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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Local blood flow (F) in metastatic Walker 256 (WL-256) brain tumors produced by the intracarotid artery injection of WL-256 tumor cells in rats was measured using 14C-iodoantipyrine and quantitative autoradiography. Blood flow was variable in the tumors; the overall range was 2 to 222 ml hg-1 min-1 and the maximum range in an individual tumor extended over 150 ml hg-1 min-1. Small tumors had mean blood flows similar to surrounding brain. Medium to large tumors had significantly lower flows; the lowest values were usually measured in necrotic or cystic regions, although low values (less than 20 ml hg-1) were also measured in some viable-appearing tumor regions. Blood flow was significantly reduced in brain adjacent to medium and large but not small tumors. A global depression of brain and tumor blood flow was measured in two animals with hydrocephalus and the largest tumor burden. The blood flow patterns of the WL-256 metastatic tumor model are not uniquely different from other brain tumor models although some individual differences exist.
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PMID:Local blood flow in Walker 256 metastatic brain tumors. 650 94

The Walker 256 carcinosarcoma growing in Sprague-Dawley rats and the Morris 5123 hepatoma growing in Buffalo rats both produce cachexia but have widely differing patterns of host metabolism and tumor growth. Both organisms respond to exogenous insulin with increased food intake and rate of weight gain of host. The insulin treatment response of food intake was 1.5 to 2 times and of body weight gain was 2 to 3 times that of tumor-free controls. Insulin does not accelerate tumor growth. On withdrawal of insulin, the reactive hypophagia seen in tumor-free rats does not occur in tumor bearers, and the host weight does not return to the expected untreated value as it does in tumor-free rats. Most of the weight gained during insulin treatment of tumor bearers above that gained by tumor-free rats is retained after withdrawal of insulin. A computer model based on the inference from these results, that the tumor-bearing host is blind to body weight error, indicates that this abnormality of feeding control could account for only about one-third of the observed depression of host weight and food intake.
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PMID:Feeding response of tumor-bearing rats to insulin and insulin withdrawal and the contribution of autonomous tumor drain to cachectic depletion. 704 59

Feeding efficiency (amount of food ingested per unit of feeding activity) was chronically depressed in male Sprague-Dawley rats recovered from the acute aphagia or hypophagia of lateral hypothalamic damage. The extent of depression varied with the severity of the acute feeding response to hypothalamic damage. Growth of Walker 256 carcinosarcoma in intact rats increased feeding efficiency. Chronic lateral hypothalamic damage did not significantly attenuate tumor-induced increase in feeding efficiency but lowered the initial and maximum efficiency levels. Growth of the tumor-bearing host was depressed by residual lateral hypothalamic damage, but this depression was not related to the severity of the acute feeding response to damage.
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PMID:Extrahypothalamic mediation of changes in feeding behavior induced by growth of Walker 256 carcinosarcoma in rats. 721 40

The role of glutathione in the biological effects of cyclophosphamide (CP) was evaluated by investigating the following: effect of CP on hepatic glutathione levels; relationship between hepatic glutathione depletion (repletion) and the binding of [chloroethyl-3H]CP and [4-14C]CP to hepatic macromolecules; effects of interaction between CP (or acrolein) and diethyl maleate (a classical glutathione depletor), and/or between CP and cysteine on the binding of labeled CP to hepatic macromolecules, on the induction of hematuria, on the content of hepatic cytochrome P-450, on weight gain in rats, on survival in mice, and on the chemotherapeutic efficacy of CP against Walker 256 carcinoma in rats. CP and acrolein produced dose-dependent depletion of hepatic glutathione in mice, whereas phosphoramide mustard was at least one order of magnitude less effective. Acrolein caused death in mice; CP became covalently bound to hepatic macromolecules, prevented weight gain in rats, and produced hematuria and depression of hepatic cytochrome P-450 in vivo. These effects of CP (or acrolein) were enhanced by diethyl maleate but partially blocked by cysteine. On the other hand, reduction in the volume of Walker 256 carcinoma in rats by CP was not antagonized by cysteine. All these investigations point to the following conclusions: (a) acrolein produced during the metabolism of CP binds to proteins and, by doing so may denature these proteins; and (b) acrolein in vivo preferentially reacts with glutathione, and sulfhydryl-containing compounds may protect against acrolein toxicity and at the same time not interfere with the chemotherapeutic activity of CP.
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PMID:Role of glutathione in the metabolism-dependent toxicity and chemotherapy of cyclophosphamide. 726 Sep 17

The antitumor effect of some N alpha-benzyloxycarbonyl-N,N-bis-(2-halogenethyl)hydrazide derivatives of lysine, glycine, cystine, phenylalanine and p-chlorophenylalanine, was studied. Six of eight newly synthesized compounds show considerable antitumor effect on solid Walker carcinosarcoma 256 (about 95% tumor growth inhibition). Three of these compounds under study increased the lifespan of mice with leukemia L1210. The investigation of the effect of N alpha-benzyloxycarbonyl,D,L-phenylalanine-N,N-bis(2-chloroethyl)hydrazine on various mouse tumors showed remarkable growth inhibition of the Ehrlich ascites carcinoma, sarcoma 37, colon adenocarcinoma akatol and lesser antitumor effect also on solid adenocarcinoma 755, Lewis lung carcinoma and melanoma B16. All investigated compounds exhibited depression of leukocyte count--their toxicity being, however, lower than that of sarcolysine in parallel experiments.
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PMID:Antitumor effect of N alpha-benzyloxycarbonyl-N,N-bis-(2-halogenethyl)-hydrazide derivatives of amino acids. 739 53

Using the methodology of Walker and Avant, the purpose of this paper was to identify the most frequently used theoretical and operational definitions of social support. A positive relationship between social support and health is generally accepted in the literature. However, the set of dimensions used to define social support is inconsistent. In addition, few measurement tools have established reliability and validity. Findings from this conceptual analysis suggested four of the most frequently used defining attributes of social support: emotional, instrumental, informational, and appraisal. Social network, social embeddedness, and social climate were identified as antecedents of social support. Social support consequences were subsumed under the general rubric of positive health states. Examples were personal competence, health maintenance behaviours, effective coping behaviours, perceived control, sense of stability, recognition of self-worth, positive affect, psychological well-being, and decreased anxiety and depression. Recommendations for future research were made.
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PMID:Social support: a conceptual analysis. 900 16

Sodium retention is a frequent effect of cancer in humans and animals, but the mechanism involved is not yet understood. In the Walker-256 tumor, sodium retention has been considered to be a late effect, secondary to retention in the tumor mass, and/or to adrenal hypertrophy. Normally, (in rats receiving single tumor implants), the development of different tumor systemic effects (TSE) such as anorexia, sodium and fluid retention, anemia and immune depression in rats is synchronous within each individual but random among individuals of a given group in which they appear 6-47 days, or more, after inoculation. In present study, multifocal simultaneous inoculations of tumor cells resulted in a rapid and synchronous initiation of TSE (in 3-4 days) in all rats when no local effects of metastases could mask the results. Sodium retention is a special tumor effect on Na+ balance and a very sensitive indicator of TSE initiation. The results from multifocally inoculated rats were averaged in each (sub-clinical (SubC), moderate (mCP) and grave (gCP)) clinical phase and compared to food-restricted (FR) rats. There was a significant, early decrease in urinary Na+ excretion during mCP when compared to SubC and FR. The renal sites involved were studied in awake, unrestrained animals by measuring of sodium, creatinine and lithium clearances. There was an initial increase in the absolute proximal (mCP: 21.4 +/- 1.7 vs FR: 16.0 +/- 1.1 mmol/min/100 g b.w., p < 0.05) and post-proximal (mCP: 11.1 +/- 0.4 vs FR: 6.6 +/- 0.4 mmol/min/100 g b.w., p < 0.001) Na+ reabsorption, which were partially compensated for by a rise in glomerular filtration rate (mCP: 213 +/- 11.4 vs FR: 162 +/- 10.2 microL/min/100 g b.w., p < 0.01) and by a fall in fractional proximal Na+ reabsorption (mCP: 62.8 +/- 2.2% vs FR: 70.1 +/- 1.7%, p < 0.05), despite significant Na+ and fluid retention. The terminal phase of illness (gCP) culminated with a marked decrease in creatinine clearance, suggesting a significant fall in renal function. The multifocal model proved useful for studying the initial TSE, since the sites of action would, in principle, be easy to identify. These observations may be of physiological interest since TSE may result from the abnormal production of physiological modulators.
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PMID:Re-assessment of the renal hydrosaline dysfunction in rats bearing the Walker-256 tumor. 1110 65

Commercially reared parasitoids were released into three high-rise, caged-layer poultry houses; one house received only N. vitripennis Walker, the second house received only M. raptorellus Kogan & Legner, and the third house received an equal ratio of both species. Overall, house fly parasitism by M. raptorellus was never higher than 7% in any house. Most parasitism in the M. raptorellus release house was attributed to N. vitripennis. Parasitism of house fly pupae by M. raptorellus did not significantly increase during or after the 6-wk release period in the house that received both parasitoids. However, a depression in total parasitism was not detected when releases of the two species were made in this house.
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PMID:Parasitism rates of Muscidifurax raptorellus and Nasonia vitripennis (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) after individual and paired releases in New York poultry facilities. 1133 59

This article features a critical review of accumulated research and conceptual issues regarding Battered Woman Syndrome (BWS). BWS is recognized as important in providing legal defense to victims and as basis for diagnosis and treatment. However, there has been confusion as to the definition of BWS such as the use of violence committed against the woman as the defining characteristic. The study introduced by Walker demonstrated cycle of violence and learned helplessness to battered women. In addition, studies found out that BWS, manifested in a form of depression, low self-esteem, anxiety, physical symptoms, is evident in some abused women putting them at risk of suicide and homicide. Symptoms attributed to battering may also be a result of stress from a troubled relationship. The Learned Helplessness and Grief Theory (Campbell, 1989) explains the depression in battered women. Moreover, researchers are in disagreement of the factors that affect the level of trauma such as frequency of abuse, educational status and severity of sexual and emotional abuse. The issue on Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and learned helplessness in BWS remained unresolved. Some researchers view battered women in the context of "survivors rather than victims". Furthermore, studies prove that battered women may experience stages of abuse where the manifestations of BWS are part of the steps to conflict resolution. Basing on these descriptions and findings, it is made clear that not all battered women experience BWS.
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PMID:Battered woman syndrome: a critical review. 1234 58

Isatin is an endogenous compound identified in humans that possesses a wide range of biological activities. Isatin has anxiogenic, sedative, anticonvulsant activities and acts as a potent antagonist on atrial natriuretic peptide receptors in vitro. A series of p-substituted isatin semicarbazones have shown anticonvulsant activity in MES, scPTZ and scSTY tests. Various isatin-N-Mannich bases of isatin-3-thiosemicarbazones have shown antiviral and tuberculostatic activity. Methisazone is an effective compound against variola and vaccinia viruses. The N-dimethyl and morpholino derivative of 5-methyl isatin and trimethoprim exhibited an EC50 of more than 4.3 and 17.7 mg mL(-1), respectively. Isatin (3-o-nitrophenyl) hydrazone has shown activity against Walker carcinoma-256. Various substituted indolinones showed antitubercular activity against M. tuberculosis H37Rv with MIC ranging from 10-20 microg mL(-1). Isatin derivatives of Mannich bases had fibrinolytic, muscle relaxant, antiallergic, immunosuppressant, and antithrombotic activity. Isatin showed cardioinhibitory effect on frog heart, and hypotensive, respiratory depression and antidiuretic effects.
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PMID:Biological activities of isatin and its derivatives. 1590 22


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