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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five healthy rhesus monkeys were ventilated with intermittent mandatory ventilation and 20 torr positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) for 8 hours. PEEP was increased to 25 torr and the monkeys were ventilated for 4 more hours. Lactated Ringer's solution and human
salt
-poor albumin were used to expand plasma and extracellular fluid volume throughout the entire period of study. Homologous blood was administered to maintain hematocrit at control levels and maintenance fluids were infused to maintain transmural pulmonary capillary wedge pressure at 5 to 15 torr. Although cardiac output, mean aortic blood pressure, oxygen consumption, venous admixture, transmural pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, HCO3- and in-vivo base excess were not changed when intermittent mandatory ventilation was employed, cardiac output and blood pressure were significantly depressed by brief periods of controlled mechanical ventilation when alternated with intermittent mandatory ventilation. Sporadic increases in arterial-venous oxygen content difference occurred. Arterial carbon dioxide tension was elevated moderately, with a concomitant
depression
of arterial pH. No pneumothorax occurred. High PEEP was well tolerated with intermittent manditory ventilation, intravascular volume expansion, and careful cardiovascular monitoring.
...
PMID:Cardiorespiratory effects of high positive end-expiratory pressure. 81 Nov 32
Sodium reabsorption along the nephron was studied before and after acute unilateral denervation of the left kidney in anesthetized rats with extracellular volume expansion. Studies were also performed before and after sham denervation. Denervation increased urine volume (V) from the left kidney from 35.2 to 59.2 mul min-1 (P less than 0.001) and urinary sodium excretion (UNaV) from 6.9 to 11.8 mueq min-1 (P less than 0.001). The control right kidney showed a simultaneous 45% decrease in V and UNaV. Inulin clearance (GFR) and renal plasma flow (RPF) remained unchanged after denervation in both kidneys. Left kidney late proximal (F/P)m decreased from 1.50 to 1.24 (P less than 0.01); single-nephron GFR (SNGFR) remained unchanged. (F/P)m ratios were also decreased in early distal (3.87-2.65, P less than 0.005) and late distal (5.48-3.83, P less than 0.02) convolutions. Fractional and absolute Na reabsorption in the distal convolution did not decrease. GFR, RPF, V, UNa, late proximal (F/P)m, and SNGFR were unchanged in sham-denervated rats. The increases in V and UNa V produced by acute renal denervation in the volume-expanded anesthetized animal are thus caused by further
depression
of proximal tubular
salt
and water reabsorption.
...
PMID:Acute unilateral renal denervation in rats with extracellular volume expansion. 83 10
The presence of a cardiodepressant factor of pancreatic origin has been reported in the plasma of experimental animals and man in a variety of shock states. It has been suggested that the
depression
of developed tension of the isolated cat papillary muscle may be caused by excess NaCl in the bathing medium rather than a specific cardiodepressant peptide. Incubated pancreatic homogenate was used as a source of this factor, and after protein precipitation, ultrafiltration (10,00 and 1,000 MW), dialysis and lyophilization, the residue was applied to a Sephadex G-10 column in order to ensure the removal of all salts. The protein effluent of the Sephadex column contained all the cardiodepressant activity of the filtered, dialyzed pancreatic homogenate and none of the
salt
content. To further isolate this cardiodepressant factor, the active residue was applied to a cellulose column and eluted with butanol: glacial acetic acid: water (25:26 v/v/v). This elution gave 8 distinct peptide peaks, one of which, peak 4, contained significant depressant activity. Thus, a cardiodepressant peptide of approximately 250-1,000 MW exists in pancreatic homogenates and this compound is not excess NaCl in the assay system.
...
PMID:The chemical nature of a pancreatic cardiodepressant factor. 92 11
The carotid body and its own nerve were removed from cats anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital and placed in an air gap system; the carotid body was bathed in modified Locke's solution equilibrated with 50% O2 in N2, pH 7.43 at 35 degrees C. The sensory discharges, changes in "resting" receptor polarization and the mass receptor potential evoked by ACh or NaCN were recorded with nonpolarizable electrodes placed across the gap. Receptor potentials and sensory discharges evoked by ACh showed an appreciable increase in amplitude and frequency when the preparation was bathed in eserinized Locke. Eserine did not change appreciably the responses evoked by NaCN. Excessive depolarization elicited by either ACh or NaCN was accompanied by sensory discharge block. Removal of K+ ions from the bathing solution induced receptor hyperpolarization and an increase in the amplitude of the evoked receptor potentials. An increase of K+ concentration had the opposite effect. Reduction of Na+ or NaCl to one half, or total removal of this
salt
, induced an initial reduction and later disappearance of the sensory discharges, some receptor hyperpolarization and a reduction in the amplitude of the evoked receptor potential. Reduction or removal of Ca++ produced receptor depolarization, a marked
depression
of the evoked receptor potentials, an increase in the frequency of the sensory discharges and a reduction in the amplitude of the nerve action potentials. High Ca++ or Mg++ had little or no effect on action potential amplitude or resting polarization, but decreased sensory discharge frequency and the evoked receptor potentials. Total or partial replacement of Ca++ with Mg++ induced complex effects: (1) receptor depolarization which occurred in low Ca++, was prevented by addition of Mg++ ions; (2) the amplitude of the evoked receptor potentials was depressed; (3) the nerve discharge frequency was reduced as it was in high Mg++ solutions; and (4) the amplitude of the nerve action potentials was reduced as it was in low Ca++ solutions. Temperature had a marked effect on the chemoreceptors since at high temperatures the receptors were depolarized and the discharge frequency increased. The baseline discharge and responses evoked by ACh or NaCN were depressed at low temperatures. The results are discussed in terms of possible receptor mechanisms influenced by the different ions.
...
PMID:Effects of different ions on resting polarization and on the mass receptor potential of carotid body chemosensors. 97 3
Taurocholate transport by everted ileal gut sacs was studied in physiological media containing graded amounts of sodium ions. Significant uphill transport of taurocholate was observed when the bulk of NaCl was replaced by osmotic equivalents of mannitol or choline chloride. Seventy-seven percent of control transport activity was observed when 36 milliequivalents per liter of Na+ were present in the incubation medium with mannitol acting as the isosmotic replacement, and 74% of the control transport was retained when 31 milliequivalents per liter of Na+ were present in the incubation medium with choline chloride acting as the osmotic replacement. Lowering the Na+ concentration to 19 milliequivalents per liter (i.e., 84% replacement of Na+) still allowed for 69% of the uphill transport observed in the control incubations. Taurodehydrocholate transport by ileal everted sacs was more sensitive to decreased Na+ concentrations; 29% of control transport was observed at 31 milliequivalents per liter of Na+. A kinetic analysis comparing the transport of taurocholate with taurodehydrocholate, the triketo analogue, at different concentrations of Na+ indicated that the apparent affinity of the transport system for Na+ is greater in the presence of taurocholate than in the presence of taurodehydrocholate. The ability of taurodehydrocholate to depress taurocholate transport is less in media of low Na+ concentration. Finally, in vivo intestinal perfusion studies demonstrated that the
depression
of taurocholate absorption, following Na+ removal, is reversible. These results are in agreement with the idea that Na+ has a physiological role in intestinal bile
salt
transport, and that the affinities of the anionic bile
salt
and the sodium cation for the transport system appear to be cooperative in that one enhances the binding of the other.
...
PMID:Ionic requirements for the active ileal bile salt transport system. 99 69
Because of the multiplicity of disease conditions and diminished tolerance for drugs in the aged, it is necessary to know concomitant pathologic conditions to determine which antihypertensive drug to use. In the Philadelphia Geriatric Center, there are about 1,000 residents, between 70 and 100 years of age. About 40% have hypertension; almost 50% have or once had
depression
; there are many cases of hiatal hernia and/or peptic ulcer; in one subdivision of residents, almost 40% have renal disease with BUN above 30 mg/100 ml. In antihypertensive treatment, some individuals respond fairly well to reassurance and weight reduction, when obese, even without drugs. All are given a low-
salt
diet. A diuretic is first used--thiazide in cases of good renal function, furosemide with impaired renal function. Liquid potassium supplements are given. If there is but little reduction in blood pressure in several weeks, methyldopa is added in ascending doses, in cases with or without renal impairment. In hypertension with impaired renal function, furosemide and/or methyldopa were especially valuable. Furosemide as an antihypertensive drug was also noted to delay the onset of congestive heart failure. Since reserpine can aggravate peptic ulcer and can precipitate or aggravate
depression
, it should seldom be used to treat hypertension in the aged. Guanethidine is rarely used, since it can cause cerebrovascular insufficiency and marked weakness. High blood pressure should be reduced slowly in the aged, to avoid untoward effects.
...
PMID:An approach to the treatment of hypertension in the aged. 105 27
In stimulation of an immune response to salmonellae in rats by dibasol and methyluracil and its
depression
by chlorophos and an amine
salt
of 2,4-dichlorphenoacetic acid it was found that the intensity of the immune response depended more on the level of protein biosynthesis than on the state of lysosomes at the period preceding the immunization.
...
PMID:[Relation of the immune response in rats to the state of the lysosomes and intensity of protein synthesis]. 109 36
Feeding sodium deoxycholate orally to rats for four days caused
depression
of the activity of the small intestinal enzymes lactase, sucrase, maltase, alkaline phosphatase, and N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase. The first four are brush border enzymes, the last a lysosomal enzyme. Alkaline phosphatase activity recovered very rapidly and rebounded to above the normal level within 24 hours. The activity of the three disaccharidases returned to normal within seven days while no recovery was observed within 96 hours of the activity of the lysosomal enzyme, N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, after removing the bile
salt
from the diet.
...
PMID:Deoxycholate depresses small-intestinal enzyme activity. 114 Jun 27
Male Sprague-Dawley rats maintained for a period of 6 or 12 weeks on a basal vitamin E-dificient diet consisting of 70% sucrose, 20% vitamin-free casein, 4% tocopherol stripped lard, 4%
salt
mixture, and 2% tocopherol-free vitamin fortification mixture were used to compare two sets of commonly used
salt
mixtures (
salt
mixtures USP XIV versus Briggs'
salt
mixture) and two sets of vitamin fortification mixtures (NBC vitamin fortification mixture versus that of Weglicki). Among the rats maintained on the deficient diets for 6 weeks, only those that received the combination of
salt
mixture USP XIV and vitamin fortification mixture of Weglicki showed a significantly lower level of hepatic catalase activity compared to the corresponding control animals. While there were no significant changes in microsomal cytochromes at this time period, after 12 weeks on the deficient diet, a significant
depression
in these cytochromes was noted in all experimental groups except the one on
salt
mixture USP XIV and NBC vitamin fortification mixture. A similar decrease in hepatic catalase was observed in deficient animals at 12 weeks. Since the most striking differences in these diets are in their content of iron and menaquinone, it appears that these two dietary constituents may interact in modulating the effect of vitamin E on hepatic hemeproteins.
...
PMID:Effects of different vitamin E-deficient basal diets on hepatic catalase and microsomal cytochromes P-450 and b5 in rats. 118 Feb 43
Randall described a pre-calculus lesion of the renal papilla in the 1930s and this was substantiated by others during the next decade and then largely ignored. This insignificant subepithelial calcification of the renal papilla. Randall's plaque type I, becomes the nucleus of at least 15% of calcium oxalate calculi, as demonstrated by apatite nuclei existing in papillary
depression
on the external stone surface. Cross section study of the stone demonstrates the peripheral nucleus with eccentric lamination postulating a mural origin. Contrariwise, study of the stone developing upon a nucleus originating in the papillary ducts (without producing obstruction) or out in the calix demonstrates a central nucleus surrounded by concentric laminations or lack of a mural origin, the more common type of calcium oxalate stone structure. Obstruction of the papillary ducts by hyperexcretion of stone
salt
may result in anemic infarction and sloughing of the apex of the papilla. Data concerning the prevalence of Randall's plaques in the population have been reviewed. Evidence of the incidence of calcium oxalate calculi that have developed upon Randall's plaques has been presented. A plea for further study of the pathology of the renal papilla has been voiced.
...
PMID:The riddle of Randall's plaques. 123 69
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