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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Haemodynamic adaptation was studied during the first 10 h after aorto-coronary bypass surgery. In a control group of 12 patients the heart was fibrillating and perfused during cardiopulmonary bypass (at 30 degrees C), and in 11 patients cold cardioplegic arrest was used. The first 4--5 h were characterized by rewarming, with increasing oesophageal temperature, cutaneous vasoconstriction and elevated systemic vascular resistance (SVR). A phase of vasodilation followed. In the control group the oxygen uptake index increased by 57% during rewarming, but the cardiac index (CI) was constant (about 2.9 l . min-1.m-2). The arterio-venous oxygen content difference (AVDo2) therefore increased (max. 3.0 mmol . l-1). The postoperative left ventricular performance was better and the serum levels of
aspartate aminotransferase
(
ASAT
) during the first 2 days postoperatively were lower in the cardioplegic patients than in the controls, indicating more efficient myocardial preservation. In the cardioplegic-hypothermic group, CI was constant at about 3.2 l . min-1.m-2 (significantly higher than in the control group) and AVDo2 remained normal during the rewarming period. The heart rate was lower initially in the cardioplegic patients than in the controls, implying a favourable influence on myocardial oxygen consumption. The better myocardial function in the cardioplegic-hypothermic group was associated with an only moderately increased SVR. This suggests that the elevated SVR in the control group could have been due to myocardial
depression
.
...
PMID:Myocardial performance early after aorto-coronary bypass surgery. Cardioplegic arrest versus coronary perfusion. 31 58
Coccinia indica (Family: Cucurbitaceae, locally known as telakucha) leaves were extracted with 95% ethanol. Following evaporation of the solvents, the residue was suspended in distilled water. When this suspension was fed orally to male normal-fed and 48-hr starved rats, the blood glucose was lowered 21% (P less than 0.01) in normal-fed and 24% (P less than 0.001) in 48-hr starved animals respectively. Starvation had induced a 3-fold increase in the activity of glucose-6-phosphatase and this activity was depressed 19% (P less than 0.05) by extract feeding while basal activity of the enzyme in normal-fed rats remained unaffected. Consistent with the
depression
of glucose-6-phosphatase, urea cycle enzyme arginase was also depressed 21% (P less than 0.001) and 12% (P less than 0.01) in the liver of 48 hr-starved and normal-fed animals respectively. Unlike glucose-6-phosphatase, starvation induced levels of gluconeogenic enzymes alanine aminotransferase and
aspartate aminotransferase
were not affected by Coccinia extract. These results suggest that the hypoglycemic effect of C. indica is partly due to the repression of the key gluconeogenic enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase.
...
PMID:Hypoglycemic effects of Coccinia indica: inhibition of key gluconeogenic enzyme, glucose-6-phosphatase. 133 43
Dried, milled Cestrum laevigatum plant material was drenched to 6 ewes at doses ranging from 2,5 to 10 g/kg/day for 1 to 47 days. The most noticeable clinical signs were
depression
, anorexia and ruminal stasis. These signs were accompanied by clinical pathological changes indicative of liver involvement such as increases in the serum activities of
aspartate transaminase
, lactate dehydrogenase and gamma-glutamyltransferase. Hepatosis characterized by accentuated lobulation, and centrilobular to midzonal coagulative necrosis, haemorrhage and congestion occurred in 2 of the 3 ewes given high doses of plant material. Liver lesions in the other animals included disappearance of hepatocytes and collapse of the reticulin stroma in the centrilobular areas. Spongy changes in the cerebral white matter were evident in the ewes of the high-dose group. Ultrastructural changes in the liver comprised degeneration and necrosis of hepatocytes and occasionally endothelial cells, and disruption of sinusoidal walls.
...
PMID:Experimentally-induced Cestrum laevigatum (Schlechtd.) poisoning in sheep. 151 94
Forty-five male Lohmann chicks were grown up to 6 weeks of age. The experimental diet containing a high protein level (30%) was aimed at increasing the metabolic need for PN. Microbiological analysis on the basal ration revealed a marginal content of 4.7 mumol PN/kg. The vitamin B6 status was assessed at the end of the experiment according to the basal activity of
aspartate aminotransferase
(AspAT) in plasma and in erythrocytes, and the in vitro stimulated activity with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP). None of the deficient chicks had any clinical signs attributable to malfunction of the nervous system, and they grew as well as those receiving the control diet. Vitamin B6 deficiency was biochemically confirmed by a significant
depression
of AspAT activity in plasma (p less than 0.001) and in erythrocytes (p less than 0.01). The addition of PLP in vitro enhanced the catalytic activity of the plasma enzyme, but had negligible effect on the erythrocyte enzyme. The degree of stimulation in vitro of the apoenzyme of AspAT not only depends on the endogenous vitamin B6 content, but also on the basal activity of the enzyme. A 15-day repletion period with a daily oral dose (50 mumol PN) did not result in a complete restoration of the enzyme activity, indicating that the availability of apoenzyme had been curtailed. This experiment demonstrated that chicks fed a high protein corn-soyamin diet with a limited amount of PN but containing Saccharomyces yeast showed no nervous signs or perosis, but significant metabolic disturbances.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Aspartate aminotransferase activity in experimentally induced asymptomatic vitamin B6 deficiency in chicks. 205 99
Risperidone (R 64766) was administered during 4 weeks in increasing doses to 17 psychotic patients, to evaluate the hematological and cardiovascular safety, the therapeutic effect, side effects, effects upon endocrinological parameters and the pharmacokinetic profile. Following a placebo wash-out period of 1 week, the initial dose was 10 mg daily, increasing with 5 mg per week until the maximal dose of 25 mg daily was reached during the 4th week of treatment. Doses up to 20 mg daily resulted in a significant improvement of the total BPRS score and of the different BPRS factor scores; with higher doses, no further clinical benefit was achieved except for the hostility and anxiety-
depression
factor, while sedation became more prominent. No increase of extrapyramidal symptoms was noticed. Except for the sedation observed with higher doses, risperidone was well tolerated. No clinically relevant effects on cardiovascular and ECG parameters were noticed, and except for a slight increase of
aspartate aminotransferase
and alanine aminotransferase in one patient, no laboratory abnormalities were observed. Prolactin showed an expected increase, while the other endocrinological parameters revealed no changes. Risperidone had a linear pharmacokinetic profile.
...
PMID:Therapeutic effect and safety of increasing doses of risperidone (R 64766) in psychotic patients. 248 Jun 16
The effect of high dietary sulfur (S) supplementation on blood thiamine (B1) concentration, biochemical indices of liver, muscle and kidney damage and selected plasma electrolytes was studied in six sheep. Three of these sheep received an additional 230 mg thiamine/kg diet (Group 2). After approximately 2.5-3 weeks on this diet, all three sheep in the non-B1-supplemented group (Group 1) showed loss of appetite and developed mild neurological signs:
depression
, intermittent signs of excitation and head pressing. Increases in blood B1 concentration and plasma creatine kinase (CK) and
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) were observed during this time in all affected animals. Clinical signs lasted only for two to five days. Sheep in group 2 were clinically normal throughout the experiment, but all of these animals also had elevated blood B1 concentrations and plasma CK activity at the 3 wk sampling. Plasma magnesium concentrations of group 1 sheep were elevated at the 2.5-3 wk and 6 wk samplings but they declined significantly (p less than 0.05) to low normal levels thereafter. Magnesium concentrations of group 2 sheep were low at the beginning but progressively increased during the course of the experiment. At necropsy, brain lesions suggestive of polioencephalomalacia (PEM) were observed in all sheep but were most marked in group 1. It is speculated that PEM may be caused by a direct toxic effect of S, S metabolites or B1 antimetabolites in the brain rather than by an in vivo B1 deficiency per se.
...
PMID:Sulfur-induced polioencephalomalacia in sheep: some biochemical changes. 257 73
Concentrations of the enzymes creatine kinase (CK) and
aspartate aminotransferase
(ASAT/GOT) were determined in plasma of 100 gilts and 175 sows at the 112. day of pregnancy and one day after parturition. Gilts and sows were divided into a stress resistant (n = 146) and a stress susceptible group (n = 129) following the creatine-kinase-test carried out after the performance test period at a body weight of 90 kg (CK-90). Stress susceptible gilts and sows showed higher CK-values before and especially after parturition than stress resistant ones. Significant correlations were demonstrable between CK-90 and the CK values before and after parturition (r = 0.5). Regarding body temperature, respiration rate and heart frequency as well as the percentage of stillborn piglets, the two groups of sows did not differ from each other. The increase of enzyme activities after parturition was not influenced by prophylactic treatment with prostaglandin-F2-alpha or beta receptor blocking agent. The beta blocking agent Carazolol, however, caused a transient
depression
of heart rate after parturition.
...
PMID:[Stress reactions in clinically healthy sows at the time of birth and their relationship to the CK test]. 289 37
The hemlocks, Conium maculatum (poison-hemlock) and Cicuta spp. (waterhemlock), are poisonous plants that cause sizeable losss to the livestock industry. Clinical signs of poisonhemlock toxicosis are similar in all species of livestock and include muscular weakness, incordination, trembling, initial central nervous system stimulation,
depression
and death from respiratory paralysis. Poison-hemlock also causes skeletal defects in the offspring of cattle, pigs and sheep and cleft palate in pigs when ingested during specific periods of gestation. The primary toxicants in poison-hemlock are coniine and gamma-coniceine. Coniine predominates in mature plants and seed, whereas gamma-coniceine predominates in early growth of the plant. Waterhemlock is the most violently toxic poisonous plant known. The toxicant is cicutoxin, which acts on the central nervous system, causing violent convulsions and death. Clinical signs of poisoning appear within 15 min after ingestion of a lethal dose and include excessive salivation, nervousness, tremors, muscular weakness and convulsive seizures interspersed by intermittent periods of relaxation and a final paralytic seizure resulting in anoxia and death. Elevated activities of lactic dehydrogenase,
aspartate aminotransferase
and creatine kinase in blood are observed, indicative of muscular damage. Toxicoses from poisonhemlock and waterhemlock generally occur in early spring when both plants emerge before other, more palatable plants begin to grow. All parts of the poison-hemlock plant are toxic. The root or tubers of waterhemlock are toxic; however, experimental evidence concerning the toxicity of other plant parts is inconclusive.
...
PMID:Toxicoses in livestock from the hemlocks (Conium and Cicuta spp.). 304 97
The activities were studied in five kinds of enzymes (
aspartate aminotransferase
- AST, alanine aminotransferase - ALT, lactate dehydrogenase - LD, the thermally stable fraction of lactate dehydrogenase - LD-1, and alkaline phosphatase - ALP) of 30 male dogs. The dogs, divided into two age categories, were studied during a long-continued training (130 days). Both transaminases exhibit characteristic changes in the activity, with a
depression
at the beginning between the 30th and 40th days of training, followed by a slow increase in AST and by a rapid increase in ALT, continuing until the end of the training period. A statistically significant activity pattern was recorded in LD: the activity declined continuously in both age groups of dogs. LD-1 exhibited an activity
depression
continuing until the 70th day of training, followed by an increase which reached statistical significance towards the end of the training. ALP activity varied regularly, but always remained significantly below the starting values. The enzymatic activities can be used as partial tests during the scientific management of the training of dogs in relation to the physiological and pathophysiological processes in the bodies of the dogs subjected to the training stress.
...
PMID:[The effect of training stress on enzyme activity in working dogs]. 312 61
The aim of this investigation was to study central haemodynamics in initially uncomplicated acute myocardial infarction (AMI) with respect to natural history, relation to enzyme estimated infarct size, mortality and effects of metoprolol. A total of 212 patients with AMI but without clinical signs of serious heart failure or hypotension and with a mean delay from onset of pain to study entry of about 7 hours were studied. They were randomised to placebo or metoprolol (15 mg i.v. + 50 mg orally q.i.d.) treatment. Central pressures and cardiac output were evaluated by repeated measurements over 24 hours by means of pulmonary artery catheters. The pharmacokinetics of metoprolol were studied in further 20 patients with AMI. The natural history, as reflected by the placebo group, was observed to be a gradual significant fall in systemic artery pressures, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP; 13.6-10.5 mmHg) and stroke volume, while heart rate increased, leaving cardiac output unchanged. The decrease in PCWP was confined to the group with baseline pressure above the median of 13 mmHg and was of equal magnitude in the group given concomitant medication to that of those who required no such therapy. Significant but weak correlations between the peak serum
aspartate aminotransferase
level and the baseline PCWP (r = 0.28) and stroke volume (r = 0.22) were found. Non-survivors had a significant baseline
depression
of cardiac output and stroke volume, while PCWP was increased. However, the overlap with survivors was large. The dosage of metoprolol used resulted in mean plasma levels of about 200 nmol/l, which should induce a rapid and sustained degree of beta-blockade. The patients randomised to placebo or metoprolol were assessed according to initial heart rate. The haemodynamic changes induced by metoprolol were similar but were more pronounced in patients with high heart rate compared to those with low rate. In patients with heart rate greater than 65 beats/min, the metoprolol treated group, in comparison to the placebo group, was characterised by a decrease of 10-20% in systolic artery pressure and heart rate, suggesting a decreased myocardial oxygen consumption. Cardiac index (2.9-2.2 l/min/m2) and stroke volume index (36-32 ml/beat/m2) decreased to a minimum after 30 minutes and gradually rose thereafter. The PCWP increased from 13.7 to 15.4 mmHg, 30 minutes after the injection of metoprolol. This increase was confined to the group with baseline low pressure and the difference compared to the placebo group disappeared after 8 hours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Central haemodynamics in acute myocardial infarction. Natural history, relation to enzyme release and effects of metoprolol. 353 97
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