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)

High frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) was attempted in ten infants with severe respiratory failure not responding to conventional ventilation (CV); it was, therefore, used as a rescue measure. HFOV was successful in improving the respiratory status of seven infants, all with hyaline membrane disease (HMD). Five of these infants survived, of the remaining two, one died of massive peri/intra-ventricular haemorrhage and the other of cholestasis associated with total parenteral nutrition. It was unsuccessful in three infants, one with meconium aspiration, the second died within two hours commencing HFOV and the third with severe depression and hypotonia.
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PMID:High frequency oscillatory ventilation in neonates with respiratory distress. 188 79

We evaluated the psychological status of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients with chronic respiratory failure, who were qualified for or on long-term oxygen therapy. Forty eight patients were examined. The patients' psychological status was assessed by means of the following methods: detailed clinical interview, the Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale (MAS), Beck's Depression Inventory, and Tylka's Psychological Evaluation of Rehabilitation Efficiency Scale (SOPER). The study demonstrated that the great majority of patients presented a high degree of anxiety, depression and psychological tension, had low self-esteem and did not believe in the efficiency of therapy.
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PMID:Psychological status of COPD patients on long term oxygen therapy. 202 40

Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors produce diverse physiologic effects, but lethal exposure consistently produces respiratory failure due to neuromuscular paralysis or depression of respiratory control centers in the medulla. Simultaneous measurement of gastrocnemius muscle contraction and efferent phrenic nerve activity was used to determine the primary cause of respiratory failure produced by neostigmine and diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP) in anesthetized cats. Both neostigmine and DFP abolished phrenic nerve activity prior to producing neuromuscular blockade. Furthermore, neostigmine did not alter brain acetylcholinesterase activity and pretreatment with either atropine methylbromide or atropine increased the dose of neostigmine required to abolish phrenic nerve activity. In contrast, DFP abolished brain cholinesterase activity and only atropine inhibited its respiratory effects. Despite the loss of efferent phrenic nerve activity, there is no evidence of a direct effect of neostigmine on respiratory control centers. Neostigmine may instead alter afferent inputs which modulate respiration to produce a reflex respiratory failure.
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PMID:Mechanisms of respiratory failure produced by neostigmine and diisopropyl fluorophosphate. 206 14

Alterations in pulmonary surfactant are partly responsible for the respiratory insufficiency seen under septic shock process. We have used an experimental model of LPS-induced shock in rats to examine the cells responsible for the pulmonary surfactant synthesis and its relationship to lung injury. (14C)Choline incorporation into phosphatidylcholine was significantly reduced in lung homogenates or type II cells obtained from LPS-treated animals. Addition of LPS in vitro fails to increase (14C)choline incorporation in type II cells obtained from LPS-treated animals. We suggest that this depression of pulmonary phosphatidylcholine synthesis may partly explain the occurrence of respiratory failure with septic shock.
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PMID:Effect of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide on phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis by rat lung and alveolar type II cells. 218 66

Acute poisoning with organic solvents and other volatile compounds now usually follows deliberate inhalation (volatile substance abuse) or ingestion of these compounds. Solvents from adhesives, typewriter correction and dry cleaning fluids, cigarette lighter refills (butane) and aerosol propellants are commonly abused. The major risk is that of sudden death. Arrhythmias leading to cardiac arrest are thought to cause most deaths, but anoxia, respiratory depression and vagal stimulation leading to cardiac arrest may also contribute, as may indirect causes such as aspiration of vomit or trauma. In the United Kingdom (UK), 3.5 to 10% of young people have at least experimented with volatile substance abuse and mortality is more than 100 per annum. The products abused are cheap and readily available despite legislation designed to limit supply. Volatile substance abuse is not illegal and only a minority of abusers are known to progress to heavy alcohol or illicit drug use. Prevention of abuse by education, not only of children but also of parents, teachers, retailers and health care workers, is important in limiting the problem. However, volatile substance abuse-related deaths are still increasing in the UK despite many measures aimed at prevention. Clinically, volatile substance abuse is characterised by a rapid onset of intoxication and rapid recovery. Euphoria and disinhibition may be followed by hallucinations, tinnitus, ataxia, confusion, nausea and vomiting. It is important not to further alarm the patient if signs of serious toxicity are present, since a cardiac arrest may be precipitated. Further exposure should be prevented and the patient resuscitated and given supplemental oxygen if necessary. Cardiac arrhythmias should be treated conventionally and respiratory failure managed supportively. Long term exposure to n-hexane is associated with the development of peripheral neuropathy, while prolonged abuse (notably of toluene or chlorinated solvents) can cause permanent damage to the central nervous system, heart, liver, kidney and lungs. Knowledge of the routes of absorption, distribution and excretion of volatile compounds, and of the rates governing these processes, is important in understanding the rate of onset, intensity and duration of intoxication, and rate of recovery after volatile substance abuse. In addition, such knowledge is helpful when the clinician is attempting to interpret the results of toxicological analyses performed on samples (blood, other tissues, urine) from such patients. Many volatile substances are partly metabolised, the metabolites being eliminated in exhaled air or in urine. Although metabolism normally results in detoxification, enhanced toxicity may also result as with carbon tetrachloride, chloroform, dichloromethane, n-hexane, trichloroethylene and possibly halothane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:An introduction to the clinical toxicology of volatile substances. 222 69

Cardiorespiratory effects of tetrodotoxin (TTX) (15 micrograms/kg, i.p.) were investigated in urethane-anesthetized guinea pigs acutely instrumented for the recording of medullary respiratory-related units (RRUs), diaphragm electromyogram (DEMG), electrocorticogram (ECoG), electrocardiogram (ECG), blood pressure (BP), endtidal CO2, and arterial O2 and CO2. Respiratory system responses showed a hyperventilatory profile during the initial stage of intoxication. This was followed by an abrupt onset of a progressive decrease in the respiratory frequency, and a respiratory rate depression-related respiratory failure. The average time to TTX-induced respiratory arrest and death was 10.3 +/- 4.2 min. Concurrently recorded inspiratory and expiratory RRU activities indicated that respiration invariably failed in an end-expiratory position as manifested by a sustained period of expiratory RRU discharge. The progressive rate depression prior to respiratory arrest was temporally correlated only to a concomitantly augmenting expiratory RRU discharge duration. Inspiratory RRU discharge duration, on the other hand, did not display any significant change throughout the course of intoxication. The asymmetry in RRU response patterns indicates either an expiratory network component's particular sensitivity to perturbation by TTX or a dissociative trend in some bulbar respiratory rhythmogenic mechanisms. Peripheral cardiorespiratory changes were also quite profound. These included a gradual and steadfast decline in BP, a steadily decreasing amplitude in DEMG oscillations, and a state of progressive hypercapnia and hypoxemia. Changes in heart rate and ECG waveform attributes prior to respiratory arrest were not appreciable. In conclusion, in addition to a variety of TTX-induced peripheral cardiorespiratory effects, findings from this study have revealed a central respiratory system component that appears to show an unusual sensitivity to perturbation by TTX. The significance of this unique phenomenon as it relates to the nature and extent of TTX-induced central respiratory depression is discussed.
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PMID:Respiratory and cardiovascular effects of tetrodotoxin in urethane-anesthetized guinea pigs. 227 27

An investigation has been made with regard to the clinical picture of 87 terminally ill patients with lung cancer. It has yielded the following points. 1) Seven patients had been informed of their diagnosis. 2) Intravenous hyperalimentation was administered in 78 cases (90%), oxygen therapy in 68 cases (78%), and morphine in 35 cases (40%). 3) The most frequent cause of death in these patients was respiratory failure, due to progress of cancer, then infection, pleural, or pericardial effusion, or interstitial pneumonitis. 4) Psychic disturbances involved anxiety over breathing, depression, and delirium. In only 12% of the patients did the mental condition seem normal until death. 5) To deal with the dying patient's needs, it is necessary to establish proper treatment for the control of sensory dyspnea and for psychosocial support by a psychiatrist and other professionals for members of the family.
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PMID:[The clinical picture of terminally ill patients with lung cancer]. 250 34

The harmful effect of iron excess was studied in an experiment using fifteen adult sheep. The animals were divided into three groups of 5 each. The sheep of the group I were kept as controls, those of the group II and III were supplemented with iron in doses of 80 and 40 mg/kg body weight (BW)/24 h respectively. The animals of group II died after a period of 3-7 weeks showing anorexia, loss of weight, diarrhoea, depression and symptoms of circulatory and respiratory failure. From the animals of group III one died after 13 weeks, with symptoms of pulmonary oedema, while the other 4 survived for 22 weeks, together with the animals of the control group. The iron-supplemented animals presented increased values of Serum Iron (SI), Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC), percent Transferring Saturation (% SAT), Alanino aminotransferase (ALT), serum Alkalin Phosphatase (SAP), Serum Urea Nitrogen (SUN) Creatinine, Phosphorus and decreased values of serum Copper concentration. These parameters were greater in group II. The iron concentration in the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys was also much higher than in the controls. The histological examination revealed degeneration of the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys in both groups, while cells overloaded with hemosiderin were seen in the third group only. In conclusion, it was shown that chronic intoxication may occur in sheep overdosed with iron. The toxic dose of iron ranged between 40 and 80 (mg/Kg body weight) per day and was close to 40 mg, when iron was administered in the soluble from FeCl3.6H2O.
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PMID:Iron toxicity in sheep. 253 32

To investigate the changes of testosterone (T) secretion under sustained hypoxia, we determined basal levels of urine T, 17 ketosteroid, luteinizing hormone releasing hormone (LHRH), luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and response to LHRH and HCG (human chorionic gonadotropin) in male patients with respiratory failure. After evaluating blood gas data, we also measured serum T, LH, FSH, plasma progesterone (P) and 17 hydroxyprogesterone (17OH-P). The subjects were divided into 3 groups according to PaO2; Group 1 with a PaO2 under 60 Torr, Group 2 with a PaO2 between 60 Torr and under 70 Torr, Group 3 was an age-matched control group. Urine T and serum T were significantly lower in Group 1 compared with those of Group 3. In the LHRH test, augmented relative responsiveness and delayed peak value in LH secretion were observed in Group 1, compared with those of Group 3. As for the HCG test, no differences were observed among the 3 groups. The ratio of 17OH-P to P, which indicates activity of 17-hydroxylase, was observed to be diminished with increasing degrees of hypoxia. These data suggest that in male patients with respiratory failure there was depression in T secretion as well as 17-hydroxylase activity due to hypothalamic-pituitary hypofunction.
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PMID:[Depression of testosterone secretion in male patients with respiratory failure]. 261 89

The aim of the study was to evaluate the psychical state of 48 patients with chronic respiratory failure in the course of COPD qualified for home oxygen therapy. The psychical state was analysed using the following tests: thorough clinical history, J. Taylor's evident anxiety scale, H. Gough's adjective scale and psychological rehabilitation effectiveness scale according to J. Tylka. The study showed that the majority of patients demonstrated high levels of fear, depression and anxiety, lowered self evaluation, negative attitude toward work, lack of life aims and disbelief in therapy benefit. Correlation between degree of primary disease and lowered self-being could not be demonstrated. The decisive effect had socio-economic situation and individual traits.
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PMID:[Psychological state of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease]. 263 Oct 50


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