Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (hypercapnia)
7,939 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neonatal hyperviscosity syndrome is known to affect multiple organ systems. The effects of polycythemic hyperviscosity on cutaneous blood flow and transcutaneous PO2 and PCO2 were compared in ten term infants prior to and following correction of the hyperviscous state. Cutaneous blood flow was measured by the heat clearance method; transcutaneous PO2 and PCO2 were detected by a polarographic O2 cathode and a potentiometric pH-sensitive glass electrode, respectively. Whole blood viscosity was measured at five shear rates from 11.25/s to 225/s using a Wells-Brookfield viscometer. Following partial exchange transfusion with fresh frozen plasma, there was a significant decrease in arterial blood hematocrit from 62.7% +/- 5.9% to 48.4% +/- 4.8% (P less than .001) and in whole blood viscosity from 13.9 +/- 2.9 cps to 8.5 +/- 1.8 cps (P less than .001) at a shear rate of 11.25/s. The arterial and transcutaneous O2 and CO2 tensions were in the normal range in the hyperviscous state and remained unchanged following exchange transfusion. The static measure of cutaneous blood flow increased 36% from 208 +/- 54 mW to 283 +/- 75 mW (P less than .01) while the dynamic measure of cutaneous blood flow increased 38% to 41% (P less than .01). The lack of demonstrable cutaneous hypoxia and hypercapnia, despite a significant decrease in blood flow in the hyperviscous state, may be due to one or more factors.
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PMID:Effects of polycythemia and hyperviscosity on cutaneous blood flow and transcutaneous PO2 and PCO2 in the neonate. 643 20

Increased tolerance to cerebral ischemia produced by general anesthesia during temporary carotid occlusion. By B. A. Wells, A. S. Keats, and D. A. Cooley. Surgery 1963; 54:216-23. Local anesthesia with little or no preoperative sedation is currently recommended as the anesthetic of choice for temporary carotid occlusion during carotid endarterectomy. Purported advantages include minimal circulatory and respiratory changes from the local anesthetic, and constant verbal contact can be maintained with the patient so that neurologic changes are promptly recognized. However, local anesthesia may not be satisfactory in uncooperative or semiconscious patients. We therefore undertook a trial of general anesthesia in 56 consecutive patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy. Patients were induced in standardized fashion using intravenous thiopental (100-400 mg), atropine (0.2 mg), and succinylcholine (40-80 mg). Cyclopropane, along with deliberate hypercapnia and hypertension, was used for anesthesia maintenance. All patients tolerated carotid occlusion for periods of up to 30 min during general anesthesia without shunt, bypass, or hypothermia. Except for one patient, electroencephalogram evidence of cerebral ischemia was not apparent during occlusion, and no patient suffered postoperative neurologic sequela. Twenty percent of patients who had their carotid arteries occluded preoperatively for 30-60 s without general anesthesia suffered convulsions. These data suggest that general anesthesia increased the tolerance to cerebral ischemia. Potential mechanisms involved might include: 1) decreased cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen; 2) increased cerebral blood flow from hypercapnia; 3) increased arterial oxygen tension; and 4) recruitment of new routes of collateral circulation.
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PMID:Contributions of anesthesiology to the surgical treatment of cerebrovascular disease: the role of Arthur S. Keats, M.D. 1836 8