Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Common effects of four beta-adrenergic blocking drugs have been investigated in mice using classical and new psychopharmacological tests. Propranolol, alprenolol, practolol and penbutolol reduced the increase in locomotor activity produced by reserpine after MAO inhibition; they produce hypothermia when associated with amphetamine and they increase oxotremorine-induced hypothermia. Regarding these three tests the studied substances ranged themseleves in the same order of potency: penbutolol greater than propranolol greater than alprenolol greater than practolol. Propranolol and penbutolol decreased the toxicity provoked in crowded mice by amphetamine or by the association pargyline-reserpine; alprenolol and practolol did not. Propranolol, penbutolol and alprenolol antagonized the amphetamine-induced increase in motor activity; practolol did not. When used at doses for which d-l propranolol was active, the dextrogyre isomer of propranolol was without effect whatever the test studied. It is suggested that for the selection of a beta-blocking drug, regarding central effects in man, the tests described would deserve consideration.
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PMID:[Effects of four beta-blocking agents on some psychopharmacological tests in mice (author's transl)]. 3 71

2-Chloro-11-(piperazinyl)dibenz[b,f][1,4]-oxazepine (amoxapine) gives an unusual spectrum in psychopharmacological tests. Many of its effects are similar to those of neuroleptics: sedation, decrease in motor activity, catalepsy (which is, however, qualitatively different from that induced by classical neuroleptics), transitory suppression of avoidance reaction, antagonism of amphetamine induced toxicity in crowded mice and inhibition of stereotyped behavior induced by amphetamine in rats, and antagonism to various effects of apomorphine (stereotyped behaviour in rats, climbing behaviour, stereotyped behaviour and hypothermia in mice). At similar doses which produce the above mentioned effects, amoxapine also shows effects atypical for a neuroleptic, but which are relatively characteristic of antidepressants: antagonism of prochlorperazine-induced catalepsy in rats, inhibition of reserpine induced hypothermia in mice and enhancement of yohimbine toxicity in mice. The profile of this substance does not facilitate the anticipation of therapeutic effects in humans.
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PMID:Amoxapine in experimental psychopharmacology: a neuroleptic or an antidepressant? 4 May 75

1 The central alpha-adrenoceptors responsible for mediating clonidine-induced sedation in rats have been characterized according to their sensitivity to alpha-adrenoceptor agonists and antagonists.2 Clonidine, injected intraperitoneally or intracerebroventricularly, caused dose-dependent sedation, both in terms of a reduction in the time that rats could remain on an accelerating rotarod and in terms of overt sedation assessed visually. Following intracerebroventricular injection, xylazine, naphazoline and methoxamine, but not phenylephrine, produced similar effects.3 The sedation caused by intraperitoneal injection of clonidine was antagonized by intracerebroventricularly injected phentolamine, yohimbine, piperoxan and tolazoline but not by labetalol, thymoxamine or prazosin.4 The relative potencies of the agonists in causing sedation and of the antagonists in inhibiting the sedative effect of clonidine clearly demonstrated that the central alpha-adrenoceptors mediating clonidine-induced sedation are the same as the peripheral presynaptic alpha(2)-adrenoceptors.5 All the alpha-adrenoceptor agonists caused hypothermia after intracerebroventricular injection, but their order of potency was different from that in producing sedation. The hypothermic effect of intraperitoneally injected clonidine was little affected by any of the antagonists administered intracerebroventricularly. No conclusions could be drawn concerning the type of receptor responsible for mediating hypothermia.
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PMID:Alpha 2-adrenoceptors mediate clonidine-induced sedation in the rat. 4 Jun 43

The incidence of complications after aorto-coronary bypass surgery were studied in a series of 55 patients in relation to the duration of extra-corporeal circulation and the value of myocardial protection. The length of the period of extra-corporeal circulation played a significant role in the onset of complications whilst there was no significant difference between the group of patients operated upon under hypothermia and those in normothermia.
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PMID:[Risk factors in coronary artery bypass surgery. 55 observations]. 4 44

The treatment of nephrolithiasis depends mainly on the type of stone present. Uric acid calculi can be dissolved by oral medication producing alkalinization of the urine. Cystin stones can only rarely be dissolved by oral administration of D-penicillamine. The best and least expensive prophylaxis is a high and constant fluid intake of 600 ml every 4 hours. This way the pathologically increased cystin excretion can be kept soluble. Calcium containing calculi and so-called "infection stones" need surgical intervention. Because of the high recurrence rate of renal stones every indication for an operative procedure has to be considered very carefully. For lasting results elimination of urinary obstruction is necessary. The treatment of choice of patients with staghorn calculus disease is surgical, even in the solitary kidney and in geriatric patients. As recent advances in the operative treatment of nephrolithiasis coagulum pyelolithotomy, intraoperative pyeloscopy, hypothermia and "bench surgery" (extra-corporeal renal surgery) are reviewed. Attempts to dissolve renal calculi by percutaneous nephrostomy as well as extraction of pelvic stones by the same procedure are mentioned. Finally, the importance of postoperative prophylaxis and the progress made in the medical treatment of calcium stones are pointed out.
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PMID:[Recent advances in the treatment of nephrolithiasis (author's transl)]. 4 17

1. A dose-related hyperthermia is obtained in mice with TRH administered intraperitoneally. 2. This hyperthermia is reinforced by amphetamine given at doses which usually cause hypothermia. 3. p-Chloroamphetamine and L-Dopa also reinforce TRH hyperthermia. Apomorphine is not significantly active. 4. TRH hyperthermia is lowered significantly by alpha-methyl-tyrosine and haloperidol but not significantly by pimozide and chlorpromazine. TRH + Amph hyperthermia is not lowered by any of the DA antagonists tested even at doses reversing Amph hyperthermia. Direct participation of DA receptors is then doubtful. 5. All these variations of temperature have their acme a 15 min except for reserpine which, given 22 hours before, potentiates TRH + Amph hyperthermia after 30 min.
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PMID:Is a dopaminergic system involved in thyrotropin releasing hormone induced hyperthermia and in its potentiation by amphetamine? 4 68

Persistent truncus asteriosus is now correctable surgically in patients with favorable anatomy. Given pulmonary arteries of reasonable size arising from any source, successful correction is possible so long as irreversible pulmonary vascular disease has not occurred. Although the majority of children with this defect demonstrate increased pulmonary blood flow, systemic-pulmonary artery shunts can be used. Also, banding of the pulmonary artery, followed subsequently by successful total correction, has been described. Recent reports of a few successful total corrections in infancy, performed with the aid of deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest, may modify the current approach. Although the majority of the reported corrections have involved aortic homograft reconstruction of the pulmonary artery, we strongly favor a synthetic prosthesis containing a heterograft valve. Based upon our clinical experience and this review of the literature, a suggested management protocol is presented.
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PMID:Current status of the surgical treatment of truncus arteriosus. 4 32

A simple and innocuous method for colouring the renal cortex is proposed. It makes visible, during the operation, the line of demarcation between different arterial areas and allows the performance of nephrotomies with minimal trauma to the renal parenchyma and a minimum of subsequent renal destruction by ischaemia. It is indicated as a complement to renal hypothermia, for the removal of complicated and extensive lithiasis; it can also be helpful in easier cases when hypothermia in not required.
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PMID:The avascular nephrotomy. 6 Nov 17

The influence of visual association cortex on the pattern of neuronal activity in the lateral geniculate body, during penicillin-induced discharges in visula cortex, was studied. In a majority of those geniculate cells which exhibited a pre-penicillin discharge increment in activity, that increment was abolished or significantly reduced during focal hypothermia of the visual association cortex. The frequency of penicillin discharges in visual cortex was, in most cases, reduced during cooling of association cortex. These findings are briefly discussed in terms of corticothalamic interactions.
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PMID:Influence of association cortex on penicillin discharges in the primary visual cortex. 6 51

Transient major reduction of EEG activity in an hyperpyrexic patient (rectal temperature 42.5 degrees C) and transient isoelectric ECoG during accidental hyperthermia (rectal temperature 41.8 degrees C) in a Rhesus monkey are reported. Since recovery of electrocortical activity occurred in both instance this implies that in hyperthermia, as well as in hypothermia, an isoelectric EEG may not indicate irreversible brain damage.
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PMID:Reversible profound depression of cerebral electrical activity in hyperthermia. 6 29


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