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

The benefits of combined antegrade-retrograde infusion of blood cardioplegic solution are becoming well known in adult coronary and valvular heart operations. Many of these advantages relate directly to the pediatric patient. They include prompt arrest and even distribution, particularly with aortic insufficiency or open aortic root, avoiding or limiting ostial cannulation, allowing uninterrupted surgical procedures, and flushing air/debris from the coronary arteries. We therefore report on the first 123 pediatric patients at the University of California, Los Angeles, to receive myocardial protection with antegrade (aortic) infusion in conjunction with retrograde (coronary sinus) infusion of blood cardioplegic solution. We employed a retroplegia catheter with a self-inflating and deflating occlusion balloon on the tip of a pressure-monitored infusion cannula that remains in the coronary sinus during the operation. Induction blood cardioplegic solution, 30 ml/kg in equally divided doses, is administered in the coronary sinus first antegrade at an aortic pressure less than 80 mm Hg, followed by retrograde infusion at less than 40 mm Hg. Maintenance cardioplegic solution (15 ml/kg) is administered every 20 minutes through one or both of the infusion cannulas, depending on the surgical procedure. Patients' ages ranged from 1 week to 16 years with a mean of 4.6 years. The following procedures were included in descending order: Fontan 20, atrioventricular valve repair/replacement (and complete atrioventricular canal) 16, aortic root/Konno/Ross 16, Rastelli 13, aortic valve repair/replacement 13, ventricular septal defect (and double-outlet right ventricle) 13, tetralogy of Fallot 10, coronary artery reimplantation/fistula repair 6, truncus arteriosus 4, arterial switch 3, bidirectional Glenn 2, sinus venosus 2, and aortopulmonary window, Senning, Stansel, interrupted aortic arch, and Ebstein's, 1 each. Aortic crossclamp times ranged from 6 to 219 minutes with a mean of 87 minutes. Myocardial oxygen consumption data for a series of six patients indicated the supplemental benefit for retrograde infusion of cardioplegic solution along with antegrade infusion, particularly in hypertrophied myocardium. Three deaths occurred (2.4% 30-day mortality), in the following patients: the first with truncus arteriosus and interrupted aortic arch, the second with complete atrioventricular canal and pulmonary hypertension, and the third with truncal valve regurgitation and replacement. There were no complications related to the retroplegia catheter. From this initial positive experience, we conclude that (1) combined antegrade-retrograde infusion of blood cardioplegic solution can be safely used in an expanding number of pediatric heart operations in all age groups, and (2) combined antegrade-retrograde infusion of blood cardioplegic solution may provide additional myocardial protection, with excellent surgical outcome, in complex congenital heart repairs.
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PMID:The use of combined antegrade-retrograde infusion of blood cardioplegic solution in pediatric patients undergoing heart operations. 143 16

The amounts of halothane and isoflurane trapped after exposure for up to 3 h at 2 MAC in commonly used anaesthesia circuit tubing were quantitated by gas chromatography. The decontaminating effects of procedures such as flushing with oxygen, thermal disinfection and/or routine storage were assessed in a similar way. After halothane exposure, anaesthetic content was highest in silicone (398 +/- 55 mg 100 g-1). Lower quantities were found in all other tubings investigated (electrically conductive latex: 64 +/- 4, conductive rubber: 62 +/- 4, polyethylene-vinyl-acetate (PEVA): 293 +/- 10 and 149 +/- 17 for non-conductive corrugated and spiral tubes, respectively, polysulfone (Hytrel): 155 +/- 10 mg 100 g-1). The isoflurane contents were substantially lower (silicone: 278 +/- 23; others: 55 +/- 7, 61 +/- 6, 163 +/- 9 and 86 +/- 8, 74 +/- 4 mg 100 g-1). The tubings' content did not correlate with the material's partition coefficient as full saturation was not achieved during exposure. Decontamination procedures reduced the content of volatile anaesthetics to a variable extent. Conductive latex and rubber showed the highest residual content, even after thermal disinfection and subsequent storage. Twenty-minute flushing with oxygen (8 l min-1) decreased effluent gas concentrations below 5 p.p.m. in all tubings. With silicone, after 1 h flushing, halothane concentrations still exceeded 10 p.p.m. (isoflurane: 8 p.p.m.). It is concluded that urgent decontamination by a 20-min flush warrants the safe re-use of previously 'contaminated' conductive rubber and latex as well as polysulfone tubings in critical situations, e.g. in malignant hyperthermia patients if disposable tubing is not immediately available.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Anaesthetic uptake and washout characteristics of patient circuit tubing with special regard to current decontamination techniques. 144 61

Several metabolic fluxes were analyzed during gradual transitions from aerobic to oxygen-limited conditions in chemostat cultures of Pseudomonas mendocina growing in synthetic medium at a dilution rate of 0.25 h-1. P. mendocina growth was glucose limited at high oxygen partial pressures (70 and 20% pO2) and exhibited an oxidative type of metabolism characterized by respiratory quotient (RQ) values of 1.0. A similar RQ value was obtained at low pO2 (2%), and detectable levels of acetic, formic, and lactic acids were determined in the extracellular medium. RQs of 0.9 +/- 0.12 were found at 70% pO2 for growth rates ranging from 0.025 to 0.5 h-1. At high pO2, the control coefficients of oxygen on catabolic fluxes were 0.19 and 0.22 for O2 uptake and CO2 production, respectively. At low pO2 (2%), the catabolic and anabolic fluxes were highly controlled by oxygen. P. mendocina showed a mixed-type fermentative metabolism when nitrogen was flushed into chemostat cultures. Ethanol and acetic, lactic, and formic acids were excreted and represented 7.5% of the total carbon recovered. Approximately 50% of the carbon was found as uronic acids in the extracellular medium. Physiological studies were performed under microaerophilic conditions (nitrogen flushing) in continuous cultures for a wide range of growth rates (0.03 to 0.5 h-1). A cell population, able to exhibit a near-maximum theoretical yield of ATP (YmaxATP = 25 g/mol) with a number of ATP molecules formed during the transfer of an electron towards oxygen along the respiration chain (P/O ratio) of 3, appears to have adapted to microaerophilic conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Metabolic and energetic control of Pseudomonas mendocina growth during transitions from aerobic to oxygen-limited conditions in chemostat cultures. 144 29

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)
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PMID:Platelet activating factor antagonist enhances lung preservation. 152 38

Nifedipine antagonises influx of calcium through cell membrane slow channels, and sustained release formulations of the calcium channel blocker have been shown to be effective in the treatment of mild to moderate hypertension and both stable and variant angina pectoris. Preliminary findings also indicate that these formulations are effective in the treatment of Raynaud's phenomenon and hypertension in pregnancy, and that they reduce the frequency of ischaemic episodes in some patients with silent myocardial ischaemia. The exact mechanism of action of nifedipine in all of these disorders has not been defined. However, its potent peripheral and coronary arterial dilator properties, together with improvements in oxygen supply/demand, are of particular importance. A major goal of sustained release therapy is to permit reductions in the frequency of nifedipine administration, preferably to once daily, and thus improve patient compliance. Two new once-daily formulations--the nifedipine gastrointestinal therapeutic system (GITS) and a fixed combination capsule comprising sustained release nifedipine 20 mg and atenolol 50 mg--have exhibited marked antihypertensive efficacy. The GITS preparation has also been used effectively in the treatment of stable angina pectoris, and both formulations appear to be well tolerated. Sustained release nifedipine formulations are generally better tolerated than their conventionally formulated counterparts, particularly with regard to reflex tachycardia. Adverse effects seem to be dose related, are mainly associated with the drug's potent vasodilatory action, and include headache, flushing and dizziness. Generally, these effects are mild to moderate in severity and transient, usually diminishing with continued treatment. Thus, sustained release nifedipine formulations are useful and established cardiovascular therapeutic agents which have demonstrable efficacy in various forms of angina, mild to moderate hypertension and Raynaud's phenomenon. Further, promising results shown by the nifedipine GITS formulation, with its advantage of once daily administration suggest that it is likely to become one of the preferred nifedipine formulations for the treatment of hypertension and the various forms of angina.
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PMID:Sustained release nifedipine formulations. An appraisal of their current uses and prospective roles in the treatment of hypertension, ischaemic heart disease and peripheral vascular disorders. 171 8

Transcutaneous oxygen pressure (tcPo2), laser Doppler flux and capillary microscopy have been used to examine the forefoot skin in 5 healthy men and 8 patients with severe peripheral arterial occlusive disease in order to evaluate the dose dependent effects of iloprost on skin microcirculation. Iloprost was infused IV starting at 0.0625 ng.kg-1.min-1 and doubling the dose every 15 min up to 2 ng.kg-1.min-1. While tcPo2 at an electrode core temperature of 44 degrees C decreased in both patients and controls, there was a significant dose dependent increase in tcPo2 (37 degrees C) in the controls from 0.25 ng.kg-1.min-1. In the patients the reaction was variable: it was decreased in two and increased in 6, with a maximum either at 0.25-0.5 ng.kg-1.min-1 (n = 3) or at the highest dose (1.0 or 2.0 ng.kg-1.min-1; n = 3). Mean laser Doppler flux in both groups was increased, although the reaction was not consistent in the patients. Density of forefoot skin capillaries was reduced in 3 patients, and in the others the flow velocity was very low. During infusion of iloprost, both an increase in capillary density and blood cell velocity were observed. The effects were of variable intensity and occurred at varying doses, some appeared early and diminished as the dose was increased, and others were found only at 2 ng.kg-1.min-1. Adverse effects were numerous, extending from harmless skin flushing to mental changes and a quickly reversible attack of angina pectoris.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Intravenous infusion of iloprost in arterial occlusive disease: dose-dependent effects on skin microcirculation. 172 Jul 38

The limited therapeutic benefit from nitroimidazoles has renewed the interest in normobaric oxygen as a hypoxic cell radiosensitizer. In this experimental study we have tried to modify the oxygenation of a C3H mammary carcinoma by flushing tumor-bearing mice with oxygen or carbogen for 5 min before and during treatment. The response to these treatments was evaluated by the changes in radiation-induced tumor control (TCD50) and by the changes in tumor hypoxic fraction (HF). Irradiation was given either as a large, single dose or as five equal, daily fractions. High levels of oxygen in the inspired air were found to decrease the TCD50 significantly. The enhancement ratios were in the range of 1.2-1.4 (p less than 0.05) for both single dose and fractionated irradiation, which suggests that hypoxic cells may be important even when reoxygenation is believed to be complete between fractions. The change in TCD50 corresponded to a decrease in the fraction of clonogenic hypoxic cells from 12% to 3-4% (p less than 0.05). Tumor blood flow was not significantly influenced by the gas treatment. This study thus shows that normobaric oxygen/carbogen inhalation may significantly improve the local tumor control by reducing the diffusion related hypoxia within tumors.
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PMID:Improving the radiation response in a C3H mouse mammary carcinoma by normobaric oxygen or carbogen breathing. 173 71

The objective of this study was to analyse in vivo the effect of oxygen on the nitrogenase of Bacillus polymyxa. The culture technique employed in this study prevented spore formation by B. polymyxa during the entire period of exposure to acetylene. Under these conditions the acetylene-reduction assay allowed quantification of nitrogenase activity over long incubation periods (44 h). Nitrogenase activity was highest in cells harvested in the late logarithmic phase. At PO2 of 0.19 and 0.37 kPa, acetylene reduction was inhibited by 80 and 100%, respectively. This switch-off effect could be reversed through oxygen exhaustion, either by flushing the culture with N2 or by cellular respiration, suggesting a respiratory protection mechanism for the nitrogenase complex in B. polymyxa. Oxygen consumption measured by a closed-chamber respirometer showed a linear increase up to a PO2 of 0.2 kPa. Above 0.3 kPa a saturation in oxygen consumption was observed. Exposure to high oxygen pressures resulted in an irreversible loss of nitrogenase activity. The oxygen inhibition pattern was shown to be similar to that in other microaerophilic and anaerobic nitrogen-fixing microorganisms.
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PMID:Reversibility of oxygen switch-off effect on Bacillus polymyxa nitrogenase. 177 55

A shortage of suitable donors is a serious obstacle to the widespread application of isolated lung transplantation for end-stage lung disease. We hypothesized that lung tissue likely remains viable for a sufficient period of time to allow for safe postmortem retrieval of lungs for transplantation. Studies were conducted in a nonsurvival model of canine lung allotransplantation. Donor animals were sacrificed, and subsequent lung harvest was delayed for 1 hour, 2 hours, or 4 hours. Pulmonary retrieval was then performed in a standard fashion, flushing the lung block with modified Euro-Collins solution. Lungs were then stored for 4 hours before single allotransplantation. Recipient animals were maintained anesthetized, and followed up for 8 hours. By occlusion of the pulmonary artery and bronchus to the native lung, recipient animals were forced to survive solely on the transplanted lung, with a constant inspired oxygen fraction of 0.40. All 5 recipient animals of 1-hour cadaver lungs survived the 8-hour observation period with excellent hemodynamics and gas exchange. Two of 5 recipients of 2-hour cadaver lungs survived the observation period, whereas a third animal survived for 5 hours with excellent gas exchange. One of 4 animals transplanted with a 4-hour cadaver lung survived the observation period. Retrieval of lungs from cadavers whose hearts are not beating may prove to be a safe and effective method to increase the pulmonary donor pool.
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PMID:A strategy to increase the donor pool: use of cadaver lungs for transplantation. 195 32

Short preservation time still severely limits lung transplantation. To determine the effect of bronchial arterial flush preservation, we studied 54 dogs using the isolated perfused working lung model. After baseline measurements, lungs were flushed with lactated Ringer's solution (60 ml/kg at 8 degrees C) by one of three methods: pulmonary artery perfusion, bronchial artery perfusion through a 15 cm closed aortic segment, or simultaneous pulmonary-bronchial artery perfusion. These groups were further subdivided and tested after 0, 4, and 17 hours of storage at 4 degrees C (n = 6 each). Lungs were ventilated (flow rate 140 ml/kg/min; inspired oxygen fraction 0.21) and continuously reperfused with normothermic deoxygenated autologous blood in a closed loop. Measured variables were hemodynamics, aerodynamics, and leukocytes in bronchoalveolar lavage. Survival time was determined from initial reperfusion to failure of the lung to oxygenate. After 0 and 4 hours of storage, there was no significant difference in survival times. After 17 hours, lungs subjected to pulmonary-bronchial artery perfusion survived longer than those perfused via either the pulmonary or bronchial arteries alone (120 +/- 24 versus 38 +/- 14 or 52 +/- 16 minutes; p less than 0.01). Pulmonary artery pressure and resistance in all groups except at failure were never different from baseline values in the intact animal. Shunts in the pulmonary-bronchial artery perfusion groups were closest to baseline at onset (8% +/- 4%) and remained lower throughout reperfusion than in the groups subjected to pulmonary or bronchial artery perfusion alone. After 17 hours, static compliance of pulmonary artery-perfused lungs was worse than baseline (1.1 +/- 0.2 x 10(-2) versus 3.2 +/- 0.7 x 10(-2) L/cm H2O/sec; p less than 0.05), whereas compliance in the pulmonary-bronchial artery perfusion groups remained constant (3.6 +/- 1.5 x 10(-2) L/cm H2O/sec). Elastic work performed by lungs subjected to pulmonary-bronchial artery flushing at onset was significantly lower when these lungs were reperfused immediately (201 +/- 14 versus 295 +/- 35 gm-m/min for pulmonary artery-flushed lungs) or after 4 hours of storage (229 +/- 30 versus 290 +/- 24 gm-m/min for pulmonary artery-flushed lungs). Bronchoalveolar lavage after 17 hours in the group subjected to pulmonary bronchial artery flushing demonstrated leukocyte counts similar to those of intact lungs (45 +/- 5 versus 29 +/- 8/mm3) and significantly less than in lungs subjected to pulmonary or bronchial artery flushing (137 +/- 18 or 82 +/- 10/mm3, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Contribution of the bronchial circulation to lung preservation. 825 22


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