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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifteen dogs were given 9.5 ml of ethylene glycol/kg of body weight, orally. Physical examination and clinical laboratory findings were evaluated at 1 and 3 hours after ingestion. Three of these dogs were also evaluated at 6, 9, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hours after ingestion. At 1 and 3 hours, the dogs were depressed, ataxic, and polydipsic with increased urine output and serum osmolality. Plasma bicarbonate and urine osmolality were decreased. The osmolal and anion gaps were increased at 1 and 3 hours, respectively. Calcium oxalate crystalluria was first observed at 6 hours. Diminished renal excretory function was not evident until 48 hours.
Depression
, ataxia, metabolic acidosis, polydipsia, and polyuria in the presence of serum
hyperosmolality
were early (1 and 3 hour) findings that indicated ethylene glycol intoxication in dogs.
...
PMID:Early clinicopathologic findings in dogs ingesting ethylene glycol. 652 24
The aim of this study was to investigate the mechanisms of the cardiodepressive action of ionic and non-ionic contrast media currently used in coronary arteriography. Experiments carried out on isolated preparations of cat papillary muscle, treated with increasing concentrations of Telebrix 39, Radioselectan, Hexabrix and Iopamidol 370 and 300, on the one hand and, on the other hand, a pre-determined dose of Telebrix and Iopamidol 300 during hypoxia and subsequent reoxygenation, showed that, at constant Ca2+ concentrations: (1) The cardiodepressive effects of contrast media are correlated with the
hyperosmolality
that they induce. When osmolality was higher than 400 mOsm, all the products caused a reduction of the peak force (PF: 40.49 +/- 5.15%), the maximum velocity of contraction (Vmax: 39.85 +/- 3.66%) and of the peak velocity of relaxation (Vrelax: 23.30 +/- 2.20%) (P less than 0.01). The time to peak force (TPF), on the other hand, remained constant, whereas the half-relaxation time (THR) was increased. No significant differences were observed between these effects and those induced by control iso-osmolar solutions when the same osmolality was induced. In practice, however, the critical
hyperosmolality
value of 400 mOsm is never reached when using non-ionic contrast media such as Hexabrix and Iopamidol 300. This could explain the excellent tolerance to these substances. (2) During hypoxia and reoxygenation, the effect of
hyperosmolality
is more marked. Thus, the non-ionic contrast medium, Iopamidol 300 (340 mOsm), reduces the hypoxic contractility
depression
(PF: 53.10 +/- 2.60% compared to the control values of 47.60 +/- 5.00%, P less than 0.01), whereas, at the same dose, the ionic medium Telebrix is hyperosmolar (440 mOsm) and induces a more pronounced hypoxic
depression
of contractility (P less than 0.01). The critical
hyperosmolality
is never reached during ventriculography (320 mOsm), whatever the medium used, but it can be observed during coronary arteriography. It is, therefore, important to use non-ionic contrast media in the investigation of unstable angina and of acute myocardium infarction.
...
PMID:Effects of contrast media used in angiocardiography on the mechanical performance and the relaxation of normal and ischaemic myocardium. 672 85
In 21 patients, epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) was an early symptom of nonketotic hyperglycemia and occurred during an initial phase of hyponatremia and mild
hyperosmolality
. EPC persisted for an average of 8 days, and its duration correlated predominantly with the degree of hyponatremia.
Depression
of consciousness and cessation of seizures occurred with increasing severity of hyperglycemia and
hyperosmolality
. In 9 patients, EPC was the first symptom leading to the diagnosis of diabetes mellitus. Four patients died of serious associated illness. The majority of the patients had evidence of a localized structural cerebral lesion. Metabolic disturbances including hyperglycemia, mild
hyperosmolality
, hyponatremia, and lack of ketoacidosis contribute to the development of EPC in areas of focal cerebral damage.
...
PMID:Epilepsia partialis continua associated with nonketotic hyperglycemia: clinical and biochemical profile of 21 patients. 677 82
In our study of 262 hospitalized flame burn patients, serum
hyperosmolality
, defined as having at least two reported osmolality values greater than 310 mOsm/kg, was observed in 15 patients (6%). From this group, nine patients were found to have an osmolal discrepancy (reported serum osmolality minus calculated serum osmolality). All patients in this group had a burn surface area greater than 35% TBS. The discrepancy between reported osmolality values of two patients from this group, determined by freezing point
depression
and vapor point analysis, suggested that a volatile substance was contributing to the osmolality. Further analysis by gas chromatography revealed propylene glycol as the agent accounting for most of the osmolal discrepancy. The only exposure to this polyalcohol was from the topical antibiotic cream (silver sulfadiazine) used in their treatment.
...
PMID:Hyperosmolality in the burn patient: analysis of an osmolal discrepancy. 735 97
4-Methylpyrazole (4-MP), an alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor, was administered to dogs to treat ethylene glycol (EG) intoxication. Eleven dogs were given 10.6 g of EG/kg of body weight; 5 dogs were treated with 4-MP 5 hours after EG ingestion and 6 dogs were treated with 4-MP 8 hours after EG ingestion. 4-Methylpyrazole was administered IV as a 50-mg/ml [corrected] solution in 50% polyethylene glycol: initial dose, 20 mg/kg; at 12 hours after initial dose, 15 mg/kg; at 24 hours after initial dose, 10 mg/kg; and at 30 hours after initial dose, 5 mg/kg. Physical, biochemical, hematologic, blood gas, serum and urine EG concentrations, and urinalysis findings were evaluated at 0, 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 24, 48, 72 hours, and at 1 week and 2 weeks after EG ingestion. Dogs of both groups developed clinicopathologic signs associated with EG intoxication, including CNS
depression
,
hyperosmolality
, high anion gap metabolic acidosis, polydipsia, polyuria, calcium oxalate monohydrate and dihydrate crystalluria, and isosthenuria. Fractional excretion of sodium was increased in all dogs between 1 and 9 hours after EG ingestion, but remained increased beyond 24 hours only in the 2 dogs treated at 8 hours after EG ingestion that developed acute renal failure. All dogs treated 5 hours after EG ingestion recovered without morphologic, biochemical, or clinical evidence of renal impairment. Of the 6 dogs treated 8 hours after EG ingestion, 2 developed acute renal failure. One of the dogs treated 8 hours after EG ingestion remained isosthenuric for 2 months, but did not manifest any other signs of renal impairment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Efficacy of 4-methylpyrazole for treatment of ethylene glycol intoxication in dogs. 788 24
Salt poisoning has been described under various circumstances in adult cattle. Presenting clinical signs in 6 Holstein beef cattle with such poisoning were primarily dysfunction of the central nervous system and included ataxia, opisthotonus, nystagmus,
depression
, muscle twitching and intermittent convulsions, as well as abdominal pain and polydipsia. Diarrhea occurred in 2, and blindness in 3/6 cattle. Hypernatremia (161.8 - 178.8 mmol/L) and
hyperosmolality
(331.81 - 366.18 mOsm/L) were present in all animals. To treat the affected cattle, access to fresh water was restricted, vascular volume was expanded with isotonic saline and then hypotonic fluid (5% Dextrose solution) i.v. and dexamethasone im was administered. Although biochemical parameters returned to normal reference ranges, 3/6 affected animals remained blind.
...
PMID:Salt poisoning in beef cattle. 1508 Feb 19
Hypertonic NaCl solutions have been used for small-volume resuscitation from hypovolemic shock. We sought to identify osmolality- and Na(+)-dependent components of the effects of the hyperosmotic NaCl solution (85 mOsm/kg increment) on contraction and cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in isolated rat ventricular myocytes. The biphasic change in contraction and Ca(2+) transient amplitude (decrease followed by recovery) was accompanied by qualitatively similar changes in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) content and fractional release and was mimicked by isosmotic, equimolar increase in extracellular [Na(+)] ([Na(+)](o)). Raising osmolality with sucrose, however, augmented systolic [Ca(2+)](i) monotonically without change in SR parameters and markedly decreased contraction amplitude and diastolic cell length. Functional SR inhibition with thapsigargin abolished
hyperosmolality
effects on [Ca(2+)](i). After 15-min perfusion, both hyperosmotic solutions slowed mechanical relaxation during twitches and [Ca(2+)](i) decline during caffeine-evoked transients, raised diastolic and systolic [Ca(2+)](i), and depressed systolic contractile activity. These effects were greater with sucrose solution, and were not observed after isosmotic [Na(+)](o) increase. We conclude that under the present experimental conditions, transmembrane Na(+) redistribution apparently plays an important role in determining changes in SR Ca(2+) mobilization, which markedly affect contractile response to hyperosmotic NaCl solutions and attenuate the osmotically induced
depression
of contractile activity.
...
PMID:Osmolality- and Na+ -dependent effects of hyperosmotic NaCl solution on contractile activity and Ca2+ cycling in rat ventricular myocytes. 1768 Feb 66
According to WHO data more than 180 million people suffer from diabetes mellitus worldwide and this number could double within 15 years. Normal function of the brain is dependent on continuous supply of glucose. In hypoglycemia, production of counterregulatory hormones (glucagon, epinephrine, growth hormone, and cortisol) increases, the sympathetic system becomes stimulated, and features of neuroglycopenia appear in order to save the homeostasis. Hypoglycemia is an alarming, actually life threatening condition, but the exposure to chronic hyperglycemia has a more detrimental effect on the brain than recurrent exposure to severe hypoglycemia. The active neural response to hyperglycemia induces changes in gene expression and function. The first steps against
hyperosmolality
are initially adaptive, but later hyperactivation of the hypothalamic magnocellular neurosecretory cells leads to their structural damage. Changes in hippocampal gene transcription are partially implicated in the deterioration of declarative memory. Neurologically passive shunting of excess glucose through alternative cellular metabolic pathways induces atherogenic, vascular lesions, free radicals, leukoencephalopathy and atrophy of the brain and thus leading to cognitive deficits. In physiological conditions insulin has neuroprotective effect. However, insulin resistance in the central nervous system correlates with insulin resistance in the periphery. Loss of responsiveness to insulin could render neurons more susceptible to neurotoxic insults, the protective effect of insulin diminishes, and apoptosis, neurodegeneration and the resultant cognitive decline are all increased in insulin-resistant patients. Some unclear relations appear between diabetes mellitus and Alzheimer's disease. Diabetic patients with APOE-4 gene have an increased risk for Alzheimer's disease. Prevalence of
depression
is higher in patients with diabetes mellitus and in turn,
depression
is a risk factor for diabetes mellitus. Simultaneous presence of
depression
and diabetes mellitus tends to worsen the course of both.
...
PMID:[Cerebral complications of diabetes mellitus]. 1805 61
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