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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cardiac performance was assessed in 33 lambs less than 1 to 5 days of age by means of left ventricular function curves. Performance was quantified by determining stroke volume ejected at end diastolic pressure 10 cm
H2O
(SV10) with constant afterload. Coronary flow, myocardial O2 consumption (MVO2), blood gas tensions and pH were determined. Measurements were obtained before and at 30 min intervals following hemorrhage to 30 mm Hg arterial pressure, and in controls (arterial pressure 75 mm Hg). Effects of metabolic acidosis, hypercapnia and beta-blockade were determined. In control lambs acidosis and hypercapnia failed to reduce SV10 after two hours. In hemorrhaged animals both factors sharply reduced SV10 and lambs with prior beta-blockade showed no greater reduction. MVO2 fell following hemorrhage but did not differ with metabolic conditions and did not relate to SV10. It is concluded that beta-adrenergic function is critically important in preserving left ventricular performance in newborn exposed to acidosis or hypercapnia. With sustained hemorrhage this mechanism fails leading to a significant
depression
of ventricular function. MVO2 was not a determining factor in these studies.
...
PMID:Cardiac function and metabolism following hemorrhage in the newborn lamb. 1 55
Disordering, fluidizing and dilating effects of anesthetics upon cell membranes are well recognized. The fluidization can be precisely measured with phospholipid membranes. When phospholipids are dispersed in
water
, they form globules of bilayer structure. These model membranes undergo transition between crystalline (ordered and less fluid) and liquid crystalline (less ordered and fluid) phases according to the temperature, the degree of packing of each molecule, and the chemical environment. The phase transition occurs in a cooperative fashion and the turbidity of the dispersion changes abruptly, clear in liquid crystalline phase and turbid in crystalline phase. The present study was undertaken to quantitate the fluidizing effects of local anesthetics on dipalmitoyl lecithin (DPL) bilayer dispersion by measuring the turbidity change. Tetracaine, bupivacaine, lidocaine, and procaine were studied. They all depressed the phase-transition temperature. The binding of the drugs to the model membrane followed unsaturable kinetics, and the pH titration curve showed that only uncharged molecules were active. The freezing point
depression
was analyzed according to the Van't Hoff model. From this model, the partition coefficients of the uncharged molecules between DPL and
water
were estimated: lidocaine 76, procaine 159, bupivacaine 812, and tetracaine 1,405. The concentration of local anesthetics in the DPL phase needed to decrease the phase-transition temperature 1 degree C showed a constant value of 0.132 M. The concentration of local anesthetics in the DPL phase is a function of pH, partition coefficient, and volume ratio between the DPL and aqueous phases. The normalized values of the fluidizing action of these drugs at physiologic conditions correlated well with their nerve-blocking potencies. The present results indicate that the uncharged molecules fluidize the lecithin membrane by unsaturable nonspecific binding. The possible effect of the charged molecules upon the fluidity of natural membranes remains to be established.
...
PMID:Depression of phase-transition temperature in a model cell membrane by local anesthetics. 1 73
This study tests the hypothesis that postischemic myocardial
depression
can be reduced by providing an initial reperfusate pH which is appropriate for myocardial temperature (i.e., metabolic systems function optimally when pH is kept slightly alkaline to the neutral point, which changes with temperature in concordance with the pK of
water
). Ten dogs underwent 1 hour of ischemic arrest with topical hypothermia (intramyocardial temperature 16+/-2 degrees C). The initial reperfusate (500 cc of blood from the extracorporeal circuit) was infused (100 cc/minute) into the proximal aorta just before removing the cross-clamp. Reperfusate pH was kept at 7.4 in five dogs (control) and raised to 7.8 with THAM [tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethane] in five dogs. Measurements 30 minutes after reperfusion showed that raising reperfusate pH to 7.8 resulted in (1) higher subendocardial blood flows (109+/-20 vs 61 cc+/-8 cc/100 gm/minute), (2) redistribution of postischemic blood flow toward the subendocardium (endocardial/epicardial flow 1.25+/-0.1 vs 1.0+/-0.03), (3) higher left ventricular oxygen uptakes (0.046 vs 0.033 cc/100 gm/beat), (4) better postischemic left ventricular compliance (56+/-3% more compliant), and (5) improved left ventricular performance (88+/-7% recovery vs only 57+/-3% recovery at pH 7.4). Postischemic edema (2%
water
gain) was unchanged by pH modification. We conclude that initial reperfusion with the appropriate pH provides an optimal milieu for restoration of cellular metabolism, counteracts the acidosis of ischemia, and improves postischemic left ventricular blood flow, distribution, oxygen uptake, compliance, and performance.
...
PMID:Studies on myocardial reperfusion injury. I. Favorable modification by adjusting reperfusate pH. 1 28
Cardiorespiratory reflex responses to laryngeal chemoreceptor stimulation were studied in 62 piglets of both sexes varying in age from 1 to 79 days. The distal trachea was cannulated to provide a free airway and the proximal end used to introduce fluids into the laryngeal area. Introduction of either
water
or milk produced apnea, bradycardia, and hypertension. Swab application of test fluids to the laryngeal epithelium produced similar responses. The reflex could be interrupted by flushing the laryngeal region with saline, by cutting the superior laryngeal nerves (SLN) or by anesthetizing the laryngeal epithelium with lidocaine. Electrical stimulation of SLN elicited identical responses. Respiratory inhibition by the reflex was enhanced following central
depression
with chloralose and overridden by administration of the respiratory stimulant, aminophylline. The relative potency of the laryngeal reflex was estimated to be equivalent to about 40% of the dose of chloralose which produced permanent respiratory arrest. It is concluded that in circumstances where respiratory drive is reduced the laryngeal inhibitory reflex is capable of caused persistent apnea and asphyxial death in the young piglet.
...
PMID:Properties of the laryngeal chemoreflex in neonatal piglets. 1 25
This review deals with the common E.E.G. characteristics of dysmetabolic encephalopathies and described the particular features of hepatic, respiratory and renal encephalopathies, as well as those resulting from a disturbance in carbohydrate,
water
and electrolyte metabolism. These now classical data are compared with the principal electroclinical appearances seen during parenteral alimentation : slow, ample wases, non-reactive, associated with a calm coma; overall
depression
of basal rhythm, with excessive myogram activity and corresponding to paroxysms of muscular hypertonia seen during the coma.
...
PMID:[Electroencephalographic study of functional metabolic encephalopathies and comas during parenteral alimentation]. 2 98
Utilizing standard microiontophoretic techniques and recording extracellularly in cats, we studied the effects of flurazepam, a
water
-soluble benzodiazepine, on the spike activity of single cerebral neurones and its interactions with several excitatory and inhibitory putative neurotransmitters. Large iontophoretic doses (5--30 nA, 0.1 M solution) of flurazepam induced a
depression
of spike amplitude. Smaller doses (less than 5 nA, 0.1 M solution or 20--50 nA, 20 mM in 0.16 M NaCl) reduced the excitation produced by glutamate, aspartate, and homocysteate, but antagonism of acetylcholine-evoked excitations required large flurazepam doses (up to 30 nA, 0.1 M solution). Even lower doses of flurazepam (less than 10 nA, 20 mM in 0.16 M NaCl) enhanced the inhibitory effect of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) but antagonized that of 5-hydroxytryptamine, and had no effect on dopamine-induced inhibition of firing. Hence, only GABA-evoked inhibitions were significantly potentiated by flurazepam. These results demonstrate the multiple possible interactions between a benzodiazepine and different putative neurotransmitters in the mammalian cerebral cortex.
...
PMID:Effects of microiontophoretically applied flurazepam on responses of cerebral cortical neurones to putative neurotransmitters. 4 77
Cation transport and electrolyte composition were studied in leucocytes from 17 patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension. Significant increases in cell sodium and
water
contents, associated with a
depression
of the rate-constant for active sodium efflux, were found in the hypertensive patients. These abnormalities in cell sodium transport may possibly be related to mechanisms of hypertension.
...
PMID:Abnormal leucocyte composition and sodium transport in essential hypertension. 4 73
Chair-restrained rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) were inoculated subcutaneously with 10(2)--10(3) plaque-forming units of virulent Rickettsia rickettsii. The latent period for fever and rickettsemia was three to four days; death occurred six to eight days after infection. Total circulatory electrolyte levels and fluid volumes, including plasma, red blood cell, true circulatory blood, and extracellular fluid, increased. The expansion of the extracellular and plasma volumes resembled findings reported during severe Rocky Mountain spotted fever in humans, guinea pigs, and rabbits. Total
water
content of the liver also increased. Intracellular concentrations of K+, as well as total Na+ and K+, decreased in the diaphragm. Both the lung and medulla oblongata showed increased levels of intracellular Na+ and
water
with simultaneously decreased levels of extracellular Na+ and
water
. Such an intracellular overhydration of the medulla oblongata could contribute to death as a result of
depression
of the cardiovascular and respiratory centers. On the basis of the findings in monkeys, the intravenous infusion of fluids and electrolytes during clinical therapy of severe rickettsial infections should be considered extremely dangerous.
...
PMID:Alterations of body fluid compartments and distribution of tissue water and electrolytes in rhesus monkeys with rocky mountain spotted fever. 9 95
The modifying effects of daily ethanol ingestion in the drinking
water
as a 15 % solution (v/v) on drug biotransformational changes induced by inhalation exposure to styrene (300 ppm or 1260 mg/m3, 6 h daily, 5 d/week, up to 17 weeks) were studied in rat liver and kidney. The drug hydroxylation activities (7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase and 2,5-diphenyloxazole hydroxylase) both in liver and in kidneys were increased more by ethanol ingestion than by styrene inhalation. When administered in combination, styrene and ethanol exerted mostly an additive enhancing effect. However, hepatic NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity was reduced both in styrene and in ethanol-treated rats. Hepatic styrene oxide hydratase activity was virtually unaffected by styrene treatments. The
depression
of glutathione concentration in liver was greater after styrene-ethanol than after styrene treatment alone. The hepatic UDPglucuronosyltransferase activity was enhanced slightly both in styrene and in styrene-ethanol rats. The binding affinity of styrene towards cytochrome P-450 was increased after styrene inhalation as shown by lowered K8 values. The perirenal fat concentration of styrene showed a rough inverse relationship to the overall monooxygenation activities in liver and kidney. Despite the additively induced enzyme activities in styrene-ethanol-treated rats the accumulation of styrene in fat of these animals was on the whole somewhat greater, suggesting that these two solvents in vivo also have mutual inhibitory effects on biotransformation.
...
PMID:Effects of intermittent styrene inhalation, ethanol intake and their combination on drug biotransformation in rat liver and kidneys. 11 16
Chlorozotocin, 2-(3-(2-chloroethyl)-3-nitrosoureido)-D-glucopyranose, is a newly synthesized,
water
-soluble nitrosourea antitumor agent that is active against L1210 leukemia in mice. A 701% and a 401% increase in life-span were attained with a dose that was lethal to 10% of the animals (15 to 20 mg/kg, i.p.) in mice treated on Day 2 or Day 6 of L1210 tumor growth, respectivley. Sixity % of Day 2-treated mice and 30% of Day 6-treated mice survived for 90 days. At the maximally effective dose against L1210, chlorozotocin produced no significant
depression
in normal bone marrow DNA synthesis nor in peripheral neutrophil count, in contrast to a sustained greater than 90% inhibition in L1210 ascites cell DNA synthesis. If the antitumor activity and reduced bone marrow toxicity of chlorozotocin are confirmed in man the use of this compound would facilitate treatment of patients with neoplastic disease who have preexisting abnormal bone marrow function or would allow for the more effective use of a nitrosourea agent in combination with anticancer agents possessing more potent myelosuppressive properties.
...
PMID:Chlorozotocin, 2-(3-(2-chloroethyl)-3-nitrosoureido)-D-glucopyranose, an antitumor agent with modified bone marrow toxicity. 12 70
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