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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with a giant cell carcinoma of the bronchus presented with headache and
flushing
attacks and a blood eosinophilia. He developed a right bundle branch block and later congestive cardiac failure. At post mortem he was found to have the appearance of Loeffler's endocarditis. A tentative mechanism for these events is proposed.
...
PMID:Bronchial carcinoma with eosinophilia and cardiomegaly. 12 74
The techniques used for laparoscopic observation of reproductive systems in 23 species are described. The application of various techniques to biomedical research is examined, and the methods used for laparoscopic follicular aspiration and injection, as well as the techniques for uterine
flushing
collection from swine and nonhuman primates, and oviductal deposition of test solutions are described.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic techniques for biomedical research. 13 15
A technique is described for recovery of preimplantation embryos from squirrel monkeys. Monkeys were induced to ovulate after 4-5 days treatment with 1 mg of follicle stimulating hormone followed by 500 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG). Natural mating or artificial insemination was done near the time of ovulation. AT 36 hours and 11 days after HCG administration, laparoscopic examinations were done to determine if ovulation had occurred. 4-7 days and 15-17 days after HCG administration, warmed saline solution was flushed through the uterine lumen. This was accomplished under laparoscopic control through a needle inserted through the adbominal wall and the uterine fundus into the uterine lumen.
Flushed
fluid was recovered from the vagina with a pipette or a catheter. Fluid recovery averaged 65.4%. In 1 animal, 10 such flushings were done without ill effect. After 58 flushings, 6 unfertilized ova and 2 preimplantation blastocysts were recovered. Results indicated that the zona pellucida of the squirrel monkey ovum is lost at a younger age than the human's or baboon's as reported by others. This could imply earlier ovum entry into the uterus and earlier embryonic development.
...
PMID:Recovery of preimplantation blastocysts in the squirrel monkey by a laparoscopic technique. 14 77
Thrombosis in a renal artery occurred in a 60-year-old woman after regional hypothermia of the kidney for which balloon occlusion of the artery had been used. Perfusion of the kidney was re-established by aspiration and
flushing
of the thrombus; this was confirmed angiographically and anatomically. Renal function did not recover, however, since removal of the thrombus by means of an angiographic catheter was carried out too late. We regard early aspiration of emboli from major abdominal vessels as a further application of arterial catheterisation by the Seldinger technique.
...
PMID:[Transfemoral aspiration of a thrombus from a renal artery with an angiographic catheter (author's transl)]. 15 30
The following recommendations and conclusions are based upon results of fertility and laboratory studies, and general trends from field investigations. Fertility results due to the addition of enzymes have been variable and contradictory.
Flushing
of ampules with dry, gaseous nitrogen prior to filling has become a routine practice in processing semen to be frozen. For control of Vibrio fetus and Leptospira pomona, 2,000 micrograms of streptomycin and 1,000 u polymyxin B sulfate should be added per milliliter of raw semen immediately after collection. The extender for initial dilution should contain the same concentration of antibiotics used for raw semen plus 500 u penicillin. The glycerol portion of the extender should contain 500 u penicillin per milliliter. The effect of addition of sugars on fertility has been highly variable. The primary beneficial effect is probably due to their cryoprotective properties. A myriad of concoctions have been added to bovine semen and the results have been highly variable with respect to both motility and fertility. Results of subsequent experiments have rarely proven that addition of exotic compounds or mixtures has been of value. Higher mean fertility was obtained with semen in straws in 14 of 21 comparisons with ampules. The differences in favor of straws ranged from 1.1 to 18.9; while the range in favor of ampules was .1 to 4.4 percentage points. Fertility obtained with pellets has ranged from minus 12.8 to plus 11.9 percentage points in nonreturn rate (NR), compared to the corresponding NR with semen in ampules. Fertility of semen in ampules was higher in five of eight studies. Fertility of pelleted semen has ranged from minus 9.5 to plus 6.0 percentage points compared with straws. Fertility was higher for semen in pellets in only one of five investigations. Pellets should not be used until the potential for pathogenic contamination and exchange of spermatozoa among pellets is eliminated. There is a potential for higher fertility with semen in straws as compared to other packaging systems, but the issue of liquid nitrogen (LN) entry and possible contamination of semen should be further investigated. In general, fertility obtained with semen frozen in the .25 ml straw has been equal to or higher than semen in larger packages. However, they cannot be unequivocally recommended due to other considerations. From laboratory studies, it appears that greater spermatozoan survival is obtained when semen frozen in straws is thawed in water at 35 C or above.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Influence of seminal additives and packaging systems on fertility of frozen bovine spermatozoa. 16 35
Large numbers of bacteria and viruses when seeded into household toilets were shown to remain in the bowl after
flushing
, and even continual
flushing
could not remove a persistent fraction. This was found to be due to the adsorption of the organsims to the porcelain surfaces of the bowl, with gradual elution occuring after each flush. Droplets produced by
flushing
toilets were found to harbor both bacteria and viruses which had been seeded. The detection of bacteria and firuses falling out onto surfaces in bathrooms after
flushing
indicated that they remain airborne long enough to settle on surfaces throughout the bathroom. Thus, there is a possibility that a person may acquire an infection from an aerosol produced by a toilet.
...
PMID:Microbiological hazards of household toilets: droplet production and the fate of residual organisms. 16 32
To study adhesion, which is probably the initial step in malignant invasion, we associated tissue culture fragments with living substrates in vitro. Malignant HeLa, hepatoma, and PY cells, as well as nonmalignant BHK cells, were transplanted into cultured chick blastoderms and organ fragments from chick embryos. Adhesion was evaluated by time-lapse cinematography, by
flushing
with Tyrode's solution, and by histological examination after fixation. It was shown that the adhesion of these tissue culture fragments depends on the nature of the substrate. Substrates of connective tissue, mesenchyme, and the basal side of epithelia proved to be adhesive. In contrast, the apical side of intact epithelia was nonadhesive. Perforated epithelia allowed adhesion at the site of the perforation. In the presence of dilysine, HeLa cells adhere to the apical side of epithelia and to the dorsal side of the upper layer of the blastoderm. We concluded that the apical side of intact epithelia constitutes an inappropriate substrate for adhesion of a large variety of cells, in vitro as well as in vivo. Alteration of this characteristic in the presence of dilysine indicates that long-range electrostatic repulsion might be responsible for the nonadhesive character of the epithelia.
...
PMID:Adhesion of malignant and nonmalignant cells to cultured embryonic substrates. 17 Oct 65
The effect of xantinol-nicotinate (50 mg/kg body-weight) on serum lipids and lipoproteins was tested in 16 out-patients with primary type V hyperlipoproteinaemia. The lipids and lipoproteins were measured before treatment, during a three-week period of drug administration and ten days after it had been stopped. There were no side effects such as
flushing
or gastritis, and no notable reduction of weight. Each serum-lipid fraction (triglycerides, nonesterified fatty acids, phospholipids, ester-cholesterol and free cholesterol) decreased significantly, regaining the initial values ten days after the drug had been stopped. While chylomicrons and very low-density lipoproteins (VLDL) decreased, there was a significant increase in low-density lipoproteins (LDL). High-density lipoproteins were not significantly changed. The decrease in chylomicrons and the significant decrease in VLDL with xantinol-nicotinate was opposite to that seen with dietary treatment. In none of the patients did LDL increase to abnormally high levels.
...
PMID:[Xantinol-nicotinate in primary type-V hyperlipoproteinaemia (author's transl)]. 18 36
Flush
is a common side effect of nicotinic acid therapy in patients. The effect is present as long as the level of nicotinic acid increases in the plasma. The mechanism of flush after nicotinic acid has been studied in the ears of guinea-pigs in vivo. The threshold dose of nicotinic acid (1-3 mg/kg) to raise the skin temperature of the ears and to increase the cyclic AMP level of this tissue was similar. Indomethacin and acetylsalicylic acid which inhibit the synthesis of prostaglandins markedly reduce the duration and intensity of the flush. In isolated slices from guinea-pig ears, nicotinic acid increased the level of cyclic AMP; this effect was inhibited by indomethacin. The stimulating action of prostaglandin E1 on the cyclic AMP level of the ear slices was not inhibited by indomethacin. Since administration to man of both cyclic AMP and prostaglandin E1 produces flush it is suggested that nicotinic acid may induce flush by the formation of some prostaglandin which then increases the formation of cyclic AMP.
...
PMID:Studies on the mechanism of flush induced by nicotinic acid. 19 86
Resistant variants are often formed when susceptible Enterobacteriaceae are grown in media containing mecillinam. These variants have not yet been detected in patients or identified as a cause of treatment failure in limited clinical trials. Mecillinam-resistant organisms were formed by 5 out of 13 urinary isolates of Enterobacteriaceae incubated in urine containing mecillinam. The mean generation time of these five variants in urine containing therapeutic concentrations of mecillinam was 3.2 times that of normal organisms in antibiotic-free urine. When three of these five resistant variants were subcultured in antibiotic-free urine, the generation time, morphology, and antibiotic susceptibility returned to normal. On antibiotic-free agar medium, all five mecillinam-resistant variants readily reverted to the "susceptible" form and were therefore more likely to be phenotypic rather than genotypic mutants. In a second series of experiments, the
flushing
effect of the bladder on the clearance of organisms was partly simulated by frequent subculture in urine. Under these conditions, the cell density of cultures of all bacteria remained high during 10 subcultures over 52 h. However, bacterial populations progressively decreased in urine containing mecillinam until none could be detected at 28 h or thereafter. The slow growth rate of mecillinam-resistant variants may explain why detectable numbers of these organisms fail to colonize the urinary tract during treatment. Other factors may reinforce the postulated effect of the reduced growth rate in vivo.
...
PMID:Growth properties of mecillinam-resistant bacterial variants in urine. 20 Jan 71
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