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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acidic deposition, commonly referred to as acid rain, is causing serious environmental damage in eastern Canada. The revenues from forest products, tourism and sport fishing are estimated to account for about 8% of the gross national product. The impact on human health is not as clearcut and a multi-department program on the Long-Range Transport of Airborne Pollutants (LRTAP) was approved by the federal government in June 1980. The objectives of the LRTAP program are to reduce wet sulfate deposition to less than 20 kg/ha per year in order to protect moderately sensitive areas. This will require a 50% reduction in Canadian SO2 emissions east of the Saskatchewan/Manitoba border and concomitant reductions in the eastern U.S.A. The objectives of the health sector of the program are to assess the risk to health posed by airborne pollutants which are subjected to long-range transport and to monitor the influence of abatement programs. Two major epidemiology studies were undertaken in 1983, one in which the health effects related to acute exposure to transported air pollutants were studied in asthmatic and nonasthmatic children, and another in which the effects of chronic exposure to these pollutants were studied in school children living in towns with high and low levels of pollutants. Preliminary analysis of the data do not indicate major health effects, but definitive conclusions must await final analysis. Studies on the indirect effects of acid deposition on water quality have shown that acidified lake water left standing in the plumbing system can adversely affect water quality and that federally set guidelines for copper and lead are exceeded. Flushing of the system before using the water rectifies the situation. Additional studies are planned to further delineate the magnitude of the health effects of acidified lake water.
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PMID:Health risks from acid rain: a Canadian perspective. 407 81

It is noted that advertisements in medical journals recommend treatment of emotional symptoms in menopausal patients with Premarin (Ayerst brand of conjugated estrogens), Ogen (Abbott brand of piperazine estrone sulfate), or other compounds. There are no acceptable studies proving the usefulness of such combinations for symptoms relating to the menopause and no persuasive evidence to justify use of conjugated or any other type of estrogen in the treatment of emotional symptoms in menopausal women. Vasomotor symptoms, flushing, and sweats respond to estrogens. Symptoms do not recur if treatment is stopped after 1 or 2 years. Systematic or topical use of estrogens fails to promote the appearance of youthfulness. Vaginal pruritus and dyspareunia due to atrophic vaginitis may be relieved by estrogens either applied locally or orally. Libido is not heightened by exogenous estrogens but sufficient androgen doses cause virilization. It is doubtful if osteoporosis is favorably influenced by long-term use of estrogens. Estrogen therapy may cause spotting, menarrhagia, nausea, breast tenderness, or fluid retention. Prolonged use may cause increase in size of uterine fibroids. Personal or even family history of breast or genital cancer are considered contraindications.
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PMID:Estrogens and the menopausal patient. 434 58

The hemodynamic effects of high-dose hydromorphone hydrochloride (H), 1.25 mg/kg, were investigated in 10 patients with normal ventricular function undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. One patient with unstable angina was excluded from the study because of hypotension and facial flushing after a 6-mg test dose of H. Nine patients showed no significant change in heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure (MAP), cardiac index (CI), left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), or coronary perfusion pressure (CPP) after H; central venous pressure (CVP) increased significantly (P less than 0.05). Loss of consciousness did not occur reliably after H. The addition of 50% N2O to H produced significant decreases in CI and LVSWI (P less than 0.05). Hemodynamic responses to tracheal intubation, skin incision, and sternotomy included depression of CI, elevation of SVR, and increased MAP (P less than 0.05). Vasodilators were required in eight patients before aortic cannulation and after extracorporeal circulation. Mean time to awakening was 7.6 hr after the full dose of H, and extubation was performed the morning after surgery (21 hr after H) according to our usual practice. We conclude that very large doses of H (equivalent in analgesic terms to 10 mg/kg of morphine sulfate) are well tolerated by most patients undergoing CABG surgery, but unconsciousness and complete suppression of sympathetic responses require supplementation of H with additional anesthetic agents or vasodilators.
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PMID:High-dose hydromorphone (Dilaudid) for coronary artery bypass surgery. 619 10

The isolated rat kidney perfused at 37 C was used to evaluate the effect of adding plasma proteins to, and varying osmolality of, cold-storage flushing solutions with or without buffering. Addition of albumin improved immediate poststorage kidney function (glomerular filtration rate [GFR], fractional sodium reabsorption, and fractional protein clearance) of all flushing solutions tested after 6 hr and 24 hr of storage. At 6 hr, these improvements also correlated with less weight gain. Flushing solutions containing citrate and sulfate produced significantly better return of function after 24 hr of cold storage than Krebs' or Collins'-derived solutions. Osmolality was unimportant with solutions containing citrate. Collins' solution with reduced MgSO4 yielded better poststorage function than conventional solution. An all-citrate isotonic solution buffered with 15 mmol THAM preserved poststorage function at 48 hr better than a similarly buffered solution containing both citrate and sulfate. Loss of dry weight during storage and subsequent perfusion appeared to correlate, in these experiments, with loss of poststorage function. The isolated rat kidney provides discrimination among various flushing solutions. The technique might be useful in the assay of additional variables that might affect the quality of kidney preservation.
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PMID:Effect of plasma proteins and buffer in flushing solutions on rat kidney preservation by cold storage. 636 61

Damage to the skin following the repeated use of 2 different wash solutions was investigated. Stratum corneum capacitative resistance, stratum corneum lipids, transepidermal water loss, skin surface pH, laser Doppler flow and skin reddening were determined. All skin function parameters already showed a marked change after a single wash (e.g., the median of TEWL values increased by more than 0.5 g/m2 h). Repetitive washing for 1 week led to a further deterioration of TEWL and corneometry values (e.g., TEWL increased for about 2.9 g/m2 h after repetitive washing with sodium lauryl sulfate). The rate of skin function regeneration after repetitive washing was unaltered compared to regeneration after a single wash. The surfactants used showed quantitatively differing effects on corneometry, TEWL and laser Doppler flow (e.g., after repetitive washing with Geliderm, the median of TEWL values increased only up to 1.55 g/m2 h). However, damage arising from repetitive washing could not be completely prevented by the selection of a mild surfactant. Skin function regeneration showed no difference with the 2 surfactants used.
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PMID:Damage to the skin by repetitive washing. 760 Jul 78

The authors studied urine excretion of sulfates before and after a shift in workers engaged into brewing and flushing shops of sulfate cellulose production, who are exposed to various amounts of methyl sulfate compounds. Significant increase of urine sulfate appeared by the end of the shift and correlated with intensity of the air pollution with methyl sulfate compounds. Lower urine excretion of sulfates occurred with longer length of service.
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PMID:[Urinary sulfates as a biologic indicator of exposure to methylsulfate compounds in manufacture of sulfate cellulose]. 937 37

Unexplained episodic hypertension, hypotension, or orthostatic intolerance, tachycardia, anxiety, and flushing in 21 patients were investigated for the possibility of hypovolemia by blood volume and individual plasma catecholamines (including autocrine paracrine-born dopamine), determinations baseline, in response to upright posture and catecholamines only during the episodic blood pressure swings. Blood volume was determined by Cr51 fixed to patients' hemoglobin, free norepinephrine, epinephrine, and dopamine with dopamine sulfate following sulfatase hydrolysis, radioenzymatically. The recumbent mean 27.4+/-3% (SE) blood volume decrease from predicted values accentuating to 33.5+/-4% upright was associated with normal baseline plasma free norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine, dopamine sulfate, plasma renin activity, and aldosterone with normal mean postural responses from all patients except a hyperresponsive compared to controls (p < 0.04), plasma renin activity increase from 0.657+/-0.1 to 4.47+/-1.8 ng/mL/hr. During the hypertensive, hypotensive, or tachycardic episodes the moderate increase of free norepinephrine and epinephrine (p < 0.04) (but not free dopamine) contrasted with an increase of dopamine sulfate from 2.5+/-0.9 to clearly pathological values of 16.8+/-8.3 ng/mL (p < 0.0003 on % increase of individual values). We conclude that the normal (but to the degree of hypovolemia inappropriately low orthostatism- and episodes-associated sympathetic arousal) is outpaced by considerable episodic dopamine sulfate surges, reflecting extraneuronal dopamine discharge. Whether this increase contributes to the increased natriuresis directly or by inhibiting aldosterone response to renin-angiotensin, perpetuating hypovolemia, remains to be established.
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PMID:Idiopathic hypovolemia: a self-perpetuating autonomic dysfunction? 986 52

We performed ex vivo experiments with Plasmodium falciparum-infected human placentas from primi- and multigravida women from Cameroon. All women, independent of their gravida status, had anti-chondroitin sulfate A (CSA) adhesion antibodies which cross-reacted with heterologous strains, such as FCR3 and Palo-Alto(FUP)1, which were selected for CSA binding. These antibodies, directed against the surface of infected erythrocytes obtained by flushing with CSA (IRBC(CSA)), were restricted to the immunoglobulin G3 isotypes. Massive desequestration of parasites was achieved with soluble CSA but not with anti-ICAM-1 and anti-CD36 monoclonal antibodies. All of the CSA-flushed parasites were analyzed immediately by using in vitro assays of binding to Saimiri brain endothelial cells (SBEC) expressing various adhesion receptors. Parasites derived from all six placentas displayed the CSA adhesion phenotype. However, only partial inhibition of adhesion was observed in the presence of soluble CSA or when Sc1D SBEC were treated with chondroitinase ABC. These results suggest that an additional adhesive molecule of IRBC(CSA) which binds to an unidentified receptor is present in the placenta. This new phenotype was lost once the parasites adapted to in vitro culture. We observed additional differences in the CSA adhesion phenotype between placental parasites and in vitro-cultured parasites panned on endothelial cells carrying CSA. The minimum size of fractionated CSA required for a significant inhibition of placental IRBC(CSA) adhesion to Sc1D cells was 1 to 2 kDa, which contrasts with the 4-kDa size necessary to reach equivalent levels of inhibition with panned IRBC(CSA) of this phenotype. All placental IRBC(CSA) cytoadhered to Sc17 SBEC, which express only the CSA receptor. Panning of IRBC(CSA) on these cells resulted in a significant quantitative increase of IRBC cytoadhering to the CSA of Sc1D cells but did not change their capacity for adhesion to CSA on normal placenta cryosections. Our results indicate that the CSA binding phenotype is heterogeneous and that several distinct genes may encode P. falciparum-CSA ligands with distinct binding properties.
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PMID:Ex vivo desequestration of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes from human placenta by chondroitin sulfate A. 1056 80

A coupled achiral-chiral high-performance liquid chromatographic system with fluorescence detection at excitation/emission wavelengths of 276/306 nm has been developed for the determination of the enantiomers of terbutaline, (S)-(+)-terbutaline and (R)-(-)-terbutaline in urine. Urine samples were prepared by solid-phase extraction with Sep-pak silica, followed by HPLC. The terbutaline was preseparated from the interfering components in urine on Phenomenex silica column and the terbutaline enantiomers and betaxolol were resolved and determined on a Sumichiral OA-4900 chiral stationary phase. The two columns were connected by a switching valve equipped with silica precolumn. The precolumn was used to concentrate the terbutaline in the eluent from the achiral column before back flushing onto the chiral phase. For each enantiomer the assay was linear between 1 and 250 ng/ml (R2=0.9999) and the detection limit was 0.3 ng/ml. The intra-day variation was between 4.6 and 11.6% in relation to the measured concentration and the inter-day variation was 4.3-11.0%. It has been applied to the determination of (S)-(+)-terbutaline and (R)-(-)-terbutaline in urine from a healthy volunteer dosed with racemic terbutaline sulfate.
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PMID:Determination of terbutaline enantiomers in human urine by coupled achiral-chiral high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection. 1123 57

Surfactant-modified zeolites (SMZ) have drawn recent attention as sorbents due to their removal of multiple types of contaminants and low material cost. However, like most sorbents, SMZ has a finite sorption capacity for different contaminants. The potential applications, economics, and efficiency of SMZ as a sorbent are related to the ability to regenerate the material. This paper reports several methods to regenerate chromate- and perchloroethylene-saturated SMZ. Regeneration of chromate-saturated SMZ was achieved by flushing with a sodium carbonate/sodium hydroxide solution. However, this high-pH solution increased the counterion competition for chromate sorption sites and decreased the chromate sorption capacity of the regenerated SMZ. As an alternative regeneration method, chromate sorbed to SMZ was reduced to Cr(III) in situ using sodium dithionite solution. Although reduction with dithionite restored the chromate sorption maximum, the chromate sorption intensity was lowered, possibly due to the competition by sulfate (generated from oxidation of dithionite) for chromate sorption sites. Carbonate-regenerated SMZ showed no loss of sorption affinity for perchloroethylene (PCE) compared to virgin SMZ. Air sparging of PCE-saturated SMZ fully regenerated the SMZ. The results show that it is possible to regenerate and re-use SMZ following saturation with anionic or nonpolar organic contaminants.
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PMID:Regeneration of surfactant-modified zeolite after saturation with chromate and perchloroethylene. 1125 88


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