Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since the opening of the Neonatology Unit, we have become the referral center for our area for problems in the newborn. In the past three years, we have treated five full-term and two premature infants with gastroschisis. There was one death in a premature infant. With an aggressive therapeutic approach and a new surgical technique, we have achieved an overall survival rate of greater than 85%. Primary closure was possible in three patients, with the remaining four being trreated in two stages. A modification of the Schuster silastic bag closure was first accomplished in those patients treated in two stages. Definitive surgical correction was completed within eight days of birgh in all seven patients. No ventral hernias or wound infections occurred using the new technique. Careful preoperative transport and management, judicious anesthesia, antibiotics, ventilatory support, and parenteral hyperalimentation when necessary, have all contributed to our increased survival rate and decreased morbidity.
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PMID:Increased survival with new techniques in treatment of gastroschisis. 15 Aug 7

Two patients had paracolostomy abscesses limited to the abdominal wall. Adequate drainage was obtained surgically using local anesthesia, but wound contamination from the fecal stream continued. Intravenous hyperalimentation and/or elemental diet reduced fecal volume, promoted wound healing and weight gain, and prevented the need for a proximal defunctionalizing colostomy. During follow-up periods of more than ten months, colostomy revision has not been necessary.
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PMID:Treatment of paracolostomy abscesses without proximal diverting colostomy: report of two cases. 93 63

Small lesions in the brain stem (including the hypothalamus) of the European hamster were effective with respect to food intake, hibernatory disposition and thermogenic power (oxygen consumption) as well. Hyperphagia was accompanied by depression of hibernation mostly. Moreover, hibernation was hindered by impairment of the thermogenic capacity. Entrance into hibernation depended on the integrity of the middle and caudal hypothalamic areas and the rostral portions of the pons and midbrain. Hyperphagia resulted from destruction of the middle (ventromedial) hypothalamic and caudal hypothalamic areas, including transition structures to the pons. A depression of thermogenesis against cold was observed after destruction of supramammillary and neighbouring mesencephalic areas. Supplementary results: An annual metabolic rhythm characterized by a minimum in december has been established once more. Urethane anesthesia did not abolish cold thermogenesis, despite the development of a slight hypothermia. Poikilothermia resulting from brain stem damage disappeared during a three-day period. Furthermore, diencephalic lesions did not suppress arousal from hibernation significantly.
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PMID:[Effect of brain stem lesions on hibernation of the hamster (Cricetus cricetus L.)]. 119 40

In a Mapleson D circuit the carbon dioxide content of gases, sampled at the breathing bag or near the bellows of the ventilator, is virtually constant throughout the phases of respiration. Assuming that after induction of anaesthesia the fresh gas inflow, if kept constant, is essentially equal in volume to the gas vented at the expiratory valve, CO2 output can be calculated by multiplying the fresh gas inflow by the CO2 content of the vented gas measured with a suitable CO2 analyzer. Anaesthesia with nitrous oxide-oxygen, supplemented with low doses of alphaprodine or halothane was compared in two groups of young patients who underwent dental surgery and who were breathing spontaneously. While the CO2 output in the group supplemented with alphaprodine increased from about 100 to 130 ml/m2/min, the halothane group showed a constant CO2 output of about 90 ml/m2/min followed by a significant rise within 5 minutes after halothane was discontinued. In 42 patients on controlled ventilation, no significant difference was found in the CO2 output estimated one hour after induction of anaesthesia in nitrous oxide-oxygen anaesthesia supplemented by halothane, ethrane or alphaprodine. The values obtained were 87 +/- 11 ml/m2/min for halothane (11 patients), 98 +/- 19 ml/m2/min for ethrane (14) and 93 +/- 13 ml/m2/min for the narcotic supplemented anaesthesia (17). The mean CO2 output for all 42 patients was 93 +/- 14 ml/m2/min. Six markedly obese patients under the same anaesthetic technique had a CO2 output of 114 +/- 17 ml/m2/min; however, their CO2 output was similar to normal patients when calculated on the basis of body weight. A marked increase in CO2 output to a mean of 160 +/- 25 ml/m2/min was found in eight patients undergoing operation while on hyperalimentation. The technique described appears suitable to monitor CO2 output under anaesthesia. In order to avoid hypercarbia when using a partial rebreathing system, the fresh gas inflow must be increased above recommended values in cases with increased metabolic activity (e.g. patients receiving hyperalimentation). In obese patients the fresh gas inflow should be calculated on the basis of body weight.
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PMID:Carbon dioxide output in anaesthesia. 125 73

The excitotoxin, N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA), was used to lesion cell bodies, but not fibers-of-passage, in the paraventricular hypothalamus. Bilateral injections of NMDA (12.6 nmol/100 nl) were made into the paraventricular hypothalamus in halothane-anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats. Water intake, food intake, urine output and body weight were measured daily for 26 days after lesioning. Lesioned rats exhibited a modest, but significant, reduction in the rate of gain of body weight, which was most closely correlated with decreases in food intake. Water intake and urine output were not significantly different among the groups. Resting blood pressure, heart rate and baroreflex sensitivity (using the infusion of phenylephrine method) were similar in conscious animals of both groups, 4-5 weeks after lesioning. Neuronal loss, primarily of parvocellular elements, was evident in the paraventricular hypothalamus and neuronal loss frequently extended into the ventro-medial thalamus adjacent to the paraventricular hypothalamus in NMDA-lesioned rats. In a second experiment, injections of NMDA were given acutely into the paraventricular hypothalamus of halothane-anesthetized rats. Upon recovery from anesthesia, behavioral excitation and increases in blood pressure and heart rate were evident for 1-2 hr. Histological examination of hearts taken 48 hr after injection of NMDA revealed a largely mononuclear inflammatory infiltration, hyperemia and myocardial hemorrhage and focal myocardial necrosis. Inflammatory and degenerative changes were most prominent in the left ventricular subendocardium. The cardiomyopathy possessed similarities with catecholamine-induced myocardial necrosis. The results indicated that NMDA-induced lesions of parvocellular elements of the paraventricular hypothalamus did not cause hyperphagia or obesity or alter the resting systemic circulatory function. However, an inflammatory cardiomyopathy, termed "excitotoxin-induced myocardial necrosis", was associated with injections of NMDA into the hypothalamus. Excitotoxin-induced myocardial necrosis may complicate any hemodynamic studies performed in rats in which lesions of the CNS have been produced by means of application of excitotoxins.
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PMID:Excitotoxic lesions of the paraventricular hypothalamus: metabolic and cardiac effects. 220 Sep 75

Intracisternal (IC) injection of the GABA-transaminase inhibitor, ethanolamine-O-sulfate (EOS), has been previously shown to induce dose-dependent anorexia in normal rats as well as to reverse overeating in several rodent models of acute and chronic hyperphagia. To determine if such anorexia might be mediated by cells within or fibers of passage which traverse the lateral hypothalamus (LH), adult female rats received bilateral radiofrequency heat lesions of the LH vs. anesthesia control injections and were allowed to recover normal feeding and drinking responses. Using a longitudinal design, all animals then received 100, 0, and 200 micrograms EOS in 20 microliters deionized water IC with 1 week separating each injection. In addition to daily measures of feeding, drinking and body weight, all animals were screened 24 hr after injections for sensorimotor competence and general health by testing open-field activity, catalepsy, paw-lick responses on a hot-plate and rectal temperature. As reported previously, IC EOS induced dose-dependent hypophagia and weight loss. However, the magnitude and duration of these effects were equivalent in lesioned and control rats. In addition, open-field activity and body temperature were reliably lowered as a function of dosage while catalepsy was increased. Again, this effect was equivalent in lesioned and control rats. Subsequent tests of drinking and feeding in response to hyperosmotic and hypoglycemic challenges, respectively, confirmed that lesioned rats were deficient compared to controls. These findings suggest that an intact LH axis is not required for the anorexigenic effects of IC EOS.
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PMID:Effects of lateral hypothalamic lesions on the anorexia induced by ethanolamine-O-sulfate. 273 38

Eighty-two patients, ranging in age from 11 months to 24 years, underwent the percutaneous placement of an implanted catheter in order to have improved venous access. Thirty-five patients (43%) were beginning chemotherapy for cancer, four (5%) had a chronic hematologic disorder, and the remaining 43 (52%) were on chemotherapy for cancer. The mean duration of catheter function was 168 days (range of 7-1,030 days), with a cumulative experience of 18,812 days of catheter use. Complications were minimal. Only four catheters (5%) required removal secondary to infection, infiltration, or tissue breakdown. Substantially reduced complication rates were observed as compared to other studies using implanted central venous catheters. Implanted central venous catheters were proven to be safe in patients with hematologic disorders. These catheters enhance the ability to infuse chemotherapy, hyperalimentation, blood products, anesthesia, and imaging solutions and are safe to use in patients with a hemostatic or host defense deficiency.
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PMID:Experience with minimal complications in implanted catheters in children. 278 56

Patients who have cystic fibrosis (CF) are frequently hospitalized for long-term intravenous (IV) treatment. We evaluated clinical effectiveness of the Drum-Cartridge Catheter (Abbott Laboratories) for such patients. The catheter is placed peripherally under local anesthesia via an antecubital vein into the superior vena cava or right atrium. Patients who were more than 10 years of age and who were hospitalized for IV antibiotic therapy and/or IV hyperalimentation were studied. All but 2 patients had CF. Using an aseptic technique the catheters were inserted into the basilic or cephalic vein. Chest radiographs were used to confirm the final location of the catheter. Catheters were used to administer IV antibiotics, hyperalimentation, and lipids. There were 38 catheterizations in 23 patients; several patients had repeated insertions at later admissions. The success rate of insertion was 86% with 31 of the 38 insertions initially located either in the superior vena cava or right atrium. Mean duration of catheterization was 15.4 days (range 5-49 days). No major complications such as sepsis, catheter or clot embolism, pneumothorax, vascular perforation, or hemorrhage occurred in the patients who had DF. Complications that required displacement of catheter into the axillary vein (1 patient), and cracked catheter hub (1 patient). This study shows that the Drum-Cartridge Catheter can be used easily for IV therapy of patients who have CF for a long duration, repeatedly, and with no major complications.
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PMID:Peripherally inserted central venous catheters for treatment of cystic fibrosis. 393 8

Rectal abscess may result in necrotizing soft-tissue infection including fasciitis, myositis, and extraperitoneal dissection of pus without muscle necrosis. The presentation and therapy of ten patients treated over the past six years are reviewed. Early recognition of rapidly spreading infection was imperative. The mortality rate of 40 per cent correlated with the degree of sepsis present at admission. The high mortality attendant with the complications of rectal abscess emphasizes the need for aggressive therapy, including frequent examinations under anesthesia, wide debridement, systemic triple antibiotic therapy, diverting colostomy, aggressive wound care, and hyperalimentation.
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PMID:Necrotizing soft-tissue infection from rectal abscess. 640 68

Trauma victims often suffer immune system failure. Oral arginine has strong immune-enhancing properties. The metabolic, hormonal, and immune effects of increasing concentrations of arginine as part of post-trauma intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH) were studied. Groups of 11-14 rats, 275-350 g, underwent jugular vein catheterization and bilateral closed femoral fractures under anesthesia. IVH was started immediately postinjury at a rate of 0.8-1 ml/100 g body wt/hr and continued for 5 days. Twenty percent dextrose and three different amino acid mixtures were given as follows: (A) FreII (1.55 g ARG/1); (B) FreIII (4.05 g ARG/1); (C) modified FreIII (7.9 g ARG/1). All rats lost weight over the 5-day postinjury period; however, rats in groups B and C lost significantly less weight than rats in group A (-3.4 +/- 0.8% of initial body weight and -3.6 +/- 0.9% vs -6.1 +/- 1.2%, P less than 0.05). Rats in group A had negative cumulative nitrogen balance, while those in groups B and C were in highly positive balance. No significant difference in body weight change or nitrogen balance was noted between groups B and C. Trauma-induced thymic involution as assessed by thymic weight and lymphocyte content was greatest in group A, which received the lowest amount of arginine, and was linearly abrogated by increasing the amount of arginine administered (A less than B less than C). Thymocyte immune responsiveness increased with the amount of arginine given as assessed by mitogenesis in response to Con A (stimulation index: A--151.3 +/- 28.8 vs B--243.6 +/- 29.2, P less than 0.01 vs C--321.8 +/- 22.3, P less than 0.001 vs A and P less than 0.02 vs B) and PHA (A--65.0 +/- 14.3 vs B--67.7 +/- 15.3, NS, vs C--117 +/- 14.0, P less than 0.005 vs A and B).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:High arginine levels in intravenous hyperalimentation abrogate post-traumatic immune suppression. 642 25


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