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)

Two ulcerogenic procedures, supine restraint (SR) and water restraint (WR) were compared. In Experiment 1, Fischer-344 (F344), Sprague-Dawley (S-D), Wistar, Long-Evans (L-E), Spontaneously Hypertensive rats (SHR) and Wistar Kyoto normotensive (WKY) rats were exposed to SR and WR. WR produced more ulcers than SR. There was no difference in ulcer scores between WKY, F344 and L-E but these rats had significantly more ulcers as compared to SHR, Wistar and S-D rats. In Experiment 2, 4- and 16-month-old SHR, WKY and F344 rats were exposed to SR and WR. The older WKY rats had more ulcers than all other treatment groups. Experiment 3 revealed no significant differences between male and female rats exposed to either SR or WR. Body temperature (BT) scores obtained after restraint and after 2-hr postrestraint rest were only marginally related to ulcer severity. Rats exposed to WR had lower BT scores but the strain and age ulcer differences did not have corresponding BT differences. These studies revealed the following: the ulcer susceptibility of WKY rats; the WR technique is a useful ulcerogenic procedure; and hypothermia is a weak covariant to restraint-induced stress ulcer.
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PMID:Strain, age, but not gender, influence ulcer severity induced by water-restraint stress. 275 55

The aim of the present study was to 1) determine the intensity of cold restraint-induced gastric lesions and core body temperature in single- and group-stressed rats, and establish a correlation between them; and 2) determine the influence of visual contact among animals during cold restraint on development of gastric stress ulcer. Therefore, adult male Wistar rats were put into individual or group restraint boxes (composed of two, three, six or nine single boxes) with or without possibility of visual contact and then exposed 2 hr to the cold (4 degrees C). Core body temperature was measured just before and after cold restraint using a digital rectal thermometer. The results showed that: 1) single stressed animals expressed significantly higher ulcer index than those stressed in group of three, six and nine rats; 2) there was no significant difference in degree of hypothermia among rats exposed to various group paradigms; and 3) there was no significant difference in ulcer index among animals stressed in conditions with or without visual contact. An absence of significant difference in ulcer index between single and paired stressed rats implies that three is the lowest number of animals per group at which an influence of group size on behavioral and adaptive mechanisms in rats exposed to cold restraint becomes manifest.
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PMID:Cold restraint-induced gastric lesions in individual- and group-stressed rats. 939 11

Matrine and oxymatrine, major components of Sophora flavescens, were confirmed to have a protective effect on restraint and water immersion stress ulcer in mice. Oxymatrine inhibits the formation of some experimental gastric ulcer, pylorus ligation ulcer and indomethacin ulcer, which are considered to relate to acid secretion. Oxymatrine decreases acid secretion in Shay's rats and inhibits gastric motility induced by restraint and water immersion stress when administered intraduodenally. These results suggest that the protective effect of oxymatrine on stress ulcer is possibly due to a decrease of acid secretion and inhibition of gastric motility. In spite of its weak inhibition of gastric acid secretion, intravenous injection of matrine is rather effective for stress ulcer. Matrine exhibits the inhibition of writhing induced by acetic acid, prolongation of sleeping time induced by pentobarbital, hypothermia and inhibition of locomotor activity induced by methamphetamine. Matrine (i.v.) also inhibits gastric motility induced by restraint and water immersion stress. On the other hand, the administration of matrine exhibits clear contraction on the preparation of the fundus strip of rats at high concentration. The contractile response of the fundus strip to matrine is not inhibited by treatment with tetrodotoxin, and is not modified with atropine, while pretreatment of the fundus strip with antihistamine abolished or reduced the contractile response. It can therefore be assumed that the direct action of matrine on the stomach smooth muscle possibly contributes to the mechanism of the matrine induced inhibition of the spontaneous gastric motility and rise in the tone of stomach, and may play an important role in the protection of the restraint and water immersion stress ulcer formetion.
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PMID:[The pharmacological studies on matrine and oxymatrine]. 1108 13

To compare the effect of long-term mild hypothermia versus short-term mild hypothermia on the outcome of 215 severe traumatic brain injured patients with cerebral contusion and intracranial hypertension. At three medical centers, 215 patients aged 18 to 45 years old with an admission Glasgow Coma Scale < or =8 within 4 h after injury were randomly divided into two groups: long-term mild hypothermia group (n = 108) for 5+/-1.3 days mild hypothermia therapy and short-term mild hypothermia group (n = 107) for 2+/-0.6 days mild hypothermia therapy. All patients had intracranial hypertension and frontotemporoparietal contusion with midline shift >1 cm confirmed on computed tomographic scan. Glasgow Outcome Scale at 6-month follow-up, 47 cases had favorable outcome (43.5%), and other 61 cases had unfavorable outcome (56.5%) in the long-term mild hypothermia group. However, only 31 cases had favorable outcome (29.0%), and other 76 cases had unfavorable outcome (71.0%) in the short-term mild hypothermia group (P < 0.05). The intracranial pressure significantly rebounded after rewarming in the short-term mild hypothermia group, but not in the long-term mild hypothermia (P < 0.05). Furthermore, the incidence of stress ulcer, epilepsy, pulmonary infection, intracranial infection did not significantly differ between the two groups (P > 0.05). Compared with short-term mild hypothermia, long-term mild hypothermia significantly improves the outcome of severe traumatic brain injured patients with cerebral contusion and intracranial hypertension without significant complications. Our data suggest that 5 days of long-term cooling is more efficacious than 2 days of short-term cooling when mild hypothermia is used to control refractory intracranial hypertension in patients with severe traumatic brain injury.
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PMID:Effect of long-term mild hypothermia or short-term mild hypothermia on outcome of patients with severe traumatic brain injury. 1630 33

The records of 168 children managed for burns in a teaching hospital in northwestern Nigeria, between April 1998 and March 2003, were assessed to determine the factors that are responsible for high rates of morbidity and mortality in paediatric burns. The causes of burns were hot water in 86 cases (51.2%), flame in 45 (26.8%), hot soup in 32 (19%) and electricity in five (3%). The main complications were wound infections in 109 (64.9%) patients, anaemia in 68 (40.5%), malnutrition in 54 (32.1%), contracture in 50 (29.8%), persistent hypothermia in 27 (16.1%), tetanus in 14 (8.3%) and one case (0.6%) of massive upper gastrointestinal bleeding, possibly as a result of Curling's ulcer.
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PMID:Paediatric burns: management problems in a teaching hospital in north western Nigeria. 1754 Jan 1