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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of
hypothermia
on hypoglycemic brain damage were studied in rats after a 30-min period of
hypoglycemic coma
, defined as cessation of spontaneous EEG activity. The rats were either normothermic (37 degrees C) or moderately hypothermic (33 degrees C). Morphological brain damage was evaluated after various periods of recovery.
Hypothermic
animals with halothane anesthesia never resumed spontaneous respiration, thus requiring artificial ventilation during recovery (maximally 8 h). In contrast, when isoflurane was used as the anesthetic agent, all animals survived and were examined after 1 week of recovery. There was a tendency towards gradually higher arterial plasma glucose levels during hypoglycemia with lower body temperature. The time period from insulin injection until isoelectric EEG appeared was gradually prolonged by
hypothermia
, and was shorter when isoflurane was used for anesthesia. Brain damage was examined within the neocortex, caudoputamen and hippocampus (CA1, subiculum and the tip of the dentate gyrus). Damage to neurons was found to be of two types, namely condensed dark purple neurons (pre-acidophilic) and shrunken bright red-staining neurons (acidophilic). In the neocortex, no clear influence of temperature on the degree of injury was seen. In the caudoputamen, the number of injured neurons clearly decreased at lower temperature (33 degrees C, P less than 0.001) when halothane was used, while no such difference was seen when isoflurane was used as the anesthetic agent. Likewise, a protective effect of
hypothermia
was seen in subiculum (P less than 0.01) when halothane, but not isoflurane was used.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The influence of hypothermia on hypoglycemia-induced brain damage in the rat. 157 15
The effects of hypoglycemia on cerebrovascular permeability to the Evans blue-albumin complex were studied in rats injected with 50 IU/kg, i.v. crystalline zinc insulin. One group of hypoglycemic animals was warmed to keep their body temperatures close to 37 degrees C, and the rats in the other group were allowed to become hypothermic by hypoglycemia. The arterial blood pressures of the hypoglycemic rats were continuously monitored during the coma and a significant rise in pressure was observed in most animals at the end of the coma. When glucose was administered i.v. to five animals of each group, this elevated pressure returned to normal values within 0.5 min and the animals slowly recovered normal behavior. At termination of the coma, most brains in the hypothermic hypoglycemic group showed an intensive and extensive staining by Evans blue; whereas only two brains in the normothermic hypoglycemic group showed any noticeable extravasation of Evans blue-albumin. Arterial PO2, PCO2, and pH were determined and no significant difference was found between values from animals in
hypoglycemic coma
and the controls. Four animals were surface-cooled and were used to examine the effects of
hypothermia
on blood-brain barrier permeability. These brains did not show any macroscopically evident Evans blue-albumin extravasation. The results indicated that prolonged, severe hypoglycemia with
hypothermia
caused a profound blood-brain barrier dysfunction whereas normothermic hypoglycemia resulted in few cases of any noticeable increase in blood-brain barrier permeability.
...
PMID:Effect of insulin-induced hypoglycemia on blood-brain barrier permeability. 298 97
From December 1993 to March 1999 we treated 18 elderly patients aged 66-87 years, suffering from urban
hypothermia
: 11 women and 7 men. Ten patients suffered from moderate
hypothermia
(rectal temperature 32-35 degrees C), and eight from severe
hypothermia
(rectal temperature < 32 degrees C). Regarding consciousness, in the group suffering from moderate
hypothermia
, 3 were somnolent and 6 in various degrees of comatose states. In the group suffering from severe
hypothermia
, 3 patients were somnolent or soporous and 5 in comatose states of various degrees. Values of arterial blood pressure in the group with moderate
hypothermia
was normal in one, in 3 arterial hypotension was observed and 6 were in a state of shock. In the group with severe
hypothermia
, 3 presented arterial hypotension and 5 were in a state of shock. In the group with moderate
hypothermia
the blood glucose level was elevated in six: 9.3-10.2-10.7-17.9-21.3-99.0, and in one patient the blood glucose level was low: 2.3 mmol/L, in correlation with
hypoglycemic coma
. In the group with severe
hypothermia
in all eight patients the values were elevated: 6.7-7.4-7.6-8.7-9.1-11.2-12.4-17.9 mmol/L.
...
PMID:Urban hypothermia and hyperglycemia in the elderly. 1121 9
We experienced a case of anorexia nervosa (AN) associated with refeeding syndrome (RS). The patient was a 24-year-old woman who was taken to the hospital emergency room in a
hypoglycemic coma
as a result of aggravated emaciation due to AN. On the admission day, she had severe emaciation (BW, 27kg; BMI, 11.4), malnutritional hepatitis, bradycardia, hypotension,
hypothermia
and hypophosphatemia. After she was intravenously administered glucose, her level of consciousness rapidly improved. On the 7th day, we started intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH). On the 13th day, she developed delirium. Because the delirium appeared after administration of IVH, we diagnosed her with RS. An EEG study disclosed frequent high-amplitude generalized slow waves. SPECT (99mTc ethyl cysteinate dimer) showed a bilateral decrease in the average blood flow. Regional blood flow was decreased bilaterally in the frontal and temporal lobes, and in the thalamus. After she recovered from the delirium and her state of nutrition improved, follow-up EEG and SPECT studies showed a decreased frequency of generalized slow waves and improved blood flow, respectively. Her serum values of P, K, and Mg had been within the normal ranges in the course of the delirium. Thus, before giving more calories to a severely malnourished patient, a physician should consider the possibility that RS will occur, even when serum electrolytes are within the normal ranges.
...
PMID:[A case of anorexia nervosa associated with delirium because of refeeding syndrome]. 1570 May 34