Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Secondary sewage effluent and renovated water from four wells at the Flushing Meadows Wastewater Renovation Project near Phoenix, Arizona, in operation since 1967, were assayed approximately every 2 months in 1974 for viruses during flooding periods. Viruses, regularly found in the secondary effluent, were not detected in any renovated water samples. Our results indicated that human viral pathogens do not move through soil into the groundwater, but are apparently absorbed and degraded by the soil and reduced in numbers by a factor of at least 10(4) (99.99 percent removal).
...
PMID:Wastewater renovation and reuse: virus removal by soil filtration. 127 80

To investigate a possible link between subclinical infection with poliovirus in childhood and increased risk of motor neuron disease in adult life, environmental determinants of infection in early life were compared in 98 cases of motor neuron disease and 335 age and sex matched controls. A weak but consistent relation was found between motor neuron disease and factors in the childhood environment known to increase likelihood of enteric infection. Relative risks associated with spending the first 10 years of life in a house without domestic amenities such as a bathroom, running hot water or flushing lavatory, living in overcrowded conditions, frequent changes of address or having a sibling with paralytic poliomyelitis were all greater than unity, although only those for absence of running hot water and frequent changes of address were statistically significant.
...
PMID:The environment in childhood and risk of motor neuron disease. 133 35

While the clinical results of orthotopic liver transplantation have greatly improved, the viability of liver grafts and extension of the safe time for preservation are necessary factors in need of improvement. The liver is one of the organs most sensitive to anoxia. The addition of an oxygen carrying agent to the preservation solution was evaluated. Pyridoxalated hemoglobin-polyoxyethylene conjugate (PHP) is used as an oxygen carrier. Viaspan (UW) served as a control solution. Test solution (PHP+UW) composition was composed of a 1:1 mixture of PHP and UW solutions with hemoglobin 4.0g%, hydroxyethyl starch 2.5g%, osmolality 320 mOsm/kg H2O, and colloidal osmotic pressure 33 mmHg. The oxygen carrying capacity of PHP+UW solution is about 10 times higher than UW solution at 4 degrees C. Male Lewis rats (BW: 250-300 g) were divided into five groups. After flushing the solution via the portal vein, rat livers were harvested. Two preservation methods, simple storage and perfusion (0.1 ml/min/g liver), were studied at 4 degrees C for 24 or 48 hours. OxyHb, MetHb, pO2, pH, Na, K, GOT, and GPT of perfusate, hepatic mitochondrial functions after preservation, and tissue adenine nucleotides by HPLC were measured. Light microscopy on the tissue was also performed. No significant differences were noted in perfusate biochemical parameters. Oxygen consumption during the perfusion was significantly higher in the PHP+UW than in the UW group. Hepatic mitochondrial functions and tissue ATP levels were better preserved in perfusion than in simple storage, and in PHP+UW than in UW at 48 hours. The oxygen carrying agent, PHP, can provide significantly higher levels of oxygen to liver grafts and improve graft viability.
...
PMID:Does oxygen supply improve graft viability in liver preservation? 139 76

We examined the hypothesis that the degree of inflation of the lungs at the time of harvest may have an important role in postpreservation function. Lungs of donor dogs randomly assigned to groups 1 (n = 5) and 2 (n = 5) were ventilated with large tidal volumes (tidal volume, 25 ml/kg; positive end-expiratory pressure, 5 cm H2O; respiratory rate, 12 breaths/min, inspired oxygen fraction 1.0) and were inflated to 30 cm H2O for 15 seconds before pulmonary artery flush and again immediately before tracheal crossclamping. In group 3 (n = 5) donor lungs were normally ventilated (tidal volume, 12.5 ml/kg, positive end-expiratory pressure 0 cm H2O; respiratory rate 12 breaths/min, inspired oxygen fraction, 1.0) and were not hyperinflated before pulmonary artery flushing; the trachea was crossclamped at end-inspiration. In groups 1 and 3 a large bolus (25 micrograms/kg) of prostaglandin E1 was injected into the pulmonary artery before flushing and was also added to the pulmonary artery flush solution (500 micrograms/L). A rapid (approximately 50 seconds), high-volume mm Hg), hypothermic (4 degrees C) pulmonary artery flush was performed in all hypothermic (4 degrees C) pulmonary artery flush was performed in all groups with modified Euro-Collins solution. Heart-lung blocks were stored at 4 degrees C for approximately 29 hours before left single lung allografting. An inflatable cuff was placed around the recipient right pulmonary artery, allowing independent study of the transplanted lung. Hyperinflated lungs harvested with or without prostaglandin E1 provided equivalently excellent early posttransplant function (arterial oxygen tension [mean +/- standard deviation]: group 1; 503 +/- 45, vs group 2; 529 +/- 150 mm Hg; inspired oxygen fraction 1.0). Mean arterial oxygen tension was significantly lower in group 3 (116 +/- 78 mm Hg) than in either groups 1 or 2 (p < 0.0002 for either comparison). Copious reperfusion pulmonary edema was a constant feature in group 3 but was not seen in groups 1 and 2. All 10 recipients in groups 1 and 2 survived the 3-day assessment period without difficulty; two of the five recipients in group 3 died during initial unilateral perfusion of the transplanted lung. Donor hyperventilation and inflation to 30 cm H2O before hypothermic storage can help provide excellent posttransplantation lung function after 30-hour preservation, with or without prostaglandin E1 pretreatment. We speculate that this improvement may be due to effects of increased lung volume on pulmonary vascular tone and/or surfactant metabolism.
...
PMID:Reliable thirty-hour lung preservation by donor lung hyperinflation. 140 66

All methods for growth of anaerobic bacteria on solid media depend on the elimination of atmospheric O2 through use of a palladium catalyst (Deoxo-Catalyst), active in presence of at least 5% H2 with resultant formation of water. Anaerobic chambers and jars are the two conventional methods employed. Both are based on the elimination of air by means of a pump and its replacement with gas from a cylinder (evacuation-replacement technique). An alternative chemical technique for use in anaerobic jars consists of adding internal gas-generating sachets. The former techniques are more efficient but the trend, particularly in the clinical laboratories, is to use the simpler chemical system that has two inconveniences: a slow establishment of anaerobiosis, and a high cost. We propose a new system that does not require a vacuum pump and consists in flushing anaerobic jars with a convenient gas mixture (H2, CO2, N2: 4.5; 5; 90.5 v/v) by means of an automaton regulating both time and gas flow. Gas-liquid chromatography analysis of the gas inside the jar shows a rapid elimination of gaseous O2, whose residual concentration is low enough to permit growth of all anaerobes of clinical interest, including those which are more O2-sensitive. Comparative qualitative and quantitative data obtained with all available techniques demonstrate the advantages of the new system.
...
PMID:[An automatic gas scanning device, technical improvement for obtaining a favourable atmosphere for in vitro culture of anaerobic bacteria]. 145 2

Platelet activating factor (PAF) is a potent phospholipid mediator of the immune and inflammatory responses, which causes physiologic effects similar to post-transplant pulmonary dysfunction. This study investigates the hypothesis that the use of a specific PAF antagonist (PAFA), BN 52021, in canine lung transplantation improves lung preservation. Twelve pairs of canines underwent left lung allotransplantation after pulmonary artery flushing with modified Euro-Collins (EC) solution (40 ml/kg). The experimental group (N = 6) received EC with BN 52021 (10 mg/kg). BN 52021 was administered to donors prior to harvest and to recipients prior to reperfusion. The preservation interval was 20 hr and the study period was 12 hr post-transplant. Differential pulmonary function and hemodynamics were monitored, comparing the transplanted left lung and the native right lung. Recipients were ventilated on 100% O2. Administration of the platelet activating factor antagonist, BN 52021, was associated with improvement in transplant lung oxygenation, pulmonary vascular resistance, and compliance. At 12 hr, transplant lung pulmonary venous oxygen tension in the treatment group (EC + BN 52021) was 154 +/- 21 mm Hg versus 87 +/- 10 mm Hg in the control group (EC) (P less than 0.05). Pulmonary vascular resistance of the transplant lung at 12 hr was 146 +/- 24 Dynes.sec.cm-5 in the EC + BN 52021 group as compared to 320 +/- 51 Dynes.sec.cm-5 in the EC group (P less than 0.05). Dynamic pulmonary compliance of the transplant lung at 12 hr was 32 +/- 2.9 ml/cm H2O in the EC + BN 52021 group versus 13 +/- 2.0 ml/cm H2O in the EC group (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Platelet activating factor antagonist enhances lung preservation. 152 38

When a dye solution used to simulate patient material was either injected into high-speed dental handpiece (drill) waterlines or applied to the equipment externally, internal air turbine chambers became contaminated. These chambers served as a reservoir of the material, which was slowly dislodged by air expelled during subsequent handpiece operation and which was diluted by water spray used for cooling the drilling surface. Considering the fact that patient materials could reside in internal parts of the equipment that are not usually disinfected and that the material may be subsequently sprayed into cuts and abrasions in the oral cavity, the common approach to reprocessing handpieces (external wiping in combination with flushing) may pose unacceptably high risks to those individuals treated soon after infected patients. Therefore, unless reliable data on cross-infection frequencies are obtained and prove it unnecessary, heat-treating high-speed handpieces between each patient should be considered an essential component of standard procedures whenever universal precautions are practiced in dentistry.
...
PMID:Cross-infection risks associated with current procedures for using high-speed dental handpieces. 162 54

Subclinical psoroptic otocariasis associated with Psoroptes cuniculi (Delafond) was diagnosed in four out of ten herds of sheep. Transmission of mites between sheep and goats and vice versa was detected in herds kept on the same pastures for over 2 years. Flushing the ear canals of sheep and goats with approximately 50 ml of water appeared to be more efficient than swabbing or otoscopic examination for diagnosis and/or mite collection.
...
PMID:Subclinical psoroptic otocariasis in Brazilian sheep with comments on a technique for mite collection. 156 4

Migration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes across epithelia is a hallmark of many inflammatory disease states. Neutrophils traverse epithelia by migrating through the paracellular space and crossing intercellular tight junctions. We have previously shown (Nash, S., J. Stafford, and J.L. Madara. 1987. J. Clin. Invest. 80:1104-1113), that leukocyte migration across T84 monolayers, a model human intestinal epithelium, results in enhanced tight junction permeability--an effect quantitated by the use of a simple, standard electrical assay of transepithelial resistance. Here we show that detailed time course studies of the transmigration-elicited decline in resistance has two components, one of which is unrelated to junctional permeability. The initial decrease in resistance, maximal 5-13 min after initiation of transmigration, occurs despite inhibition of transmigration by an antibody to the common beta subunit of neutrophil beta 2 integrins, and is paralleled by an increase in transepithelial short-circuit current. Chloride ion substitution and inhibitor studies indicate that the early-phase resistance decline is not attributable to an increase in tight junction permeability but is due to decreased resistance across epithelial cells resulting from chloride secretion. Since T84 cells are accepted models for studies of the regulation of Cl- and water secretion, our results suggest that neutrophil transmigration across mucosal surfaces (for example, respiratory and intestinal tracts) may initially activate flushing of the surface by salt and water. Equally important, these studies, by providing a concrete example of sequential transcellular and paracellular effects on transepithelial resistance, highlight the fact that this widely used assay cannot simply be viewed as a direct functional probe of tight junction permeability.
...
PMID:Neutrophil migration across a cultured epithelial monolayer elicits a biphasic resistance response representing sequential effects on transcellular and paracellular pathways. 157 55

Two methods to preserve gastrointestinal tract (GIT) organs and tissues, plastic coating (PC) and plastination (PN), were investigated and compared. Specimens to be preserved were removed from animals within 2 h of death and immediately cleaned with water. Digesta contents were removed by flushing desired portions of GIT with water until the exiting water was clear. In the PC method, cleaned specimens were dehydrated by immersion in an isopropanol solution, dried with forced air after positioning and orientation as in situ, and finally coated on the outer and inner surfaces with a clear plastic material. In the PN procedure, specimens were filled with, and submerged in, a low-formaldehyde fixative, then dehydrated by immersion in a cold acetone solution. Dehydrated specimens were immersed in silicone and placed in a freeze drier for impregnation under low vacuum, followed by overnight gas curing with a silicone crosslinker. Finally, viewing windows were cut out with a scalpel in GIT preserved by both methods. Preserved GIT and tissues had an appearance similar to their appearance in vivo. The PC method was simple and inexpensive. Plastinated specimens were more flexible, durable, and lifelike than those preserved by the PC method. In addition, many body parts, such as muscles, nerves, bones, ligaments, and central nervous system specimens, were preserved by PN. Both methods were found to be useful tools for postmortem studies of tissues and GIT organs.
...
PMID:Technical note: preservation of tissues and gastrointestinal tract portions by plastic coating or plastination. 158 28


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>