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

A case of medullary hemangioblastoma treated with radiation and operation is presented. After radiation a 55% decrease in the volume of the vascular portion of the tumor was documented by angiograms. Also, there were planes of dissection between the tumor and the dorsal medulla that had not been appreciated at exploratory operation before radiation. Total resection of the tumor was accomplished using hypothermia and cardiac standstill. The literature detailing the effects of radiation on hemangioblastoma is reviewed. (Neurosurgery, 6: 82--86, 1980)
...
PMID:Effect of radiation therapy on hemangioblastoma: a case report and review of the literature. 735 2

1. There are some remarkable analogies between neoplastic growth of tissue cells and other pathological events such as functional alterations of the central nervous system resulting in schizophrenic behaviour. 2. Body tissues in general and the central nervous system in particular are highly cooperative systems which can undergo state transitions at critical points. 3. Circadian rhythms may be regarded as giant fluctuations near a critical point. 4. Temperature shifts and changes of other environmental conditions can induce reversible state transitions whose occurrence is indeterminate but whose progress, once they have occurred, is inevitable. 5. Hypothermia may be a useful form of treatment of illnesses such as cancer, that can be reversed, since it is a mean of bringing a system back to its equilibrium. 6. If we assume that characters such as vitamin dependency are gentically transmitted we may envisage that homozygotes for that character have a phenotypic expression which may lead to high probabilities of developing schizophrenia and cancer at two different ages as a result of environment-dependent phase transitions.
...
PMID:Hypothesis on illnesses depending on state transition in cooperative systems: relevance to cancer and schizophrenia. 743 46

Cimadronate (YM175) is a novel bisphosphonate with potent inhibitory activity on bone resorption under development for the treatment of tumor-induced hypercalcemia, metastatic bone disease and osteoporosis. We conducted intravenous single and repeated dose toxicity studies of cimadronate in beagle dogs. In the single dose study, animals received a single dose of 0.3, 1, 3 or 10 mg/kg of cimadronate and the animals were observed for at least 14 days. At 10 mg/kg, both the male and female dog showed toxic signs such as vomiting, decreased locomotor activities and hypothermia and were killed in extremis within a week after dosing. In the 30-day study, animals received cimadronate at a dosage of 0 (vehicle), 0.03, 0.1, 0.3 or 1 mg/kg/day. At 0.03 mg/kg/day or more, histological findings indicated an increased amount of primary spongiosa in the rib and ilium. At 1 mg/kg/day, degenerative nephropathy, aggregation of spermatozoa and glandular hypoplasia of the prostate gland were observed. On day 16 of dosing one male animal died of acute renal failure. In the 26-week study, animals received cimadronate once weekly at a dosage of 0 (vehicle), 0.31, 0.62, or 1.25 mg/kg. Histopathological examination showed an increased amount of primary spongiosa in the rib at all dosage levels. In addition, similar findings were observed in the lumbar vertebrae at 1.25 mg/kg/week. Histopathological changes in the kidney and male reproductive organs were not observed.
...
PMID:Intravenous single and repeated dose toxicity studies of cimadronate (YM175), a novel bisphosphonate, in beagle dogs. 749 Jul 87

Surgical management for cavoatrial involvement of malignant tumors and its outcome is reported on for 6 patients; their age ranged from 55 to 79 years and 5 were male and 1 female. The basic disease was renal cell carcinoma in 5 cases and adrenal leiomyosarcoma in 1. Intracaval tumor extension was diagnosed by computed tomography, magnet resonance imaging, digital subtraction angiography, and echocardiography. The tumor was resected together with adherant vena cava and invaded right-atrial wall, using cardiopulmonary bypass and normo- or mild-hypothermia in 5 patients. The caval defect needed to be reconstructed with a slit GORE-TEX vascular prosthesis in 3 patients. In all patients the tumor resections were successful and without major complications. All patients survived and are well from 4 to 52 months after the surgery. It is concluded that such cavoatrial extensions of malignant tumors can be safely and accurately resected with the aid of cardiopulmonary bypass, with favorable early and late outcomes in patients who have no distant metastatic lesions.
...
PMID:Surgery for cavoatrial extension of malignant tumors. 757 May 68

The effects of high-energy shock waves (HESW) on the human renal cell carcinoma were examined. The kidneys were available from 32 patients treated by radical nephrectomy due to renal cell carcinoma. Immediately after nephrectomy the kidneys were perfused with cold HTK solution and stored for a maximum of 4 h in hypothermia at 8 degrees C. The tumors were treated with 4,000 shocks (65 mPa = 0.6 mJ/mm2) in an electromagnetic lithotriptor (Siemens Co., Erlangen, Germany). Microscopic and immunohistological examinations of the tumors were performed after treatment, and cell proliferation rates of treated and untreated specimens were analyzed by cell cultures in 10 cases. HESW induce severe microscopic damage in the tumor tissue as complete rupture of the vessel walls and destruction of the tubular-formed tumor masses in the focal area. Immunohistochemistry shows intact immune reactive endothelial cells by factor 8-associated antibodies until the border to histological damage. Around this region a zone of negative antibody reaction against collagen type 4 is found. In cell cultures the proliferation rates of treated specimens were significantly lower compared to untreated. The human renal cell carcinoma seems to be susceptible for treatment with shock waves. HESW induce direct damage of tumor cells and vascular damage in the tumor which may be the primary cause of tumor necrosis.
...
PMID:Treatment of human renal cell carcinoma with high-energy shock waves--a new in vivo/in vitro model. 757 Nov 74

We describe the management of a recurrent atrial myxoma extending to the pulmonary veins and superior vena cava. Deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest with left atrial and caval excision was required to achieve complete resection of the tumor. The patient is alive and well without evidence of tumor recurrence 18 months after transplantation. Radical en bloc cardiac resection is feasible in selected cases of cardiac tumors.
...
PMID:Radical excisional therapy and total cardiac transplantation for recurrent atrial myxoma. 757 60

Two patients underwent carotid artery ligation for the purpose of surgical hemostasis either under hypothermia or under normothermia. One was 56-year-old man with rupture of brachiocephalic artery following esophagectomy. The bilateral common carotid arteries were ligated for bypass-grafting between the right internal carotid artery and the left common carotid artery for 35 min under surface-induced hypothermia at a rectal temperature of 30.7 degrees C. No postoperative neurological deficit developed. The other was 40-year-old woman with a malignant parotid tumor involving left internal carotid artery. The left carotid artery was ligated for 20 min at a rectal temperature of 37.3 degrees C. Cerebral ischemia developed postoperatively. Mild to moderate hypothermia should be reevaluated as one of useful measures to protect the brain from cerebral ischemia.
...
PMID:[Reevaluation of hypothermia as protective measures against cerebral ischemia]. 774 96

Hypothermic circulatory arrest has become an accepted technique for a variety of cardiac and complex aortic operations. However, prolonged periods (> 45 min) of hypothermic circulatory arrest in older patients is associated with marginal cerebral protection and an increased incidence of adverse neurologic events. In an effort to minimize such morbidity, we used a technique of retrograde cerebral perfusion with continuous monitoring of cerebral hemoglobin oxygen saturation during hypothermic circulatory arrest in 35 patients who underwent thoracic aortic operations or resection of intracardiac tumor. There were 27 men and 8 women (mean age 60 years, range 21 to 83 years). Sixteen patients had acute dissection, 6 had contained rupture of a thoracic aortic aneurysm, 10 had either a chronic dissection or aneurysm, and 3 had hypernephromas extending into the heart. Six patients underwent root replacement by means of an open technique for their distal anastomosis, 7 underwent root and partial arch replacement, 12 had root and total arch replacement, 7 had total arch replacement, and 3 had resection of tumor in the heart and retrohepatic vena cava. Seven patients had simultaneous coronary artery bypass grafting, 3 had replacement of one of the arch vessels, and 2 patients had a cesarean section. Sixteen cases were emergency, 6 urgent, and 13 elective. Nine (26%) were reoperations. Thirty-four patients underwent the procedure via a median sternotomy and one patient through a posterolateral thoracotomy. The mean retrograde cerebral perfusion time was 63 minutes (range 35 to 128 minutes), with 30 (86%) patients having more than 45 minutes, 12 (34%) having more than 65 minutes, and 4 (11%) having more than 90 minutes. There was 1 operative death caused by a preoperative myocardial infarction from an aortic dissection, and there were 2 late deaths (multiple organ failure and ruptured total aortic aneurysm). One patient had a stroke with a residual right hemiplegia and a pronounced aphasia. There were no other significant neurologic events or reoperations for bleeding. The average length of stay for patients having elective operations was 11 days and for those having emergency operations, 27 days. At a mean follow-up of 6 months all surviving patients (91%) are well. Hypothermic circulatory arrest is a relatively simple technique that provides a bloodless field and good visualization without the need for aortic crossclamps. Moreover, retrograde cerebral perfusion with continuous monitoring of cerebral oxygen saturation extends the "safe" time for hypothermic circulatory arrest, allowing ample opportunity to perform complicated cardiac and aortic operations with reduced risk of adverse neurologic events.
...
PMID:Retrograde cerebral perfusion during hypothermic circulatory arrest reduces neurologic morbidity. 785 79

Concerning hypothermia treatment, knowledge of time-temperature and of temperature distributions within tumor volumes is essential in order to obtain the maximal therapeutic effect. New techniques are being developed to overcome these difficulties. Two different heat sources, a contact Nd:YAG laser system and an automatically controlled high-frequency current system were investigated on 15 rabbits. Changes of the intracerebral temperature were registered at 4 different distances from the energy source. The intracerebral temperature was increased to 42.5 degrees C at a distance of 5 mm to the heat source and maintained at this level for a period of 60 min. The contact Nd:YAG laser system reached 42.5 degrees C at 3 W of output power. Using higher laser output power, brain tissue herniation (brain edema) through the burrhole was observed. The automatically controlled high-frequency current system reached 42.5 degrees C at 18.75 W of output current. A very small herniation of brain tissue could be observed using higher output current. Both heat sources presented an exponential decrease of the temperature profile depending on the distance. The tissue heat clearance was compensated for by intermittent laser or high-frequency current application. Both systems proved efficient for inducing hyperthermia as needed for antitumoral therapy.
...
PMID:Induced hyperthermia in brain tissue in vivo. 797 3

This is a report on a 42-year-old woman with a tumor thrombus in the inferior vena cava and the right atrium caused by recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma. The tumor thrombus, which extended from the retrohepatic inferior vena cava into the right atrium close to the tricuspid valve was successfully resected using a cardiopulmonary bypass and total hepatic vascular exclusion. The cardiopulmonary bypass was established by cannulating the ascending aorta, the superior vena cava and the infrarenal vena cava, and was performed under moderate hypothermia and ventricular fibrillation. To reduce the duration of ventricular fibrillation, after the tumor thrombus had been removed from the right atrium into the suprahepatic inferior vena cava through the atriotomy, the atriotomy was closed. The intrapericardial or suprahepatic vena cava was then clamped. The caval tumor thrombus was removed using the total hepatic vascular exclusion technique through a vena cava incision. To reduce total hepatic vascular exclusion time the suprahepatic vena caval clamp was released after the caval tumor had been removed from the suprahepatic vena caval. The infrahepatic vena cava just below the hepatocaval junction was then clamped and the entire tumor thrombus was removed. The vena caval incision was closed without a prosthesis. The total hepatic vascular exclusion and vena caval exclusion times were 10 and 30 minutes, respectively. The ventricular fibrillation and total cardiopulmonary bypass times were 15 and 52 minutes, respectively. The operating time was 9 hours and 30 minutes and the total blood loss was 4,000 ml.
...
PMID:Surgery for tumor thrombi in the right atrium and inferior vena cava of patients with recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma. 805 4


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>