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)

During the course of chronic airflow obstruction the effect of the pathological process and compensatory mechanisms that take place in the lungs to limit these effects express themselves by easily indentifiable clinical signs. The limitations of expiratory flow is responsible for the prolongation of the duration of maximal expiration: Pursed lipped breathing is probably the method used by certain patients to limit airway collapse; the increase in the residual volume and functional residual capacity results in distortion of the thorax and a change in the configuration of the inspiratory muscles, reducing their capacity to generate pressures (Hoover's sign: respiratory pulse, hypertrophy of the accessory respiratory muscles, thoraco-abdominal asynchrony); the considerable increase in the inspiratory thoracic depression accounts for the inspiratory descent of the trachea and the sub-sternal "tug". Finally the ventilatory pattern is different, ventilation being rapid and superficial, probably in order to adapt to the constraints imposed by the pathological process.
...
PMID:[Physical signs reflecting mechanical changes in the respiratory system in chronic obstructive pneumopathy]. 293 6

In pentobarbitalized rats, hypoxia induced by inhalation of O2 8%-N2 92%, produces a transient hyperventilation which is followed by a respiratory depression and an apnea. A cardiovascular collapse is then observed. Correction of the hypocapnia depending on the initial hyperventilation, by inhalation of a gas mixture containing 4% CO2 maintains the hyperventilation and suppresses the cardiovascular collapse. Carbon dioxide activity is both a direct one by stimulation of respiratory centers and an indirect one by increasing the sensitivity of the peripheral arterial chemoreceptors to hypoxia. Four percent carbon dioxide just compensating hypocapnia are sufficient to prevent apnea and vascular collapse. The increase of this concentration up to hypercapnia complicates the interpretation of the results by addition of hypoxic and hypercapnic effects.
...
PMID:[Effects of the addition of carbon dioxide on manifestations of acute hypoxia in rats]. 297 Feb 83

Effects of brevetoxin were evaluated in cats anesthetized with pentobarbital under conditions of controlled end-expiratory pCO2 and constant body temperature. Recordings were made of arterial blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory pattern, diaphragm EMG, evoked tibialis muscle twitch and evoked contraction of the nictitating membrane. Electrical stimulation was employed for periodic excitation of the medullary respiratory center, the phrenic nerve, the peroneal nerve and the cervical sympathetic nerve. Brevetoxin was prepared at a concentration of 1.0 mg/ml in an aqueous medium of 2.5% ethanol plus 2.5% Emulphor 620 (General Aniline and Film Corp., New York). Small i.v. bolus injections of the toxin (40 micrograms/kg) evoked, without tachyphylaxis, the Bezold-Jarisch reflex triad of bradycardia, hypotension and bradypnea. This effect was essentially abolished by vagotomy. Continued injections then resulted in pressor reactions and tachycardia, along with the development of respiratory dysrhythmia. Large doses of brevetoxin (160 micrograms/kg i.v.) caused somatomotor seizures accompanied by severe hypertension, that occurred even after decerebration and cervical spinal cord transection. Cranial intra-arterial and intra-cerebroventricular injections of brevetoxin produced hypertension and respiratory depression more effectively than did i.v. injections. Systemic cumulation of the toxin, with the respiration supported artificially, caused death from cardiovascular collapse, without significant blockade of neuromuscular and ganglionic transmission. It is concluded that brevetoxin exerts its major toxic effects on the circulation and respiration through reflex and central actions, largely sparing peripheral motor mechanisms.
...
PMID:Neurological analysis of respiratory, cardiovascular and neuromuscular effects of brevetoxin in cats. 299 23

Patent ductus venosus was diagnosed in a 10-week-old Holstein heifer with acute onset of collapse and marked tenesmus. Additional clinical signs observed during the course of hospitalization included depression, anorexia, hind limb ataxia, bruxism, and poor growth. Clinicopathologic test results included high blood ammonia concentration, prolonged sulfobromophthalein half-life, and high serum bile acid concentration. Liver biopsy revealed mild periportal fibrosis, but no appreciable hepatocyte atrophy. Mesenteric portography and percutaneous ultrasonography confirmed the patent ductus venosus. An atrial septal defect prosthesis was placed in the ductus venosus, using a catheterization technique. After surgery, however, clinicopathologic test results were unchanged. Ultrasonography revealed that the prosthesis had pulled away from one side of the vessel. When the calf was 10.5 months old, surgical correction was achieved by a transhepatic ligation technique. Ultrasonography confirmed closure of the ductus venosus during and after surgery. Blood ammonia and serum bile acid concentrations and sulfobromophthalein half-life were normal 3 weeks after surgery. The calf had no further episodes of hepatoencephalopathy and was successfully bred at 18 months of age.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and surgical correction of patent ductus venosus in a calf. 306 3

Between 1982 and 1983, we experienced four cases of hemodynamic collapse accompanied by an ST-segment depression in the ECG lead II, shortly after the cessation of cardiopulmonary bypass. The bypass graft flows monitored in these patients during the hemodynamic collapse episodes were remarkably low. In three cases, nitroglycerin (0.5-1 mg) was injected directly into the vein graft, which increased the graft flow suddenly, returned the ST-segment to the baseline, and improved the circulatory condition. Since 1984, however, diltiazem has been used in the cardioplegic solution and postoperative drip infusion. Due to the introduction of this drug, coronary artery spasm has not been seen in any of our patients since. These findings show that the monitoring of ST-segment changes and bypass graft flows are useful in the early diagnosis of coronary artery spasm after myocardial revascularization. Direct infusion of nitroglycerin into the vein graft is effective for the treatment of spasm, while diltiazem is useful in the prevention of coronary artery spasm incidental to myocardial revascularization.
...
PMID:Coronary artery spasm during coronary artery bypass surgery: its diagnosis, treatment and prevention. 315 18

This study is the first attempt to characterize neurological and behavioural consequences of fluid-percussion concussive head injury in the cat. Both animals initially anaesthetized by N2O as well as unanaesthetized, chronically prepared animals were subjected to injury. Injury with a fluid-pressure wave of 1.9-2.5 atm (duration 21-24 ms) produced a brief generalized areflexia. Following this initial response, injury greater than 2.1 atm frequently produced a period associated with hypotonia of postural muscles and suppression of postural motor responses (flaccidity). A close association between flaccidity and other indices of coma such as absence of eye-opening responses was noted. These consequences of injury can occur without fatal apnoae, circulatory collapse or overt intraparenchymal haemorrhages. This result suggests that mechanical stress predominantly restricted to the brain stem in fluid percussion may be sufficient, at least in the cat, to produce coma associated with flaccidity which has been previously documented for acceleration concussion. There was no evidence that fluid percussion produced EEG depression similar to the effects of lesions in the mesencephalic reticular activating system (RAS). Thus, depression of general levels of brain activity including those within the RAS seems not be necessary for production of this form of reversible coma.
...
PMID:Coma associated with flaccidity produced by fluid-percussion concussion in the cat. I: Is it due to depression of activity within the brainstem reticular formation? 316 67

The toxicity of local anesthetic agents can be divided into two categories: (1) systemic toxic reactions due usually to an accidental intravascular injection and (2) local tissue toxicity. The systemic toxicity of local anesthetic agents is primarily characterized by CNS excitation and convulsive activity. The cardiovascular system is more resistant to the toxic actions of local anesthetics. However, local anesthetics can exert a negative chronotropic and inotropic action and cause profound peripheral vasodilation. The combination of cardiac depression and peripheral vascular dilation results in irreversible circulatory collapse. The more potent agents such as bupivacaine appear to be more cardiotoxic and may precipitate ventricular arrhythmias and ventricular fibrillation. Local tissue toxicity is rare following the administration of local anesthetics. However, large doses of chloroprocaine solutions administered intrathecally have been associated with prolonged sensory-motor deficits in a few patients due probably to the low pH and presence of sodium bisulfite in the chloroprocaine solutions. In general, local anesthetic agents are relatively safe if administered properly. However, as with any pharmacological agents, local anesthetics may cause severe toxic reactions due to the improper use of these drugs.
...
PMID:Toxicity of local anesthetic agents. 317 46

Disopyramide is an oral antiarrhythmic drug which reduces conduction velocity, prolongs duration of action potential and the effective refractory period, and exerts vagolytic properties. The drug is usually well absorbed orally. The principal use of the drug is to suppress ventricular extrasystoles with usual oral dosage of 100 to 200 mg every 6 h, until blood levels of 2 to 4 micrograms/mL are attained. The use of the drug for suicide is uncommon as it is a prescription drug. Two cases of fatal disopyramide intoxication seen at the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner's Office will be discussed followed by a review of the literature of fatal suicidal disopyramide overdose. Case 1 was a 31-year-old male pharmacist with known history of depression and no history of heart disease. His decomposed remains were found with a suicide note and with several disopyramide tablets. At autopsy the blood level for disopyramide was 146 micrograms/mL. Case 2 is a 40-year-old male with history of alcoholism and prior suicidal attempts who regularly took disopyramide to control ventricular arrhythmias. He apparently ingested 36 100-mg tablets of disopyramide before his final collapse. At autopsy his blood level of disopyramide was 63 micrograms/mL.
...
PMID:Fatal disopyramide intoxication from suicidal/accidental overdose. 332 13

To assess the dose-response effects of isoflurane and halothane anesthesia on hemodynamics and coronary artery reactivity, the authors studied myocardial hyperemic responses following brief single artery flow arrests in 21 open chest, isocapnic swine in which arterial blood pressures and cardiac outputs were recorded. A specially designed Doppler probe was used to measure the peak and time course of coronary blood flow velocity in the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) after 15-s LAD occlusions. The ratio of peak velocity of blood flow to resting velocity (coronary reserve), relative repayment of flow debt, and duration of hyperemic responses were studied. Surgery was performed at MAC end-tidal concentrations ([Et]isoflurane = 1.45%. [Et]halothane = 1.25%) of isoflurane (n = 7) or halothane (n = 7), and recordings were made after 15-min steady state [Et]agent at 0.5, 1, 1.25, 1.5, 1.75, 2 MAC, and further 0.5 MAC increments until the demise of each animal. To compare coronary reactivity at similar coronary pressures, an aortic snare was used to elevate arterial pressures in a third group of halothane anesthesized pigs (n = 7) to those in the previously studied isoflurane group at each MAC level. There were three major differences between halothane and isoflurane. First, cardiac depression (reduction in arterial pressure, cardiac output, and stroke volume) was less with isoflurane compared with halothane anesthesia. Second, with halothane anesthesia, there was a marked decrease in coronary reactivity independent of coronary perfusion pressures with marked, dose-dependent reductions in both coronary reserve and relative flow repayment. During isoflurane anesthesia, coronary reactivity and coronary reserve was well preserved within physiologic limits up to 1.75 MAC [Et]. Third, halothane anesthesized pigs died in cardiac collapse at much lower agent concentrations than with isoflurane (no animals survived 1.75 MAC halothane, whereas all animals survived 2.5 MAC isoflurane). Therefore, pigs anesthesized with isoflurane had greater coronary reserve, better preserved cardiac function, and greater tolerance to increasing agent concentration than pigs anesthesized with halothane.
...
PMID:Comparative coronary vascular reactivity and hemodynamics during halothane and isoflurane anesthesia in swine. 334 77

An infectious bursal disease (IBD)-vaccinated flock of 23,900 broilers, 17 days of age, experienced sudden onset of depression, dermatitis, and mortality. Postmortem examination showed extensive subcutaneous serosanguineous fluid accumulation over the pectoral muscles, discrete hepatic whitish foci, fluid-filled intestines, and small, flaccid bursae of Fabricius. Gram-stained impression smears from the affected areas revealed numerous gram-positive cocci. Aerobic culture of liver and subcutaneous tissue consistently produced heavy growth of penicillin-sensitive Staphyloccus aureus. Histopathologically, subcutaneous tissue showed diffuse hemorrhage and large numbers of gram-positive cocci with severe congestion and hemorrhage of the underlying skeletal muscle. Liver sections showed multiple, randomly scattered areas of acute coagulation necrosis with numerous gram-positive cocci. Bursal lesions were characterized by extensive follicular necrosis and collapse. A diagnosis of staphylococcal gangrenous dermatitis secondary to IBD was made. Mortality returned to preinfection levels within 72 hours after penicillin was added to the drinking water.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus-induced gangrenous dermatitis in broilers. 338 70


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