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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
N-(2,2-Diphenylethyl)adenosine (DPEA) has been identified as a potential antipsychotic agent acting via stimulation of adenosine receptors. The projected human therapeutic dose, based on animal studies, is 2-3 mg/kg. DPEA has been tested for potential toxicity in mice, rats, dogs and monkeys. Following single oral doses, median lethal dose values were approximately 10-fold greater in rats than in mice, although similar clinical signs including reduced activity, prostration, and necrosis of the tail were seen in both species. DPEA was well tolerated at daily doses up to 40 mg/kg in rats for 2 weeks. A no observed effect level (NOEL) was not identified in the dog or monkey studies. Reduced activity, dacryorrhea, ptosis,
hypothermia
, necrosis of the tail, and death occurred in rats given 120 and 160 mg/kg. Pathologic changes consisted of
pancreatitis
, gastric erosion/ulceration, lymphocyte depletion of the thymus, and pulmonary congestion and hemorrhage at 80 mg/kg or greater. In dogs, sporadic emesis was noted at 12.5 mg/kg and greater, and significant pathologic changes consisted of coronary arteritis associated with myocardial lesions and lymphocyte depletion at 25 and 50 mg/kg, pancreatic acinar necrosis at 50 mg/kg, and renal tubular degeneration at 12.5 mg/kg and greater. Emesis and depression were noted at 25 and 50 mg/kg in monkeys. Renal tubular dilatation and degeneration at 25 and 50 mg/kg were noted in the monkeys. These studies demonstrated that DPEA produced a range of adverse effects in common laboratory animal species.
...
PMID:Preclinical toxicity studies of an adenosine agonist, N-(2,2-diphenylethyl) adenosine. 187 77
The necropsy findings in an elderly woman, who had been treated with methyldopa and who had died during treatment for accidental
hypothermia
, showed acute periductal inflammation of obviously similar duration in an entopic pancreas in the wall of the jejunum and in the ectopic pancreas. This supports the hypothesis that attempted drug detoxification by pancreatic tissue can cause
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Simultaneous acute inflammation in entopic and ectopic pancreas. 336 30
Serial serum amylase and blood glucose levels were measured in 68 hypothermic (rectal temperature 35 degrees C or less) patients, including 15 who had hypothermic myxoedema (serum protein bound iodine 3.5 mug/100 ml or less). Raised amylase levels were found in 34 patients and probably reflected a mild acute pancreatitis. The high amylase levels correlated with low arterial PO(2) levels and significantly with high arterial PCO(2) levels and the base deficit but not with the severity or duration of the
hypothermia
. The acute pancreatitis does not explain why hypothermic patients with myxoedema have a poorer prognosis than those who are euthyroid. The
pancreatitis
occasionally contributed to the development, sometimes delayed, of diabetic ketoacidosis, blood glucose levels of over 120 mg/100 ml being found in 20 patients. There was a significant correlation between the raised serum amylase levels and the hyperglycaemia. Hypoglycaemia, sometimes profound, was found in 12 patients.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis and diabetic ketoacidosis in accidental hypothermia and hypothermic myxoedema. 412 1
The clinical features in a series of 24 patients with
hypothermia
treated at Mulago Hospital, Kampala, are described.
Hypothermia
developed in all when the environmental temperature did not fall below 16 degrees. There was a preponderance of males; 14 of the 24 cases were over 50 years old. The most common predisposing factors were severe undernutrition or malnutrition with wasting and almost complete absence of subcutaneous fat, and anaemia present in over two thirds of the patients. Hypoglycaemia appeared to be the immediate precipitating factor in at least five patients. Acute pancreatitis was found in three of the four patients who died unexpectedly 2-7 days after recovery from
hypothermia
; focal
pancreatitis
and fat necrosis was also present in six other cases. It is concluded that
hypothermia
is not uncommon, and is a dangerous complication amongst patients with severe under- or malnutrition, and can occur even under "tropical" conditions, when the environmental temperature does not fall below 16 degrees.
...
PMID:Hypothermia in the tropics. A review of 24 cases. 443 62
A 26-year-old woman had hyperphagia, obesity, aggressive behavior, visual hallucinations, reversal of wake-sleep patterns,
hypothermia
, hypothyroidism, and amenorrhea. She died of
pancreatitis
, probably secondary to
hypothermia
. Autopsy revealed a low-grade astrocytoma in the third ventricle and medial anterior and mid hypothalamus, primarily on the right. Although she exhibited thyroid and ovarian hypofunction, the patient had intact median eminence and pituitary function, suggesting end-organ failure, possibly of an autoimmune nature.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic astrocytoma. Syndrome of hyperphagia, obesity, and disturbances of behavior and endocrine and autonomic function. 657 19
Five patients with accidental
hypothermia
are reported. Admission rectal temperatures ranged from 24 degrees C to 31.7 degrees C and two patients had suffered circulatory arrest. Ages ranged between 25 and 77 and predisposing factors included alcoholism, gluterthimide poisoning,
pancreatitis
and cerebro-vascular accident. Along with respiratory and circulatory management in an intensive care unit the patients were actively rewarmed by peritoneal dialysis with fluid at 37 degrees C. Rewarming was rapid, smooth and free of complications. All five patients made a good recovery.
...
PMID:Warm peritoneal dialysis in the management of accidental hypothermia: report of five cases. 694 12
There is a recognised but poorly understood association between
hypothermia
and acute pancreatitis. A histological study of the pancreas was made in eight patients with accidental
hypothermia
who had evidence of
pancreatitis
at necropsy. From an analysis of the patterns of parenchymal necrosis in the pancreas it was thought that there were at least three possible mechanisms for the relation between
hypothermia
and
pancreatitis
. Firstly, that ischaemic
pancreatitis
may result from the "microcirculatory shock" of
hypothermia
. Secondly, that both
hypothermia
and
pancreatitis
may be secondary to alcohol abuse: and finally, that severe
pancreatitis
may be the primary disease and that
hypothermia
results from the patients' social circumstances.
...
PMID:Morphological study of the relation between accidental hypothermia and acute pancreatitis. 714 33
Medical records and histologic sections of 40 cats with acute pancreatitis were reviewed. Two distinct groups of cats with
pancreatitis
were established by histologic analysis of tissue. Group 1 (32 cats) had acute pancreatic necrosis (APN). Group 2 (8 cats) had suppurative
pancreatitis
. Ages of affected cats ranged from 3 weeks to 16 years. The majority consisted of indoor cats of the Domestic Short-Haired breed but Siamese cats were over-represented relative to the general population (P < 0.05). Twenty-two percent of cats were obese and 57% were underweight. Thirty-eight percent of cats had acute disease. In the other cats, two stages in the progression of the disease were evident: (1) anorexia, weight loss, and lethargy, followed by (2) acute deterioration, development of shock, and a moribund state, despite fluid therapy. The most common clinical signs were severe lethargy (100%), reduced appetite (97%), dehydration (92%), and
hypothermia
(68%). The initial hemogram occasionally showed a neutrophilia (30%) and anemia (26%) but packed cell volume (PCV) decreased markedly to the extent that 55% of cats were anemic terminally. Serum biochemical abnormalities included increased activities of ALT (68%) and ALP (50%), and increased concentrations of bilirubin (64%) and cholesterol (64%). Cats with APN were hyperglycemic (64%), glycosuric (60%) and ketonuric (20%), whereas cats with suppurative
pancreatitis
tended to be hypoglycemic (75%). Renal failure and electrolyte abnormalities were mild or infrequent except for hypokalemia (56%). This study characterizes a severe necrotizing
pancreatitis
in the cat similar to that reported in other species, and a histologically distinct suppurative
pancreatitis
.
...
PMID:Acute necrotizing pancreatitis and acute suppurative pancreatitis in the cat. A retrospective study of 40 cases (1976-1989). 1146 88
Cerebral and extracerebral effects of moderate
hypothermia
(core temperature 32.5 degrees C-33.0 degrees C) were prospectively studied in 10 patients with severe closed head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score < 7) in the intensive care unit of a university hospital.
Hypothermia
was induced by cooling the patient's body surface with water-circulating blankets. Before cooling, a conventional intracranial pressure (ICP) reduction therapy was applied, which remained unchanged throughout the study. Cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral metabolic rates for oxygen (CMRO2) and lactate (CMRL), and ICP were simultaneously measured prior to inducing
hypothermia
, after obtaining
hypothermia
, after 24 hours of
hypothermia
, and after rewarming. With respect to extracerebral effects, supplemental investigations were conducted 24 and 72 hours after rewarming. The median delay between injury and induction of
hypothermia
was 16 hours.
Hypothermia
reduced CMRO2 by 45% (p < 0.01), whereas CBF did not change significantly. Before cooling, six patients had elevated CMRL indicating cerebral ischemia. Cooling normalized CMRL in all patients (p < 0.01). The intracranial hypertension present prior to cooling declined markedly during
hypothermia
(p < 0.01) without significant rebound effects after rewarming. Cardiac index decreased by 18% after
hypothermia
was reached (p < 0.05), recovered at 24 hours of
hypothermia
, and surpassed baseline values after rewarming. Platelet counts dropped continuously up to 24 hours after rewarming (p < 0.01). Plasma coagulation tests did not show significant worsening. Creatinine clearance decreased during cooling (p < 0.01) and recovered by 24 hours after rewarming. Twenty-four hours after cooling had begun, eight patients had elevated serum lipase activity (p < 0.01) and four of them acquired
pancreatitis
. Rewarming normalized both pancreatic alterations. Seven patients made a good recovery; one survived severely disabled; and two patients died. Moderate
hypothermia
is effective in preventing secondary brain damage while reducing cerebral ischemia. However, there are potentially hazardous side effects that require additional monitoring.
...
PMID:Moderate hypothermia in patients with severe head injury: cerebral and extracerebral effects. 912 14
Accidental
hypothermia
has been described in the forensic literature but reports of occurrence in hospitalized patients are rare. Associated anatomic lesions include acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
and characteristic acute gastric ulcers termed Wischnewski ulcers. We report here two patients with cirrhosis and ascites; one also had hepatocellular carcinoma. Portal vein thrombosis, acute hemorrhagic
pancreatitis
and Wischnewski ulcers were present in both. The clinical records documented
hypothermia
that progressed over several days. Temperature nadirs of 31.0 degrees C (87.8 degrees F) and 32.2 degrees C (90.0 degrees F) were recorded in each patient, respectively, one day before death, although each transiently reached temperatures that did not register on standard monitoring devices. This is the first report that chronicles antemortem body temperatures in hypothermic patients with Wischnewski ulcers and
pancreatitis
at autopsy. Also, the association of these findings with portal vein thrombosis and cirrhosis has not been previously described. We discuss this constellation of findings with regard to possible mechanistic interrelations.
...
PMID:Wischnewski ulcers and acute pancreatitis in two hospitalized patients with cirrhosis, portal vein thrombosis, and hypothermia. 1048 64
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