro. This study as well as previous experiments with animals suggest that thymosin may influence depressed host resistance favorably by increasing T-cell-mediated immunity.
...
PMID:In vitro effect of thymosin on T cells from immunodepressed surgical patients. 108 39
Two boys aged up to 2 weeks suffered from enterobacter-
sepsis
. In both cases osteomyelitis developed in spite of treatment with Gentamycin or Gentamycin combined with Chepazolin. Both children were, taking accont of the risks, then treated with Chloramphenicol (100 mg/kg body weight/24 hours) and the first patient also, for a short time, with tetracyclin. In the second patient we saw a marrow
depression
dependent on Chloramphenicol and its dosage which disappeared rapidly, when the drug was withheld.
...
PMID:[Enterobacter-osteomyelitis in two neonates (author's transl)]. 123 63
The covalent modification of receptor proteins via phosphorylation and dephosphorylation is one of the principal mechanisms controlling carbohydrate metabolism and is known to be regulated by various protein kinases. Recent studies indicated that many hormones may exert their effects on cellular metabolism by regulating intracellular c-AMP levels and by activating a c-AMP dependent protein kinase, i.e., protein kinase A. The metabolic disturbances during
sepsis
are characterized by an initial hyperglycemia followed by a progressive hypoglycemia and a depletion of hepatic glycogen content. The latter is coupled with a slowdown in glycogenesis, an accelerated glycogenolysis, and a
depression
in gluconeogenesis in the liver. Since the liver is the major organ that regulates the homeostatic level of blood glucose, it is conceivable that the
sepsis
-induced glucose dyshomeostasis might be mediated by changes in protein kinase activity and the kinetic characteristics of enzymes. The present experiment was designed to study the correlation between protein kinase A and the pathophysiology of hepatic glucose dyshomeostasis during
sepsis
.
Sepsis
was induced in rats by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). Late
sepsis
occurred 18 hours after CLP. Protein kinase A was extracted from the rat livers by acid precipitation and ammonium sulfate fractionation, and then partially purified by DEAE-cellulose. The results show that in the late
sepsis
, type-I protein kinase A (eluted at low ionic strength) activity was significantly decreased by 34-52% (P < 0.01). The kinetic parameters such as Vmax's for ATP, histone, and c-AMP were also significantly decreased from the control values of 6.1 +/- 0.9, 5.4 +/- 0.8, and 5.1 +/- 1.9 nmoles/mg.min. to 3.6 +/- 0.5, 2.8 +/- 0.3, and 2.5 +/- 0.5 nmoles/mg.min., respectively. Analysis using Hill's equation indicates that the S0.5 and n (Hill coefficient) values of the various substrates and activators for type-I protein kinase A remained unchanged. In the case of type-II protein kinase A (eluted at high ionic strength), the Vmax, S0.5, and n values for ATP, histone, and c-AMP were unchanged during late
sepsis
. The results of the present study indicate that the activities and kinetic characteristics of type I protein kinase A in rat liver are modified during late
sepsis
. Since protein kinase A is known to regulate glucose metabolism through adrenergic receptor mediation, these findings may have a pathophysiological significance in the understanding of hepatic glucose dyshomeostasis during
sepsis
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Kinetic studies of protein kinase A in rat liver during late sepsis]. 129 61
The most common cause of late death following trauma is
sepsis
. The traumatized patient has a significant increased risk of infection. Transfusion, hypotension, and prolonged ventilatory support are predictive of septic complications. In addition, the trauma patient has a higher predisposition to pneumonia than nontrauma patients (18% versus 3% incidence of pneumonia, P < .001). Additional risk factors include the degree of nutrition status and the type of medications used during surgery. Immunologic
depression
may be an additional risk factor. There is mounting evidence that trauma can result in host defense abnormalities. To prevent the significant mortality caused by
sepsis
, close surveillance must be maintained, nutritional status must be optimal, and liberal use of antibiotics should be discouraged. Their use should be guided by appropriate cultures and sensitivities.
...
PMID:Risk factors for infection in the trauma patient. 129 93
Although studies indicate that simple hemorrhage induces profound
depression
of cell-mediated immunity and enhances the host's susceptibility to
sepsis
, the mechanism for this remains unknown. Since the Kupffer cells (KC) are positioned to have constant exposure to various immunomodulators and antigens released during hypotension, we have examined whether antigen presentation by KC, a critical component in eliciting an antigen specific immune response or those processes associated with it, are depressed following hemorrhage. C3H/HeN mice were bled to and maintained at a mean BP of 35 mmHg for 60 min, and then resuscitated with their own blood and adequate fluids. The mice were killed at varying periods of time after hemorrhage to obtain KC from the liver, and assessed for their capacity to present antigen to a sensitized clone Th/cell line (D10.G4.1). Hemorrhaged mice exhibited a marked decrease in antigen presenting capacity beginning as little as 2 h and lasting up to 3-5 days post-hemorrhage. The ability of KC to express mouse interleukin 1 (mIL-1) showed a significant decline at 2 h following hemorrhage, but this effect was not apparent at 24 h post-hemorrhage. In contrast, KC capacity to produce IL-1, IL-6 and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) (cytokines which can co-stimulate T cell antigen presentation) was markedly enhanced during the first 24 h following hemorrhage. A marked decrease was observed in both the mean of the average fluorescence per KC and the percent of Ia antigen-positive KC which persisted for at least 3 days after hemorrhage. The ability of ibuprofen (a cyclooxygenase blocker) to partially restore the antigen presenting capacity of KC from hemorrhaged mice in vitro indicates that prostaglandins are involved in this dysfunction. Thus, the
depression
of KC antigen presentation, as well as the enhanced capacity of these cells to release inflammatory mediators (TNF, IL-1, IL-6 and prostanoids) which may produce cell and organ dysfunction, could contribute to the host's enhanced susceptibility to
sepsis
following hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Differential effects of hemorrhage on Kupffer cells: decreased antigen presentation despite increased inflammatory cytokine (IL-1, IL-6 and TNF) release. 131 64
A case of chorioadenoma destruens with uterine rupture is reported. The patient was admitted because a persistent uterine bleeding after abortion about two months before. The titulation of gonadotrophic hormone resulted in 25,000 unities. After curettage she was complicated with hemoperitoneum and went to surgery. During hysterectomy were identified trophoblastic tissue in the broad ligament and partial blocking of the right ureter. After repeated chemotherapy she presented severe immuno
depression
and
sepsis
complicated with hemopericardium and died five months after the first admission. The pathology study demonstrated a perforation because a trophoblastic invasion in the right side of the cervix and in the autopsy was demonstrated right ureteral obstruction due to a fibro necrotic an inactive trophoblastic tissue determining significant right hydro-uretero nephrosis.
...
PMID:[Invasive mole with uterine rupture]. 134 67
The effects of adrenaline and isoproterenol, a specific beta-adrenergic agonist, on TNF production were investigated. Both agents inhibited the production of TNF by human blood and THP-1 cells stimulated by LPS. The effect of adrenaline was prevented by a beta-receptor antagonist, but not by an alpha-receptor antagonist. Levels of TNF mRNA were not reduced by adrenaline. Inhibition of TNF production was observed only if cells were first exposed to adrenaline or isoproterenol at about the same time as to LPS; incubation of THP-1 cells with isoproterenol for 24 h before LPS stimulation dramatically increased response, and prevented suppression of TNF production by a second dose of isoproterenol. Intracellular cAMP levels were increased by adrenaline and isoproterenol, at concentrations that inhibited TNF production. However, prolonged incubation of THP-1 cells with isoproterenol resulted in
depression
of cAMP concentrations to below basal levels. These data suggest that TNF production can be regulated by beta-receptor stimulation, that such regulation is mediated by changes in intracellular cAMP concentrations and is exerted at a posttranscriptional level. Adrenaline may be an important endogenous regulator of TNF production in
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Regulation of tumor necrosis factor production by adrenaline and beta-adrenergic agonists. 135 Feb 91
The mortality and morbidity of women who terminated their pregnancy before the 1973 Supreme Court decision in Roe v Wade are compared with post-Roe v Wade mortality and morbidity. Mortality data before 1973 are from the National Center for Health Statistics; data from 1973 through 1985 are from the Centers for Disease Control and The Alan Guttmacher Institute. Trends in serious abortion-related complications between 1970 and 1990 are based on data from the Joint Program for the Study of Abortion and from the National Abortion Federation. Deaths from illegally induced abortion declined between 1940 and 1972 in part because of the introduction of antibiotics to manage
sepsis
and the widespread use of effective contraceptives. Deaths from legal abortion declined fivefold between 1973 and 1985 (from 3.3 deaths to 0.4 death per 100,000 procedures), reflecting increased physician education and skills, improvements in medical technology, and, notably, the earlier termination of pregnancy. The risk of death from legal abortion is higher among minority women and women over the age of 35 years, and increases with gestational age. Legal-abortion mortality between 1979 and 1985 was 0.6 death per 100,000 procedures, more than 10 times lower than the 9.1 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births between 1979 and 1986. Serious complications from legal abortion are rare. Most women who have a single abortion with vacuum aspiration experience few if any subsequent problems getting pregnant or having healthy children. Less is known about the effects of multiple abortions on future fecundity. Adverse emotional reactions to abortion are rare; most women experience relief and reduced
depression
and distress.
...
PMID:Induced termination of pregnancy before and after Roe v Wade. Trends in the mortality and morbidity of women. Council on Scientific Affairs, American Medical Association. 847 94
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