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

Baboons anaesthetized with halothane and nitrous oxide in oxygen were given Althesin 0.05 ml kg-1 i.v. Cerebral blood flow (c.b.f.) was measured by an electromagnetic flowmeter and by xenon clearance whilst extracellular fluid (e.c.f.) pH of the parietal cortex was measured with a micro pH electrode. Carotid blood flow (carBF) began to decrease and carotid vascular resistance (carVR) to increase 2.0 s (SEM 0.3) after the slowing of the e.e.g. produced by Althesin, while e.c.f. pH began to change to alkaline 10.5 s (SEM 1.0) after the e.e.g. change. The first statistically significant increase in mean e.c.f. pH occurred 25 s after the Althesin-induced change in the e.e.g. The duration of the changes in carVR and e.c.f. pH were 7 and 5 min respectively. It is concluded that the change in e.c.f. pH cannot have initiated the increase in carVR which followed the cerebral matabolic depression produced by Althesin. The later alkaline shift in e.c.f. pH may, however, have maintained the increased carVR during the duration of cerebral metabolic depression produced by Althesin.
...
PMID:Relationship between cerebral blood flow changes and cortical extracellular fluid pH during cerebral metabolic depression induced by althesin. 4 61

The effects of a 0.5 g/kg body weight arginine infusion on plasma inorganic phosphates and potassium were examined in nineteen normal subjects. Plasma phosphorus displayed a highly significant (p less than 0.001) fall with a maximum depression below baseline of 1.11 +/- 0.15 mg/100 ml or 33 +/- 3% (mean +/- SEM); there was a significant correlation (p less than 0.01) between this fall and the insulin peaks induced by arginine. Plasma potassium levels displayed a distinct and significant increase in eleven of the twelve subjects studied; the maximum increase above baseline was 1.02 +/- 0.14 mEq/1 or 27 +/- 4.5% (p less than 0.001). No change occurred in blood pH values determined in four subjects. In six normal subjects, the test was repeated with the addition of somatostatin (250 micrograms bolus, followed by 500 micrograms/hr), which abolished the insulin and growth hormone response to arginine. It also abolished the fall in plasma phosphorus but appeared (if anything) to augment the increase in potassium. These findings show that arginine is responsible for a fall in plasma phosphorus related to the insulin response, and for an increase in plasma potassium of clinical significance, the mechanism(s) of which, however, are still obscure.
...
PMID:Arginine-induced hypophosphatemia and hyperkaliemia in man. 4 74

Although the precise etiologic incitant of the minimal lesion idiopathic nephrotic syndrome of childhood is not known, it is likely that a host mechanism mediates the permeability alterations of the glomerular capillary wall resulting in massive proteinuria. As a first step in examining the possibility that local kinin release may account for the proteinuria in this disorder, two parameters of the plasma kinin-generating system, plasma prekallikrein and kallikrein inhibitor, were assayed during 27 nephrotic episodes in 21 corticosteroid-responsive children. Plasma kallikrein was assayed by means of its esterase activity on a synthetic arginine ester substrate, N-alpha-tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester (TAMe), after activation of Hageman factor by kaolin. This activity, after subtraction of spontaneous arginine esterase activity (i.e., TAMe esterase activity measured in plasma not exposed to kaolin) is derived from prekallikrein. Plasma prekallikrein activity in 11 normal children was 99.6 +/- 2.9 mumol TAMe hydrolyzed/ml plasma/hr (mean +/- SEM). Kallikrein inhibitor was quantified in arbitrary units. Kallifrein inhibitor activity in 11 normal children was 0.94 +/- 0.04 units. During the overt nephrotic syndrome, before initiation of intensive daily corticosteroid treatment, mean values were: prekallikrein, 58.5 +/- 7.24 mumol/ml/hr; and kallikrein inhibitor, 0.35 +/- 0.06 units. After corticosteroid-induced remission occurred, mean values were: plasma prekallikrein, 118.6 +/- 3.2 mumol/ml/hr; and kallikrein inhitor, 0.78 +/- 0.03 mumol/ml/hr. Both parameters were again assayed in 14 of the 21 children after complete cessation of corticosteroid treatment. Plasma prekallikrein was normal, 99.6 +/- 4.8 mumol/ml/hr; but kallikrein inhibitor was still somewhat depressed, 0.84 +/- 0.03 units. A subset of 9 patients had marked depression of plasma prekallikrein to levels less than 20 mumol/ml/hr and essentially undetectable inhibitor activity. Serum alpha-2 macroglobulin was elevated in nephrotic patients: mean value during relapse, 862 +/- 29 mg/100 ml; during corticosteroid-maintaining remission, 615 +/- 29 mg/100 ml. After cessation of corticosteroids, mean serum level was 481 +/- 20 mg/100 ml. The proportional reduction of plasma prekallikrein and kallikrein inhibitor suggested that an enzyme-inhibitor complex formed in vivo, perhaps at a local site of activation in proximity to the glomerular basement membrane. These data suggest that the plasma kinin-generating system may be the host effector mechanism subserving the increased glomerular capillary permeability in the minimal lesion nephrotic syndrome of childhood.
...
PMID:A study of the plasma kinin-generating system in children with the minimal lesion, idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. 5 8

The authors studied 12 patients with chronic persistent hepatitis and persistent or intermittent mild unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Maximum serum total bilirubin concentration ranged from 2.1 to 3.6 mg/dl. Hemolysis was not evident. Hepatic bilirubin UDP-glucuronyltransferase activity assayed in each patient ranged from 0.16 to 0.39 U (mean +/- SEM = 0.27 +/- 0.02) compared to 0.68-1.99 (1.35 +/- 0.08) in 23 normals, 0.78-2.28 (1.41 +/- 0.05) in 53 patients with acute hepatitis, 0.34-1.74 (0.81 +/- 0.09) in 16 patients with anicteric chronic persistent hepatitis, and 0-0.62 (0.24 +/- 0.03) in 33 patients with Gilbert's syndrome. The mean UDP-glucuronyltransferase activity was significantly lower in anicteric chronic persistent hepatitis compared to normals, but higher than in Gilbert's syndrome. The incidence of unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia among first degree relatives was 0:32 in icteric chronic persistent hepatitis compared to 24:85 (28%) in Gilbert's syndrome. These results show that the likely cause for the unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia associated with chronic persistent hepatitis is an acquired depression of hepatic bilirubin UDP-glucuronyltransferase activity. The data suggest that the enzyme defect is related to chronic persistent hepatitis.
...
PMID:Chronic persistent hepatitis and unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. 10 75

Previous studies of the effect of angiotensin on myocardial contractility have yielded conflicting results. Possible reasons for the observed disparities include differences in techniques for measuring contractility, in species (dog, cat, and man), in myocardial state (normal or diseased), in preparation observed (heart-lung, isolated heart, papillary muscle, atrial myocardium, intact heart), and in dosage schedule. Moreover, there are no reported studies in the intact human heart, normal or diseased, in which contractility measurements are based on velocity-force relations. To resolve the conflict, left ventricular myocardial contractility was measured using the same expressions for the force-velocity relationship in all subjects. Studies were performed in five normal human subjects, six patients with cardiomyopathy, eight normal mongrel dogs, and six dogs with ischemic myocardial scarring, before and during angiotensin infusions in dosages producing 15--20-mm Hg increases of aortic diastolic pressure. Contractile element velocity at peak, dP/dt (Vce) and the Frank-Levinson contractility index (CyIx), which normalizes Vce for diastolic fiber length, decreased during angiotensin infusion in all groups. The mean decreases (11 to 19) per cent in Vce, 15 to 23 per cent in CyIx, SEM's 4-5 per cent) were significant (P values ranging from smaller than 0.05 to smaller 0.005) in the normal hearts of dogs and man and in the scarred canine hearts, in which preangiotensin Vce and CyIx were normal. In the cardiomyopathy group, in which contractility was depressed before angiotensin, the drug elicited a further decrease in Vce (mean fall 17 plus or minus 7 per cent, P smaller than 0.1) and CyIx (26 plus or minus 8 per cent, P smaller than 0.02). We conclude that, in the intact organism, with a normal myocardium or a diffuse or segmental myocardial disease, the administration of angiotensin results in a depression of contractility.
...
PMID:The effect of angiotensin on myocardial contractility. 23 32

The effects of glucose-insulin-potassium (GIK) and placebo normal saline (S) infusion on treadmill-walking time to angina, ST depression, heart rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), rate pressure product (RPP), blood glucose (G), lactate (L) and free fatty acids (FFA) were studied in 14 non diabetic patients with exertional angina. For the whole group, the post-GIK walking time to angina (393 +/- 33 sec, mean +/- SEM) was greater than the values during control GIK (319 +/- 20 sec, p less than 0.02) and post-S infusion (334 +/- sec, p less than 0.05), but circulatory and ST responses were similar in post-GIK and post-S studies. 7 of the 14 patients experienced significantly greater improvement in exercise tolerance following GIK (467 +/- 39 sec) in comparison to control GIK (313 +/- 29 sec, p less than 0.001) and post-S infusion (334 +/- 32 sec, p less than 0.005) and exercised to a higher HR, SBP and RPP after GIK than after S infusion. At the onset of angina these patients had similar ST-segment depression before and after GIK but when ST segments were assessed after GIK at the same exercise duration when angina had occurred during the control and post-S studies, there was significantly less ST depression (p less than 0.01). Of the remaining 7 patients exercise tolerance following GIK deteriorated in 3, remained unchanged in 2 and increased by 12 and 48 sec in 2 patients in comparison to post-S values. Comparison of post-GUK and post-S values for G, L and FFA for the whole group showed significantly lower resting values of FFA and post-exercise values of G following GIK infusion. The differences in clinical and circulatory responses between patients who improved and those who did not improve following GIK were not related to the angiographically determined severity of coronary artery disease or to GIK-induced metabolic changes. Results suggest that some patients with angina pectoris do benefit from GIK infusion but the response in a given patient to this therapeutic modality is unpredictable.
...
PMID:Effects of glucose-insulin-potassium infusion on the angina response during treadmill exercise. 38 19

Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was measured at rest and during supine bicycle exercise in 31 men with arteriographically defined coronary disease and in 15 normal men. LVEF was calculated from a left ventricular time vs activity curve (collimated scintillation probe, 99m Technetium) as the fracitonal fall in count-rate divided by the background-corrected left ventricular end-diastolic count-rate. In normal men LVEF at rest averaged .59 +/- .06 (+/-SD) and during exercise was .72 +/- .08. LVEF did not increase with exercise in men with coronary disease (.55 +/- .03 to .57 +/- .03; N = 31; AVE +/-SEM; NS). In 17 men with coronary disease who had ST segment depression with exercise, LVEF either decreased or was unaltered in all (55 +/- .04 to .49 +/- .03; P less than 0.05); whereas in 14 without ST depression, LVEF increased in 10 (71 per cent) and was unaltered in 4 (29 per cent) (.54 +/- .04 to .66 +/- .04; P less than 0.01). Results suggest that LVEF during exercise normally increases, but in men with coronary disease LVEF either fails to increase or actually decreases. In addition there appears to be a relationship between ST segment changes during exercise and ejection fraction.
...
PMID:Effect of exercise on left ventricular ejection fraction in men with coronary artery disease. 42 82

Thirty men, mean age 55 years, known to have treadmill-induced ischemic ST-segment depression, performed static and dynamic effort, i.e., forearm lifting and treadmill exercise, separately and combined. Static effort was sustained at 20%, 25% or 30% of maximal forearm lifting capacity. Two symptom-limited treadmill tests, one with and one without added static effort, were performed on each of two visits. Compared with dynamic effort alone, combined static-dynamic effort decreased treadmill work load and increased heart rate, systolic blood pressure and rate-pressure product at the onset of ischemic ST-segment depression or angina pectoris: 7.1 +/- 0.4 vs 8.0 +/- 0.5 (SEM) multiples of resting oxygen consumption (mets), estimated; 141 +/- 3 vs 134 +/- 3 beats/min; 170 +/- 4 vs. 162 +/- 4 mm Hg and 239 +/- 8 vs 218 +/- 9 (p less than 0.001). The prevalence of angina pectoris was significantly less with combined static-dynamic effort than with dynamic effort alone. Static effort causes a resetting of the threshold at which ischemic abnormalities appear during dynamic effort.
...
PMID:Comparison of cardiovascular responses to static-dynamic effort and dynamic effort alone in patients with chronic ischemic heart disease. 42 9

Confidence in the assignment of lifetime psychiatric diagnosis is of great importance to genetic studies of psychiatric illness. To establish the credibility of a lifetime psychiatric history obtained via a structured interview, two paradigms were constructed to estimate reproducibility of the interview recording process. The first paradigm, simultaneous coding, was used to test comparability of four interviewers independently coding an interview form. Low variance/high reliability was demonstrated. The second paradigm, test-retest, provided for each subject to be interviewed twice, with a mean interim time of 6.7 months (SEM = .39). This paradigm demonstrated high reproducibility of psychiatric diagnosis over time. The overall k value for measurement of diagnostic agreement was .79. Only the diagnostic category of minor depression seemed to evade reliability. It was shown across both paradigms that an interviewer need not be blind (naive to previously held diagnosis) to obtain an unbiased interview. However, it is still recommended that the diagnosis of each interview should be determined by an independent diagnostician.
...
PMID:Blindness and reliability in lifetime psychiatric diagnosis. 43 12

This study compared estimates of sinoatrial conduction time (SACT) obtained by constant atrial pacing (CAP) and premature atrial stimulation (PAS) with measured SACT in isolated rabbit right atrial preparations. Transmembrane potentials and surface electrograms were recorded from the sinus node and crista terminalis, respectively. The crista terminalis was paced 5, 10 and 15 beats/min faster than the spontaneous sinus rate with a train of eight pulses. Estimate of SACT by CAP was taken as the difference between the first atrial return cycle and the mean spontaneous cycle length. SACTs at 5, 10 and 15 beats/min faster were 76 +/- 10, 86 +/- 10 and 96 +/- 10 msec (mean +/- SEM; n = 12), respectively; correlation coefficients with the true SACT were 0.7, 0.54 and 0.4. Consecutive determinations of SACT by PAS and CAP in the same preparation (n = 6) at 10 beats/min faster gave SACTs of 86 +/- 13 and 79 +/- 14 msec, respectively, compared with true SACTs of 79 +/- 10 msec. Shortening of sinus node action potential, depression of automaticity and shifts in the site of the primary pacemaker contributed to the errors in both techniques. Estimation of SACT by CAP may be further complicated by failure of sinus node capture. Principles to minimize some of these errors are also presented.
...
PMID:The estimation of sinoatrial conduction time in rabbit heart by the constant atrial pacing technique. 45 23


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>