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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Treatment of chronic uremia by hemodiafiltration requires replacement of the filtrate. Using Ringer's solution alone, there is a
depression
of pH because of bicarbonate loss. To bring the acid base status back to normal, sodium lactate in increasing concentrations (283 mg% = 32 mM/1, 361 mg% = 40 mM/1; 462 mg% = 51 mM/1; 508 mg% = 57 mM/1) was added to the replacement fluid. The optimal concentration is 450 mg% (=50 mM/1) sodium lactate, provided the following conditions are fulfilled: (a) substitution after the filter; (b) mixing ratio of blood and substitution fluid 1:2. Using 12-15 liters of substitution fluid during a 5 hr treatment, the added lactate amounts to 60 g (=0.54 M). With continuous addition of lactate, the serum concentration of lactate is 3.5 times normal and the concentration of serum pyruvate 4 times normal. An excess lactate concentration, according to Huckabee [1,2], was thus not observed. The sieving coefficients were the following: sodium, potassium,
urea
, lactate, pyruvate, and phosphate 1; chloride greater then 1; calcium and protein less than 1. Serum osmolality fell, on the average, 9 mOsmol/1 during diafiltration.
...
PMID:Acid base status during treatment of chronic uremia with diafiltration. 2 47
Salicylic acid and its principal metabolic product, salicyluric acid, are ultrafiltered at the glomeruli, secreted by the proximal segment and undergo back diffusion; the net effect being an accumulation of salicylates in the cortex. The back diffusion of salicylate is pH-sensitive (salicylurate is not) and its secretion is less sensitive than that of salicylurate to
depression
by probenecid. There was an increasing concentration gradient of these salicylates from outer cortex to innermost medulla. The clearance of salicyluric acid exceeded glomerular filtration rate even at very low urine flow and was not pH-dependent, so that total salicylate accumulation in the medulla was less affected by adjustment of urinary pH. Increasing perfusion of the nephron markedly reduced the inner medulla/cortical concentration ratios and segmental concentrations of salt and
urea
and reduced the cortical concentrations of salicylates. Diuresis may decrease the medullary concentration of salicylates, depending on the rate and duration of increased urine flow.
...
PMID:Renal concentration gradients of salicylic acid and its metabolic congeners in the dog. 2 32
The ongoing IgE antibody formation against ovalbumin (OA) in high responder mice was depressed by i.v. injections of either native or
urea
-denatured ovalbumin (UD-OA). Adoptive transfer experiments to determine the helper function of spleen cells from the treated animals showed that helper function for both IgE and IgG antibody responses diminished after treatment. Evidence was obtained that treatment suppressed the expansion of IgE-G memory cells. When the same treatment with OA or UD-OA was given to OA-primed mice before the appearance of IgE antibody in their serum, OA-specific splenic suppressor T cells were demonstrable. Thus, the transfer of splenic T cells from treated mice into normal mice suppressed the primary IgE and IgG antibody responses of the recipeints to DNP-OA. It was also found that the transfer of the splenic T cells from UD-OA-treated mice into OA-primed mice depressed ongoing IgE antibody formation in the recipients. The results suggested strongly that the decrease of helper function and the
depression
of ongoing IgE antibody formation by repeated injections of UD-OA was caused by generation of antigen (OA)-specific suppressor T cells.
...
PMID:Reaginic antibody formation in the mouse. VII. Depression of the ongoing IgE antibody formation by suppressor T cells. 6 94
The effects of intravenously injected 4-dimethylaminophenol and Co2EDTA on peripheral circulation, respiration, acid-base balance, and several other physiological and biochemical parameters were studied on dogs. DMAP increased the respiratory minute volume and mean arterial pressure, diminished the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio, and induced an increase in arterial oxygen pressure caused by liberation of oxygen from oxyhemoglobin during the formation of ferrihemoglobin. A study in vitro of the fate of the oxygen during the reaction between DMAP and oxyhemoglobin showed that only 30--40% of the oxygen released by the formation of ferrihemoglobin appeared in the gas phase. Co2EDTA caused circulatory
depression
, hyperventilation, and metabolic acidosis resulting in a decrease in base-excess and pH. The concentrations of lactate, pyruvate, potassium, and
urea
nitrogen and the hemoglobin content were increased by Co2EDTA. The side effects of Co2EDTA in therapeutic doses were more serious than those of DMAP. Thus the latter is superior in the therapy of cyanide poisoning, all the more since it detoxifies more cyanide.
...
PMID:Effects of 4-dimethylaminophenol and Co2EDTA on circulation, respiration, and blood homeostasis in dogs. 11 Feb 89
The ATPase activity of chicken gizzard myosin was studied by varying the KCl concentration in the reaction medium. The following was thus found: (a) A sharp
depression
of the activity occurred when the KCl concentration was reduced to less than 0.3 M, showing the minimum activity around 0.15 M KCl. (b) The activity
depression
was removed by addition of
urea
or bay papain-digestion, but not by addition of p-chloromercuribenzoate. (c) In the KCl concentration where the activity
depression
occurred, the ATPase reaction proceeded in two distinct phases; the activity was relatively high in the early phase of the reaction and declined into the later phase where the steady state reaction took place. (d) In the KCl concentrations higher than that particular concentration or in the presence of
urea
, the ATPase reaction proceeded in one phase. (e) The temperature dependence of the ATPase activity in the early phase was of an ordinary magnitude being approximately equal to that of the ATPase activity in 0.6 M KCl. In contrast, the temperature dependence of the activity in the later phase was unusually small. Gizzard myosin in various concentrations of KCl was also examined by measuring the turbidity and the light-scattering intensity, and by observation under an electron microscope. The following was thus found: (a) In the KCl concentration where the activity
depression
occurred, there was a stagnation in the turbidity decrease as the KCl concentration was gradually increased and also the formation of "thick filaments," each of which was approximately 0.6-0.9 micron in length and 20-30 nm in diameter with no central "bare zone." (b) Addition of ATP induced dissociation of the thick filaments, and the dissociation occurred during the early phase of the ATPaseeaction. (c) Moreover, the temperature dependence of the ATP-induced dissociation rate was approximately equal to that of the ATPase activity in the early phase. On the basis of the findings mentioned above, it is concluded that the activity
depression
results from the ATP-induced dissociation of myosin filaments. Moreover, since high concentrations of KCl or
urea
also caused dissociation of myosin filaments and yet did not produce the activity
depression
, it was strongly suggested that gizzard myosin in the ATP-dissociated form must be different from that in the
urea
- or KCl-dissociated form, probably in the physical state of some myosin aggregates which were not detectable by the physical methods we used. As a side-observation, gizzard myosin filaments formed in the presence of ADP were found to be unusually long (longer than 2 micron), and they looked very similar to the particular filaments of skeletal myosin that were reported, by Moos, to be formed in the absence of the C protein.
...
PMID:Adenosine triphosphatase activity and "thick filament" formation of chicken gizzard myosin in low salt media. 14 68
The present study was carried out to examine the possible intervention of some hormones in the "protein-sparing/actions of dietary carbohydrate and fat. Administration of either a carbohydrate meal or a fat meal to fasted rats caused a reduction in the urinary output of
urea
and total nitrogen with a concomitant decrease in rate of urogenesis in liver. as well as the activities of some amino acid-catabolizing enzymes in liver. The sparing action of carbohydrate but not that of fat was abolished in alloxan-diabetic rats. Feeding rats a carbohydrate meal caused a marked reduction in the amount of cyclic AMP in liver. The change was coincident with a reduction in the level of plasma
urea
and the urinary output of
urea
and total nitorgen. Administration of dibutyryl cyclic AMP abolished the carbohydrate-induced
depression
of urinary output of
urea
and total nitrogen as well as partially the activity of serine dehydratase in liver. Feeding a carbohydrate meal resulted in a significant reduction in the level of corticosterone in plasma. However, the possible intervention of glucocorticoids in the protein-sparing action of carbohydrate was ruled out inasmuch as the action of carbohydrate was also observed in the adrenalectomized rats. The overall results suggest that the protein-sparing action of dietary carbohydrate may be exerted in a different fashion from that of fat, that is, through
depression
of cyclic AMP in liver and thus the reduction of the degradation of amino acids in liver
...
PMID:Possible intervention of insulin, cyclic AMP, and glucocorticoids in protein-sparing action of dietary carbohydrate in rats. 16 49
Vasopressin increases the permeability of the total urinary bladder, an analogue of the mammalian renal collecting duct, to water and small solutes, especially the amide
urea
. We have observed that three general anesthetic agents of clinical importance, the gases methoxyflurane and halothane and the ultrashortacting barbiturate methohexital, reversibly inhibit vasopressin-stimulated water flow, but do not depress permeability to
urea
, or the the lipophilic solute diphenylhydantoin. In contrast to their effects in vasopressin-treated bladders, the anesthetics do not inhibit cyclic AMP-stimulated water flow, consistent with an effect on vasopressin-responsive adenylate cyclase. The selectivity of the anesthetic-induced
depression
of water flow suggests that separate adenylate cyclases and cyclic AMP pools may exist for control of water and
urea
permeabilities in to toad bladder. Furthermore, theophylline's usual stimulatory effect on water flow, but not its effect on
urea
permeability, was entirely abolished in methoxyflurane-treated bladders, suggesting that separate phosphodiesterases that control water and
urea
permeabilities are present as well. We conclude that the majority of water and
urea
transport takes place via separate pathways across the rate-limiting luminal membrane of the bladder cell, and that separate vasopressin-responsive cellular pools of cyclic AMP appear to control permeability to water and to
urea
.
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of osmotic water flow by general anesthetics to toad urinary bladder. 18 13
The effects of chronic oral ingestion of lead in doses ranging from 20-80 ppm were compared with those seen after the subacute exposure of rats to a 10 mg/kg daily dose of the heavy metal for 7 days. Irrespective of the treatment regimen used, lead treatment significantly increased the activities of renal pyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, fructose 1,6-diphosphatase and glucose 6-phosphatase. The observed enhancement of kidney gluconeogenic enzymes in chronically treated animals was associated with a stimulation of the adenylate cyclase-cyclic AMP system, a rise in blood blucose and
urea
as well as a
depression
in hepatic glycogen and serum immunoreactive insulin (IRI) levels. In contrast, subacute exposure to lead failed to significantly alter cyclic AMP metabolism and the concentrations of liver glycogen, blood glucose, serum
urea
or IRI. Whwereas the insulinogenic index (the ratio of serum IRI to blood glucose concentration) was markedly suppressed in chronically treated rats, this ratio remained within normal limits following subacute exposure to the heavy metal. However, a marked decrease in the insulinogenic index was observed in subacutely treated rats 15 min after the administration of a glucose load. The data provide evidence to show that increased glucose synthesis as well as suppressed pancreatic function may be responsible for lead-induced disturbances in glucose homeostasis.
...
PMID:Effects of subsacute and chronic lead treatment on glucose homeostasis and renal cyclic AMP metabolism in rats. 18 14
Toxicosis was induced in pregnant Holstein-Friesian heifers by giving polybrominated biphenyls a in gelatin capsules at the rate of 25 g/day. Initially, this dosage was approximately 67 mg/kg of body weight. Clinical signs were anorexia, excessive lacrimation and salivation, diarrhea, emaciation, dehydration,
depression
, and abortion. Fever was not evident during the experiment. Values for serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase, lactic dehydrogenase, blood
urea
nitrogen, and bilirubin were increased. Changes in packed cell volume, hemoglobin content, total erythrocyte and leukocyte counts, and differential leukocyte counts were minimal and reflected dehydration and secondary infection. The principal urine changes were decreased specific gravity and moderate proteinuria. Gross necropsy findings included dehydration; subcutaneous emphysema and hemorrhage; atrophy of the thymus; fetal death with concomitant necrosis of cotyledons; kidneys that were enlarged, pale tan to gray; thickened wall of the gallbladder; inspissated bile; edema of abomasal folds; mucoid enteritis; linear hemorrhage and edema of the rectal mucosa; and secondary pneumonia. Microscopic changes were most marked in the kidneys, gallbladder, and eyelid. In the kidney, the principal changes were extreme dilatation of collecting ducts and convoluted tubules, with epithelial degenerative changes of cloudy swelling, hydropic degeneration, and separation from the basement membrane. Common changes in the gallbladder were moderate to marked hyperplasia and cystic dilatation of the mucous glands in the lamina propria. The changes in the eyelids were characterized by hyperkeratosis, with accumulations of keratin in hair follicles of the epidermis and squamous metaplasia with keratin cysts in the tarsal glands. Clinical signs and lesions of toxicosis did not develop in heifers given the polybrominated biphenyls at the rate of 0.25 mg and 250 mg/day for 60 days. Initially these rates were approximately 0.00065 mg/kg and 0.65 mg/kg of body weight, respectively.
...
PMID:Pathology of experimentally induced polybrominated biphenyl toxicosis in pregnant heifers. 18 92
Toxicosis was induced in pregnant heifers by feeding 25,000 mg/head/day of FireMaster BP-6, a commercial blend of polybrominated biphenyls (PBB). The PBB feeding decreased dry matter intake approximately 50% by 4 days exposure. Emaciated animals became anorexic a few days prior to death at 33 to 66 days. Weight losses of heifers average 80 kg. Other clinical signs observed were dehydration, diarrhea, excessive salivation and lacrimation, fetal death, abortion, and general
depression
as evidenced by depressed heart and respiratory rates. Clinical signs were apparent after 10 days exposure and progressively intensified along with loss of condition until death. Clinicopathologic changes included significantly increased serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase and decreased serum calcium by 30 days exposure. Lactate dehydrogenase,
urea
nitrogen, and bilirubin were elevated, and serum albumin decreased by 36 to 40 days. Principal urine changes were decreased specific gravity and moderate proteinuria. Pregnant heifers fed 0.25 or 250 mg/head/day for 60 days and nonpregnant heifers fed 250 mg/head/day for 180 days displayed neither clinical signs nor clinicopathologic changes indicating adverse effects from PBB exposure. Post-exposure, all heifers exposed to PBB for 60 days calved normally with zero calf mortality and were successfully rebred. Milk production was not different from control animals. Birth weights of calves from dams exposed to 250 mg PBB/head/day were significantly greater than calves of dams exposed to 0 mg or 0.25 mg/head/day. PBB exposure of dams produced no detrimental effects on calves as indicated by clinical signs, clinicopathologic changes, or performance.
...
PMID:Effects of PBBs on cattle. I. Clinical evaluations and clinical chemistry. 21 5
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