Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
On average, the
hypothermia
exhibited by rats receiving 60% nitrous oxide (N2O) eventually abates despite the continued inhalation of the drug (i.e., acute tolerance develops). However, large individual differences occur in both the magnitude of
hypothermia
achieved and the degree of acute tolerance that develops. To determine whether the degree of temperature loss and subsequent recovery during N2O administration are reliable characteristics of an individual, we measured intraperitoneal temperature via telemetry in 77 Long-
Evans
rats that each received 60% N2O for 5 h during two sessions separated by 14 days. Good intersession reliability (Pearson's r) was observed for simple change and adjusted change scores for both initial N2O temperature sensitivity (.61 < or = r < or = .62), and acute tolerance development (.46 < or = r < or = .52). In a separate experiment, three groups of rats were selected based on their individual body temperature patterns during an initial N2O administration: (1) insensitive to N2O
hypothermia
(n = 8); (2) marked
hypothermia
followed by acute tolerance development (n = 6); and (3) marked
hypothermia
followed by little acute tolerance development (n = 6). When retested 10 days later, each group exhibited a body temperature profile similar to that observed during the initial N2O exposure. Thus, the temperature profile observed during a rat's initial exposure to 60% N2O reflects a reproducible response for that animal.
...
PMID:Reliability of individual differences in initial sensitivity and acute tolerance to nitrous oxide hypothermia. 1152 66
Magnesium probably protects brain tissue against the effects of cerebral ischemia, brain injury and stroke through its actions as a calcium antagonist and inhibitor of excitatory amino acids. The effects of magnesium sulfate on cerebrovascular permeability to a dye,
Evans
blue, were studied during insulin-induced hypoglycemia with
hypothermia
in rats. Hypoglycemia was induced by an intramuscular injection of insulin. After giving insulin, each animal received MgSO4 (270 mg/kg) ip, followed by a 27 mg/kg dose every 20 min for 2.5 h. Plasma glucose and Mg2+ levels of animals were measured. Magnesium concentrations increased in the serum following MgSO4 administration (6.05+/-0.57 vs. 2.58+/-0.14 mg/dL in the Mg2+ group, and 7.14+/-0.42 vs. 2.78+/-0.06 mg/dL in the insulin + Mg2+ group, P < 0.01). Plasma glucose levels decreased following hypoglycemia (4+/-0.66 vs. 118+/-2.23 mg/dL in the insulin group, and 7+/-1.59 vs. 118+/-4.84 mg/dL in the insulin + Mg2+ group, P < 0.01). Blood-brain barrier permeability to
Evans
blue considerably increased in hypoglycemic rats (P < 0.01). In contrast, blood-brain barrier permeability to
Evans
blue was significantly reduced in treatment of hypoglycemic rats with MgSO4 (P < 0.01). These results indicate that Mg2+ greatly reduced the passage of exogenous vascular tracer bound to albumin into the brain during hypoglycemia with
hypothermia
. Mg2+ could have protective effects on blood-brain barrier permeability against insulin-induced hypoglycemia.
...
PMID:Magnesium sulfate attenuates increased blood-brain barrier permeability during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in rats. 1159 80
The effects of
hypothermia
and rewarming on endothelial integrity were examined in intestines, kidney, heart, gastrocnemius muscle, liver, spleen, and brain by measuring albumin-bound
Evans
blue loss from the vasculature. Ten groups of twelve rats, normothermic with no pentobarbital, normothermic sampled at 2, 3, or 4 h after pentobarbital, hypothermic to 20, 25, or 30 degrees C, and rewarmed from 20, 25, or 30 degrees C, were cooled in copper coils through which water circulated.
Hypothermic
rats were cooled to the desired core temperature and maintained there for 1 h; rewarmed rats were cooled to the same core temperatures, maintained there for 1 h, and then rewarmed. Following
Evans
blue administration, animals were euthanized with methoxyflurane, tissues removed, and
Evans
blue extracted. Because
hypothermia
and rewarming significantly decrease blood flow, organ-specific flow rates for hypothermic and rewarmed tissues were used to predict extravasation.
Hypothermia
decreased extravasation in tissues with continuous endothelium (brain, muscle) and increased it in tissues with discontinuous endothelium (liver, lung, spleen). All tissues exhibited significant (p < 0.05) differences from normothermic controls. These differences are attributed to a combination of anesthesia, flow, and (or) change in endothelial permeability, suggesting that appropriate choice of organ and temperature would facilitate testing pharmacological means of promoting return to normal perfusion.
...
PMID:Tissue-specific extravasation of albumin-bound Evans blue in hypothermic and rewarmed rats. 1199 Dec 35
Administration of the organophosphate pesticide chlorpyrifos (CHP) to the male rat at a dose of 25-80 mg/kg (p.o.) results in
hypothermia
followed by a delayed fever lasting for several days. These are high doses of CHP that cause marked cholinergic stimulation. It is important to understand if chronic exposure to CHP would evoke changes in thermoregulation that are comparable to the acute administration. Male rats of the Long-
Evans
strain were subjected to dietary treatment of 0, 1, or 5 mg/(kg day) CHP for 6 months. A limited amount of food was given per day to maintain body weight at 350 g. The constant body weight allowed for the regulation of a consistent dosage of CHP per kg body weight throughout the feeding period. Core temperature (T(a)) and motor activity (MA) were monitored by radio telemetric transmitters implanted in the abdominal cavity. After 5 months of treatment, T(c) and MA were monitored in undisturbed animals for 96 h. CHP at 5 mg/(kg day) led to a slight elevation in T(c) without affecting MA. The rats were then administered a challenge dose of CHP (30 mg/kg, p.o.) while T(c) and MA were monitored. Rats fed the 1 and 5 mg/kg CHP diets showed a significantly greater hypothermic response and reduction in MA following CHP challenge compared to controls. The restricted feeding schedule resulted in marked changes in the pattern of the circadian rhythm. Therefore, in another study, rats were treated ad libitum for 17 days with a CHP diet that resulted in a dosage of 7 mg CHP/(mg day). There was a significant increase in T(c) during the daytime but not during the night throughout most of the treatment period. Overall, chronic CHP was associated with a slight but significant elevation in T(c) and greater hypothermic response to a CHP challenge. This latter finding was unexpected and suggests that chronic exposure to CHP sensitizes the rat's thermoregulatory response to acute CHP exposure.
...
PMID:Dietary exposure to chlorpyrifos alters core temperature in the rat. 1213 25
Nitric oxide (NO) is postulated to play a role in endotoxin-induced ileus. We investigated the effect of selective blockade of inducible NO synthase (iNOS) and guanylyl cyclase on endotoxin-induced ileus in mice. Thirty minutes before injection of lipopolysaccharides (LPS), mice were pretreated with L-NAME (N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, non-selective NOS inhibitor), 1400W (N-(3-(aminomethyl)benzyl)acetamide, selective iNOS inhibitor), ODQ (1H-(1,2,4)oxadiazolo(4,3-a)quinoxalin-1-one, guanylyl cyclase inhibitor), dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO, vehicle), or dexamethasone. After 18 h, general well being deteriorated and the mice developed
hypothermia
and a significant delay in gastric emptying and intestinal transit as measured by
Evans
blue. 1400W completely reversed the endotoxin-induced delay in gastric emptying, while L-NAME did not have these beneficial effects. On the contrary, even in control mice, L-NAME delayed gastric emptying. Dexamethasone, DMSO, and ODQ mimicked the effect of 1400W on endotoxin-induced delay in gastric emptying. The endotoxin-induced delay in transit was significantly improved only by 1400W. None of the drugs reversed the
hypothermia
. In LPS mice treated with L-NAME, the behavior scale increased even further, while it decreased after treatment with 1400W. In conclusion, selective inhibition of iNOS reverses the endotoxin-induced delay in gastric emptying and transit and improves general well being. The pathway used by NO, derived from iNOS, may involve inhibition of guanylyl cyclase or radical scavenging.
...
PMID:Effect of inhibition of inducible nitric oxide synthase and guanylyl cyclase on endotoxin-induced delay in gastric emptying and intestinal transit in mice. 1216 74
Diazinon is an organophosphate (OP)-based, anticholinesterase insecticide that irreversibly inhibits acetylcholinesterase activity and produces cholinergic stimulation in central nervous system (CNS) and peripheral tissues. Our laboratory has found that OPs administered orally in rats induce a transient period of
hypothermia
followed by a delayed fever that persists for several days after exposure. There is little information on the thermoregulatory effects of diazinon. Core temperature (Tc) and motor activity (MA) were monitored by radiotelemetry in male and female rats of the Long-
Evans
strain dosed orally with diazinon (0 [corn-oil vehicle], 100, 200, or 300 mg/kg in males and 0, 50, 100, or 200 mg/kg in females). There was a dose-dependent decrease in Tc during the first night after treatment, with females exhibiting slightly greater sensitivity than males. MA was unaffected in females exposed to diazinon at doses of 50 to 200 mg/kg; MA of males was reduced during the first night after dosing with 300 mg/kg. There was a delayed elevation in Tc of males dosed with 200 and 300 mg/kg and females dosed with 50, 100, and 200 mg/kg diazinon. The elevated Tc was only manifested during d 2 and 3 after diazinon. Administration of 200 mg/kg sodium salicylate to females 48 h after being treated with 200 mg/kg diazinon led to a rapid abatement of the fever. Diazinon doses of 50 to 300 mg/kg led to 40% to 50% inhibition in plasma cholinesterase (ChE) activity 4 h after dosing, and females displayed a significantly slower recovery of ChE activity compared to males. When compared on a molar basis, the hypothermic response to diazinon was relatively small compared to other OPs such as chlorpyrifos. The delayed fever and efficacy of sodium salicylate to block diazinon-induced fever are similar to the effects of OPs chlorpyrifos and diisopropyl fluoro-phosphate (DFP).
...
PMID:Influence of gender on thermoregulation and cholinesterase inhibition in the long-evans rat exposed to diazinon. 1252 73
2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is considered to be one of the most toxic environmental contaminants, named dioxin. Exposure to TCDD induces a plethora of intoxication symptoms, including anorexia and
hypothermia
, in several mammals and human. Enkephalin, an endogenous pentapeptide, is an important neuroregulator of autonomic functions, such as food intake and body temperature. In this study, we investigated the effects of TCDD gastric administration on methionine-enkephalin (MEK) immunoreactivity in the brain of the Long-
Evans
rat, the species strain considered to be the most TCDD-susceptible, using immunohistochemical staining. A single dose of TCDD (dissolved in olive oil, 50 microg/kg) or olive oil alone was administrated to the rats by gavage. Compared with the vehicle-treated rat, a marked increase in the density of MEK immunoreactive cell bodies, fibers and terminals was found 2 weeks after TCDD treatment in the forebrain of the TCDD-treated rat, i.e. the central amygdaloid nucleus, field CA3 of the hippocampus, paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, medial preoptic nucleus, interstitial nucleus of the posterior limb of the anterior commissure, lateral globus pallidus, ventral pallidum and lateral division of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. These results demonstrated for the first time a site-specific increased enkephalinergic activity in certain brain regions of the Long-
Evans
rat. It is suggested that the increased MEK immunoreactivity may act as a compensatory adaptation for the pathophysiological alterations caused by TCDD exposure.
...
PMID:Up-regulation of methionine-enkephalin-like immunoreactivity by 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin treatment in the forebrain of the Long-Evans rat. 1266 56
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced systemic inflammation is accompanied by either
hypothermia
(prevails when the ambient temperature (Ta) is subneutral) or fever (prevails when Ta is neutral or higher). Because platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a proximal mediator of LPS inflammation, it should mediate both thermoregulatory responses to LPS. That PAF possesses hypothermic activity and mediates LPS-induced
hypothermia
is known. We asked whether PAF possesses pyrogenic activity (Expt 1) and mediates LPS fever (Expt 2). The study was conducted in Long-
Evans
rats implanted with jugular catheters. A complex with bovine serum albumin (BSA) was infused as a physiologically relevant form of PAF; free (aggregated) PAF was used as a control. In Expt 1, either form of PAF caused
hypothermia
when infused (83 pmol kg-1 min-1, 60 min, i.v.) at a subneutral Ta of 20 degrees C, but the response to the PAF-BSA complex (-4.5 +/- 0.5 degrees C, nadir) was ~4 times larger than that to free PAF. At a neutral Ta of 30 degrees C, both forms caused fever preceded by tail skin vasoconstriction, but the febrile response to PAF-BSA (1.0 +/- 0.1 degrees C, peak) was > 2 times higher than that to free PAF. Both the hypothermic (at 20 degrees C) and febrile (at 30 degrees C) responses to PAF-BSA started when the total amount of PAF infused was extremely small, < 830 pmol kg-1. In Expt 2 (conducted at 30 degrees C), the PAF receptor antagonist BN 52021 (29 micromol kg-1, i.v.) had no thermal effect of itself. However, it strongly (~2 times) attenuated the febrile response to PAF (5 nmol kg-1, i.v.), implying that this response involves the PAF receptor and is not due to a detergent-like effect of PAF on cell membranes. BN 52021 (but not its vehicle) was similarly effective in attenuating LPS (10 microg kg-1, i.v.) fever. It is concluded that PAF is a highly potent endogenous pyrogenic substance and a mediator of LPS fever.
...
PMID:Platelet-activating factor: a previously unrecognized mediator of fever. 1456 87
Hypothermic
protection was compared in Long-
Evans
and spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) strains using transient focal ischemia, and in Wistar and SHR strains using permanent focal ischemia. Focal ischemia was produced by distal surgical occlusion of the middle cerebral artery and tandem occlusion of the ipsilateral common carotid artery (MCA/CCAO). Moderate
hypothermia
of 2 hours' duration was produced by systemic cooling to 32 degrees C, with further cooling of the brain achieved by reducing to 30 degrees C the temperature of the saline drip superfusing the exposed occlusion site. Infarct volume was determined from serial hematoxylin and eosin-stained frozen sections obtained routinely at 24 hours, or in some cases after 3 days' survival. In the SHR, moderate
hypothermia
was only effective when initiated before recirculation after a 90-minute occlusion period. In contrast, the same intervention was strikingly effective in the Long-
Evans
rat even when initiated after as long as 30-minute reperfusion after a 3-hour occlusion. This magnitude and duration of cooling was not protective in permanent MCA/CCAO in the SHR, but such transient
hypothermia
did effectively reduce infarct volume after permanent occlusions in Wistar rats. These results show striking differences in the temporal window for hypothermic protection among rat focal ischemia models. As expected, "reperfusion injury" in the Long-
Evans
strain is particularly responsive to delayed cooling. The finding that the SHR can be protected by
hypothermia
initiated immediately before recirculation suggests a rapidly evolving component of injury occurs subsequent to reperfusion in this model as well.
Hypothermic
protection after permanent occlusion in Wistar rats identifies a transient, temperature-sensitive phase of infarct evolution that is not evident in the unreperfused SHR. These observations confirm that distinct mechanisms can underlie the temporal progression of injury in rat stroke models, and emphasize the critical importance of considering model and strain differences in extrapolating results of hypothermic protection studies in animals to the design of interventions in clinical stroke.
...
PMID:Hypothermic protection in rat focal ischemia models: strain differences and relevance to "reperfusion injury". 1468 15
This experiment examined the effects of nicotine on flash-evoked potentials (FEPs) recorded from both the visual cortex (VC) and the superior colliculus (SC) of chronically implanted male Long-
Evans
rats. FEPs were recorded at 5, 20, 40, and 60 min following subcutaneous injections of saline, and of 0.4, 0.7, and 1.0 mg/kg nicotine on separate days. In the VC, the amplitude of components N(39), N(53), N(67), and P(88) increased, while the amplitude of components N(30) and P(235) decreased following nicotine administration. P(22), P(47), and N(153) were unchanged. In the SC, components P(27), N(48), and N(53) were reduced in amplitude, while P(37) and N(57) were unaffected by nicotine. Many peak latencies in the VC and SC were increased by nicotine, often at all three doses. However, effects of nicotine on FEPs were both dose- and time-dependent. When body temperature was recorded 65 min after drug administration, significant
hypothermia
was found with both the 0.7- and 1.0-mg/kg nicotine doses. The 1.0-mg/kg dose of nicotine resulted in a significant increase in movement during the recording sessions, but not in subsequent open-field observations. The results demonstrate that nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) play a differential role in the production/modulation of the various components of FEPs.
...
PMID:Nicotine alters flash-evoked potentials in Long-Evans rats. 1509 17
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>