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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
After surgical placement of end-to-side portacaval shunts (PCS), 4 adult mongrel dogs (11.8 to 18.2 kg) were fed purified diets and monitored for approximately 50 weeks for changes in body weight, neurologic status, and an array of clinically important biochemical variables. Two healthy dogs, fed the same diets and maintained in the same environment, were also observed (controls). Body weights were relatively stable over the period of observation. The branched-chain ratio ([valine] + [leucine] + [isoleucine]/[phenylalanine] + [tyrosine]), an index of the degree of change in plasma amino acid concentrations, was significantly lower in dogs with PCS than in controls. Despite this
depression
in branched-chain ratio, the principals (dogs with PCS) were essentially free of neurologic symptoms. Statistically significant decreases due to portacaval shunting were seen in the serum concentrations of glucose, calcium,
urea
nitrogen, creatinine, cholesterol, and albumin. Total protein, globulin, and triglyceride concentrations tended to be lower in the serum of principals than in serum of controls, but the differences were not statistically significant. Statistically significant increases due to portacaval shunting were seen in plasma concentrations of total conjugated bile acids and sulfobromophthalein retention. Concentrations of the following compounds tended to be higher in serum of principals than in serum of controls: phosphorus, chloride, uric acid, total bilirubin, lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate transaminase, alanine transaminase, and alkaline phosphatase. Liver biopsy at 7 months after operation showed mild-to-extensive atrophy of hepatocytes, mild-to-extensive fibrosis, and collapsed portal veins in all principals examined.
...
PMID:Long-term biochemical and physiologic effects of surgically placed portacaval shunts in dogs. 395 18
Anaesthesia was induced in 24 horses with xylazine and ketamine and maintained with halothane (12 cases) or enflurane (12 cases) in oxygen. Pulse rate, arterial blood pressure, arterial blood gas values, respiratory rate and tidal volume were measured at regular intervals during anaesthesia. Serial venous blood samples were taken for assay of glucose,
urea
, haemoglobin, packed cell volume, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase and creatine kinase. Operating conditions and the horses' behaviour in the recovery period were also recorded. In the case of the group of horses receiving enflurane, difficulty was experienced maintaining anaesthesia deep enough for surgery. This group also displayed greater respiratory
depression
. There were no significant differences between arterial blood pressure values, or any of the haematological or biochemical parameters recorded in each group. Recovery from anaesthesia was significantly faster in horses receiving enflurane but less smooth. It was concluded that, although enflurane appeared to be safe in the horse, the respiratory
depression
and the unpleasant recovery did not make it a desirable alternative to halothane.
...
PMID:Clinical anaesthesia in the horse: comparison of enflurane and halothane. 397 74
A total of 39 Holstein cattle were grazed in tracts of wild grassland on account of shortage in pasture grass. Twenty-nine cattle were affected and 26 of them died during a 21-day period. The main signs were
depression
, anorexia, ascites, and oliguria. There was elevated serum
urea
nitrogen and sugar and protein in the urine. Pathological examination revealed turbid swelling of the kidney, an increase in the amount of fluid in the body cavity, edema in the perirenal adipose tissue and hemorrhage in various visceral organs and tissues. Histologically, acute tubular necrosis in the kidney, hypoplasia of the erythroblast series in the bone marrow, atrophy and degeneration of the lymphatic tissue and focal necrosis of the liver were observed in many of the cattle. Among cows experimentally fed Narthecium asiaticum Maxim., Polygonum sachalinense Fr. Schum., and Vitis coignetiae Pulliat which were presumed to have been ingested in large amounts by grazing cattle in the field, the cows fed N. asiaticum revealed the clinical, biochemical and pathological changes similar to those noticed in naturally affected cattle. Cows fed P. sachalinense and V. coignetiae showed no distinct systemic symptoms except transient anorexia and hypothermia.
...
PMID:Narthecium asiaticum Maxim. Poisoning of grazing cattle: observations on spontaneous and experimental cases. 398 97
Four rumen-fistulated steers averaging 400 kg in body weight were used in a 4 X 4 Latin square arrangement with 18-d periods to investigate the effect of treating soybean meal (SBM) with formaldehyde on nitrogen (N) utilization and ruminal fermentation. Experimental diets, on a dry matter basis, consisted of 42% corn silage, 48.5% cracked corn-mineral mixture and 9.5% SBM treated with 0, .3, .6 or .9% formaldehyde by weight. Dry matter and organic matter digestibilities were not affected by treatment. Formaldehyde treatment of SBM resulted in a linear decrease in N digestibility (P less than .005) and urinary N excretion (P less than .01) and a quadratic increase (P less than .05) in N retention. The
depression
in apparent N digestibility was small when SBM was treated with .3% formaldehyde. This level of formaldehyde treatment also had little effect on in vitro enzymatic hydrolysis of SBM. Ruminal ammonia-N concentrations were lower (P less than .05) in steers fed formaldehyde-treated SBM. Ruminal pH was lower (P less than .05) at 6 and 8 h postfeeding while volatile fatty acid concentrations were higher (P less than .05) at 8 and 12 h postfeeding for steers fed untreated SBM. Propionic acid (mol/100 mol) decreased linearly (P less than .05) with increasing level of formaldehyde treatment.
Urea
-N concentrations in plasma were decreased (P less than .001) and plasma-free essential amino acid concentrations were increased (P less than .10) by formaldehyde treatment. Ruminal disappearance of N from polyester bags containing the SBM supplements was greatly reduced (P less than .005) by formaldehyde treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nitrogen utilization and ruminal fermentation in steers fed soybean meal treated with formaldehyde. 403 15
(+)-Tubocurarine (TC) decreases the probability that the protozoan, Stentor coeruleus Ehrenberg, will contract in response to mechanical stimulation, because it selectively depresses mechanoreceptor currents. Resting membrane properties and action potentials are not significantly altered by the drug. Stentor incubated in media containing radioactively labelled TC (TC*) retain TC* after extensive washing despite a rather high apparent KD (19.7 mumol l-1). The incubation curve for TC* binding exhibits an initial exponential rise followed by a linear increase. Wash-out of bound TC* and elimination of the exponential component of the incubation curve is observed if the TC* incubation is followed by a 5-s exposure to 8%
urea
; therefore, the exponential component represents a reversible binding process. TC* binding in the exponential component is highly correlated (r less than -0.96) with the
depression
in receptor current and response probability when incubation time, drug concentration and drug (gallamine, TC, decamethonium and succinylcholine) are varied. These correlations suggest that the exponential binding is to functional mechanoreceptors. Mechanoreceptor currents are decreased by hyperpolarization and increased by depolarization, indicating that the mechanoreceptor channel is voltage-dependent. At hyperpolarized potentials the channels are in a form (the U form) which cannot be opened by mechanical stimulation; at depolarized potentials they are in a form (the R form) which can be opened. TC appears to bind to the U form with higher affinity than to the R form, since depolarization reduces the amount of bound TC* and relieves the
depression
of mechanoreceptor current produced by TC.
...
PMID:The mechanism of tubocurarine action on mechanoreceptor channels in the protozoan Stentor coeruleus. 406 99
Clinically normal Nubian goats were given the antiprotozoal drug imidocarb at single intramuscular doses of 6, 12, 18 and 24 mg/kg, and the various clinical, biochemical and pathological manifestations were recorded. At a dose of 6 mg/kg the drug produced no change in any of the parameters studied. At higher doses, the drug produced dose dependent changes which included increased heart and respiratory rates, increased defaecation, urination,
depression
, incoordination of movement, weakness of the hindlegs, recumbency, and finally death. Just prior to death, there was a significant decrease in the number of erythrocytes, and in packed cell volume, and haemoglobin concentration. In plasma there was an increase in the activity of aspartate transaminase,
urea
and creatinine concentrations and inhibition of cholinesterase activity. The main histopathological changes were associated with hepatic and renal damage. Three goats were pre-treated with atropine sulphate (1 mg/animal) and after one hour given imidocarb intramuscularly at a dose of 12 mg/kg. The changes were similar but much less severe when compared with those in animals given imidocarb alone at the same dose.
...
PMID:Some effects of imidocarb in goats. 408 55
Portasystemic encephalopathy has been a major deterent to the utilization of total or non-selective shunts. A procedure to determine the maximum rate of
urea
synthesis (MRUS) has been developed and a
depression
in the ability to synthesize
urea
has been shown to correlate closely with the development of encephalopathy. Utilizing this procedure and a modified ammonium tolerance curve, a controlled comparison was instituted between selective and non-selective shunts. Following a non-selective or total shunt, there was a definite deterioration in both the MRUS and the ammonium chloride tolerance curve which was accompanied by a high rate of clinical encephalopathy. In marked contrast, the selective shunt, which maintains portal venous perfusion of the liver, showed little or no change in the MRUS and the ammonium chloride tolerance curve following the selective shunt and there was a very low incidence of encephalopathy. The difference between the non-selective and selective shunt in maintenance of
urea
synthesis, metabolism of ammonium chloride, and the development of clinical encephalopathy show the selective shunt procedure to be definitively superior in this regard.
...
PMID:The metabolic basis of portasystemic encephalopathy and the effect of selective vs nonselective shunts. 441 59
Several physiological and biochemical changes which occur in CD-1 pathogen-free mice during the course of infection with Listeria monocytogenes strain A4413 have been examined. Mice injected with 10(4) to 10(6) organisms by the intraperitoneal route displayed a significant
depression
in weight gain. In contrast, at 24 hr after infection an increment in total liver weight averaging 0.1 g was observed. The ratios of liver to body weight increased throughout the observation period. As the severity of the infection increased, food intake, as well as total liver protein and nitrogen, showed a corresponding decrease, with the diminution being most evident immediately prior to the death of the animals. Blood
urea
nitrogen remained relatively constant for 24 hr and then increased continuously as the infection progressed to the acute stage. Total liver lipid increased until the death of the animals. At 72 hr postinfection, a significant decrease in oxidative phosphorylation was observed. Xanthine dehydrogenase activity increased, with maximal values obtained 72 hr after infection. Uric acid levels remained constant for 24 hr, diminished at 48 hr, and then increased until the death of the animals. After 24 hr, uricase activity showed a slight increase. This activity returned to within normal ranges at 48 hr and decreased as the infection progressed to the acute stage at 72 hr. The results support the hypothesis that at least a part of the cause of death is a derangement in hepatic purine and carbohydrate metabolism. The data are also consistent with the possibility of changes in iron transport in the infected mice.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of pathogenesis in Listeria monocytogenes infection. II. Characterization of listeriosis in the CD-1 mouse and survey of biochemical lesions. 496 Jan 78
Measurements of serum freezing points in three Antarctic marine fishes indicated that they do not freeze in the -1.87 degrees C seawater because their blood is isosmotic to seawater. Concentrations of sodium chloride,
urea
, and free amino acids in the serum accounted for only half of the freezing-point
depression
of the serum. A protein containing carbohydrate was isolated which accounted for 30 percent of the freezing-point
depression
of the serum.
...
PMID:Freezing resistance in some Antarctic fishes. 576 71
Whole blood samples of patients with various forms of alpha thalassemia including hemoglobin H disease, alpha thalassemia trait, and the "silent carrier" state were incubated with leucine-(14)C for definition of relative rates of production of alpha and beta chains in these disorders. The chains were separated by carboxymethyl cellulose chromatography in the presence of 8 M
urea
and dithiothreitol. Their absorptions at 280 mmu were determined and their radioactivities measured in a liquid scintillation spectrometer. After correction for differences in extinction coefficients, the specific activities of the widely separated alpha and beta peaks were determined. In 11 nonthalassemic individuals, the alpha/beta specific activity ratios were found to be 1.02+/-0.07; in nine patients with alpha thalassemia trait, 0.77+/-0.05; in six patients with hemoglobin H disease, 0.41+/-0.11; and in four "silent carriers," 0.88 with a range of 0.82-0.95. The results show that in peripheral blood, alpha chain production relative to beta chain production is indeed limited in the alpha thalassemia syndromes. Hemoglobin H disease results from doubly heterozygous inheritance of a gene resulting in moderate
depression
of alpha chain production (alpha thalassemia trait) and a gene resulting in very mild
depression
of alpha chain production (the "silent carrier" syndrome."
...
PMID:Globin chain synthesis in the alpha thalassemia syndromes. 577 43
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