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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Animal studies suggest that induction of
depression
-like states may alter preference for sweet tastants. A major goal of the present study was to search for correlations between depressive symptoms measured by the Beck
Depression
Inventory (BDI) and taste responses to sweet and bitter substances. Thirty-three nonclinical volunteers rated intensity and pleasantness of chocolate and vanilla milk as well as of sucrose- and quinine-soaked filter paper disks. Reactivity to citric acid (sour) and
sodium chloride
(salty) was also tested with the paper disk methodology. Taste detection thresholds were assessed by means of electrogustometry. A weak inverse relationship was found between the BDI scores (range: 3-33) and rated intensity of paper disks soaked in 60% sucrose. No correlations were found between depressive symptoms and intensity, pleasantness or identification of the other samples. Similarly, there was no relationship between the BDI scores and responses to chocolate and vanilla milk. BDI scores were not associated with electrogustometric thresholds. These data suggest that depressive symptoms may not influence taste reactivity in nonclinical population.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms and taste reactivity in humans. 1545 56
The 'Salada de Chiprana' (Chiprana Lake) is a hypersaline (30-73 per thousand), permanent and shallow lake of endorheic origin in a semi-arid region of the Ebro
depression
(Aragon, Spain). Magnesium sulfate and
sodium chloride
represent the main salts of this athalassohaline environment. Anoxic conditions occurred periodically in the bottom layers of the lake during the study period. When stratified, high sulfide concentrations (up to 7 mM) were measured in the hypolimnion. Physical and chemical conditions gave rise to the development of very dense green sulfur bacteria blooms (10.7 mg l(-1) of BChl c and 16.7 mg l(-1) of BChl d) at 0.5-1 m from the bottom. Microscopic observations revealed that cells morphologically similar to Chlorobium vibrioforme were dominant in the phototrophic bacterial community, but Prosthecochloris aestuarii was also found sometimes at lower concentrations, as revealed by both microscopic observation and flow cytometric analyses. Deep agar dilution series allowed to obtain several axenic cultures of phototrophic bacteria. They were identified according to their morphology, pigment composition and phylogenetic relationships (16S rDNA sequence analysis). Two of the sequenced strains (CHP3401 and CHP3402) belonged to the green sulfur bacteria and were related to Prosthecochloris aestuarii SK413(T) and Chlorobium vibrioforme DSM260(T), respectively. HPLC analyses of both natural samples and Chlorobium vibrioforme isolates indicated that these strains contained both BChl c and BChl d. Phylogenetic results suggested that Chlorobium vibrioforme strains DSM260(T) and CHP3402, all sequenced strains of Prosthecochloris aestuarii and strain CIB2401 constitute a separate cluster of green sulfur bacteria, all of them isolated from marine to hypersaline habitats.
...
PMID:Green sulfur bacteria from hypersaline Chiprana Lake (Monegros, Spain): habitat description and phylogenetic relationship of isolated strains. 1622 10
Hypernatraemia induced by chronic injections of
sodium chloride
provokes thermal
depression
in the agamid lizard, Ctenophorus (formerly Amphibolurus) ornatus, with a fall of two degrees Celsius in the mean body temperature selected behaviourally in a photo-thermal gradient. The placement of an electrolytic lesion in the base of the hypothalamus, designed to eliminate secretion of the neuropeptide arginine vasotocin (AVT), did not affect the lizards' thermoregulatory behaviour and their Preferred Body Temperature (PBT) was not significantly different from that of unoperated controls. Saline loading, however, did not induce thermal
depression
in these tract-operated individuals and their PBT was significantly higher than that of salt-loaded intact individuals. When AVT was injected into operated, salt-loaded, animals, however, thermal
depression
was observed, supporting the hypothesis that thermal
depression
brought about by hypernatraemia is mediated through the action of AVT. AVT similarly significantly depressed the PBT of injected intact individuals by 3.2 degrees C when compared with hydrated controls. Immunostaining for AVT confirmed that the lesions placed in the region of the median eminence virtually eliminated AVT located in the neurohypophysial tract, and the pars nervosa. This is the first report of an effect of this peptide on behavioural thermoregulation in a lizard.
...
PMID:Effect of hypernatraemia and the neurohypophysial peptide, arginine vasotocin (AVT) on behavioural thermoregulation in the agamid lizard, Ctenophorus ornatus. 1690 23
Molecular dynamics simulations are presented for the self-diffusion coefficient of water in aqueous
sodium chloride
solutions. At temperatures above the freezing point of pure water, the self-diffusion coefficient is a monotonically decreasing function of salt concentration. Below the freezing point of pure water, however, the self-diffusion coefficient is a non-monotonic function of salt concentration, showing a maximum at approximately one molal salt. This suggests that
sodium chloride
, which is considered a structure-making salt at room temperature, becomes a structure-breaking salt at low temperatures. A qualitative understanding of this effect can be obtained by considering the effect of ions on the residence time of water molecules near other water molecules. A consideration of the freezing point
depression
of aqueous
sodium chloride
solutions suggests that the self-diffusion coefficient of water in supercooled
sodium chloride
solutions is always higher than that in pure (supercooled) water at the same temperature.
...
PMID:A diffusive anomaly of water in aqueous sodium chloride solutions at low temperatures. 1821 33
The time-dependent evolution in the equilibrium size of an optically trapped aqueous
sodium chloride
droplet (>2 microm radius) within an environment of varying relative humidity (RH) is shown to depend on both the
depression
in vapour pressure due to the presence of the solute and the elevation in temperature due to optical absorption. In particular, the level of optical absorption is highly dependent on the size of the droplet relative to the wavelength of the absorbed light. Thus, as the droplet size tunes into a Mie resonance at the trapping laser wavelength, the increased level of optical absorption leads to an elevation in droplet temperature. This increase in resonant heating can balance a continual increase in RH, leading to only marginal growth in droplet size and change in solute concentration. Once the RH is sufficiently high that the resonance condition can be surpassed, the droplet cools instantaneously and the solute concentration again dominates in determining the vapour pressure, with a rapid increase in size and a decrease in solute concentration returning the droplet to equilibrium with the gas phase RH. Thus, a growing droplet is observed to pass through periods of apparent size stability followed by instantaneous growth, consistent with the variation in absorption efficiency with droplet size. This provides a clear example of the coupling between the optical and physical properties of an aerosol and their influence on the equilibrium state.
...
PMID:The influence of resonant absorption and heating on the equilibrium size of aqueous-solute aerosol droplets. 1967 43
The artificially ventilated guinea pig was frequently used for neurophysiological and respiratory studies. This species is also preferable for an evaluation of hemoglobin based artificial oxygen carriers, because its oxygen hemoglobin binding is very similar to that of man. But the narcosis of this animal-species is very difficult, because of cardiorespiratory
depression
induced by conventional procedures. The following intraperitoneal administered neuroleptanesthesia was proved in guinea pigs: 0.2 mg Fentanyl (Janssen/D), 10 mg Droperidol (Janssen/D) and 400 mg Urethan in 10 ml isotonic
sodium chloride
solution per kg body weight. Our new animal model with a special valve system enables to assess the gas exchange under spontaneous breathing, cardiovascular and the acid-base parameters. The vital parameters of animals were stable over 6 hours and very close to those of awake animals, especially the arterial average blood pressure. For that reason, this established neuroleptanesthesia of guinea pigs is preferable for research purpose. The fasted animals show significantly decreased values of arterial blood pH (7,345 vs. 7401), of heart frequency (244 vs. 277 min(-1)), and of ventilation value (167 vs. 205 ml/min) compared to non-fasted animals.
...
PMID:[An extended evaluation of a neuroleptanesthesia for the guinea pig with analysis of mixed expiratory gases during spontaneous breathing. Effects of fasting on the cardiorespiratory system and metabolism]. 1977 59
1. Under certain conditions, general autolysis does not begin immediately upon the removal of the organ from its circulation. This latent period is more apt to be present in those cases in which the tissues have been temporarily cooled on account of the use of a cold saline diluent or in which the percentage concentration of the inorganic salts (calcium or potassium), of the tissues have been changed by dilution with a
sodium chloride
solution. The presence of blood and absence of fats and of glycogen in the cells act as important factors in prolonging the latent period. 2. Attempts to produce an alkaline reaction (phenolphthalein) in the tissue resulted negatively. Solutions of disodium hydrogen phosphate and of sodium bicarbonate when added to the liver tissues gave a mixture which was acid to phenolphthalein and had no apparent effect upon autolysis. 3. The addition of antiseptics-chloroform and toluol-markedly decreased the rate of autolysis. Ordinary light produced no effect. 4. Ethyl butyrate when added to the tissue became hydrolysed into butyric acid; the formation of this acid in the mixture caused a decided acceleration in the autolytic rate. The acidity of a solution of dihydrogen sodium phosphate failed to produce a similar result. 5. The figures for the changes in the
depression
of the freezing-point, non-coaguable nitrogen and reaction of the autolytic mixture do not parallel one another. In some experiments a marked increase in the
depression
of the freezing-point was unaccompanied by augmentation of non-coagulable nitrogen. 6. General autolysis is the sum total of proteolytic, amylolytic and lipolytic factors. Each of these autolytic factors may proceed alone for a time; the rate of one is decidedly influenced by the presence or absence of the others. The acid products which are the result of amylolytic (lactic acid) and of lipolytic (higher fatty acids) autolysis, exert a pronounced augmentative effect upon the commencement and rate of nitrogenous autolysis.
...
PMID:THE EFFECT OF CONDITIONS UPON THE LATENT PERIOD AND RATE OF ASEPTIC POST MORTEM AUTOLYSIS DURING THE FIRST TEN HOURS. 1986 44
Associated with the intoxication of intestinal obstruction there exists a definite impairment of the excretory function of the kidneys. The degree of functional
depression
corresponds roughly with the intensity of the clinical intoxication. The decrease in the urea ratio and in the capacity of the kidneys to excrete
sodium chloride
is more marked than is the percentage decrease of phenolsulfonephthalein elimination. The great increase in the non-protein nitrogen of the blood usually observed in acute intestinal obstruction, which has hitherto been explained as being due entirely to an increased rate of protein catabolism, is due in part to retention of the products released from the injured cell protein. It is probable that the impaired renal function is due to direct action of the toxic substances upon the renal epithelium. The actual demonstration of this renal injury is perhaps the strongest evidence so far obtained to prove the presence of an actual toxic substance in the blood during intestinal obstruction. This obscure disability of the kidneys during the height of the intoxication of acute ileus should always be considered in the clinical management of this condition. It may also serve as a guide to indicate the degree of intoxication.
...
PMID:I. RENAL FUNCTION INFLUENCED BY INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION. 1986 27
The injection of the toxic proteose obtained from the contents of the obstructed small intestine causes a definite impairment of the eliminative function of the kidneys as shown by a decreased capacity to excrete urea,
sodium chloride
, and phenolsulfonephthalein. This involvement of the renal function is similar to that shown by the preceding report (1) to accompany the intoxication of intestinal obstruction. The observed
depression
of function is readily demonstrable even when large amounts of fluid and urea, dye, or salt are injected directly into the blood stream. There is in all probability a temporary injury of the kidney cells, since the most important extrarenal factors have been largely eliminated in the above experiments. There is no appreciable impairment of the renal function following the injection of a number of other proteose preparations from a variety of sources. This study affords new evidence in favor of the view that the function of an organ can be profoundly disturbed for a time without any demonstrable anatomical lesions. The repair of this type of injury promptly follows the disappearance of the intoxication and is functionally and anatomically perfect.
...
PMID:II. RENAL FUNCTION INFLUENCED BY PROTEOSE INTOXICATION. 1986 28
Table I and Figs. 1 and 2 summarize the experiments done on 150 rats. Suprarenalectomy in rats is followed by a striking
depression
in antibody formation most marked during the first week following the operation. Repeated injections of large amounts of isotonic
sodium chloride
or sodium acetate solutions restore the antibody titer to normal. The effect of these solutions is not due to diuresis alone, since isotonic glucose solution does not affect the titer, nor to the sodium alone, since hypertonic solutions of
sodium chloride
in small volume have little influence on the titer. Both the sodium ion and the water volume are necessary in the restoration of the titer.
...
PMID:IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES IN RELATION TO THE SUPRARENAL GLAND : V. THE EFFECT OF REPEATED INJECTIONS OF SOLUTIONS CONTAINING SODIUM SALTS AND GLUCOSE ON THE HEMOLYSIN FORMATION OF NORMAL AND SUPRARENALECTOMIZED RATS. 1986 9
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