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)
There is no consensus on the optimal level of intraoperative
hypothermia
during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). To assess the effect of systemic cooling on the stress response to CPB, the acute phase and endocrine responses were measured in 20 male patients undergoing elective coronary artery surgery and randomised to an intraoperative blood temperature of 28 degrees C or 20 degrees C. The acute phase response was assessed by changes in the plasma concentration of
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
) and the endocrine response by the urinary excretion of the counter-regulatory hormones adrenaline, noradrenaline and cortisol. The groups were comparable with respect to age, anthropometric indices, cross clamp and bypass times. There was no significant difference in the groups in the acute phase response but the endocrine response was attenuated in the 20 degrees C group. These findings may have implications for the severely stressed preoperative patient.
...
PMID:Hypothermia and the stress response to cardiopulmonary bypass. 248 24
A 14-year-old boy presented with a 1-week history of
hypothermia
and obtundation. His medical history included surgical resection of craniopharyngioma with postoperative visual impairment and panhypopituitarism. The patient's rectal temperature remained persistently lower than 35 degrees C during the first 3 days of hospitalization. His blood pressure was 90/56 mmHg on admission. The peripheral blood leukocyte count was 2.7 x 10(10)/L with 18% neutrophils, 19% band forms, 44% metamyelocytes, 3% myelocytes, and 16% lymphocytes. The
C-reactive protein
concentration was 133.9 mg/L. Two separate blood cultures both yielded Pseudomonas putida. The patient was treated with amikacin and ceftazidime along with aggressive fluid therapy. Replacement therapy directed at his hormonal deficiencies was initiated as soon as his hemodynamic status was stabilized. The patient responded well to therapy with a gradual rise in body temperature and improvement in general activity. A growth experiment carried out on the P. putida isolate showed that the bacteria grew more rapidly at 30 degrees C than at 37 degrees C. The clinical course of the patient, as well as the results of the laboratory study, suggest that
hypothermia
may predispose human infection with P. putida.
...
PMID:Hypothermia predisposing to Pseudomonas putida sepsis in a child with panhypopituitarism. 958 82
Professional phagocytes, comprising polymorphonuclear neutrophils and monocyte/macrophage cells, play an important role in the host defense. Any defect in their function exposes the organism to microbial intruders terminating in fatal diseases. The functional responses of the phagocytes to bacterial and fungal infections include chemotaxis, actin assembly, migration, adhesion, aggregation, phagocytosis, degranulation, and reactive oxygen species production. Superoxide generation by phagocytic NADPH oxidase is an imperative step toward bacterial killing. Phagocytes participate in inflammatory reactions and exert tumoricidal activity. They are supported by serum factors such as immunoglobulins, cytokines, complement, the acute phase reactant
C-reactive protein
, production of antibacterial proteins, and others. In addition to their principal task to eliminate bacteria, they are engaged in removing damaged, senescent, and apoptotic cells. Engulfed cell debris, large particles such as latex beads, fat, and oil droplets, are examples of phagocytic activity illustrated in the present review with transmission and scanning electron microscope micrographs. Numerous factors, such as diseases and stressful conditions, affect the engulfing activity of the professional phagocytes. Our experience regarding the impaired phagocytic capacity of cells in patients with diabetes and chronic renal failure is discussed. The results obtained in our laboratory from experiments detecting the effect of strenuous physical exercise,
hypothermia
, fasting, and abdominal photon irradiation on the phagocytic capacity of human polymorphonuclear neutrophils and rat peritoneal macrophages are hereby summarized and the reports on those subjects in the recent literature are reviewed. A variety of assays are applied for quantifying phagocytosis. Flow cytometry based on incubation of phagocytic cells with fluorescent conjugated particles and measuring the amount of fluorescence as an indicator of the engulfing capacity of the cells is a useful method. A direct visualization of the ingested particles using light or electron microscopy is a valuable tool for estimation of phagocytic function. In our hands, the use of semithin sections of embedded phagocytes following their incubation with latex particles provided satisfactory results for measuring the total number of phagocytic cells, as well as the internalizing capacity of each individual cell. Microbiological assays, the nitroblue tetrazolium test, quantitation of antibody- and antigen-mediated phagocytosis, as well as methods reviewed in detail in other reports are additional applications for determination of this intricate process.
...
PMID:Phagocytosis--the mighty weapon of the silent warriors. 1211 25
A 73-year-old woman with a history of hypertension and hyperlipidemia presented with a sharp pain ranging from the right shoulder to the upper limb. She had suffered a sharp pain at rest accompanied by general fatigue and nausea for about ten months prior to admission. Her white blood cell count was 12,800/microl, and her serum
C-reactive protein
was 17.5 mg/dl. A chest computed tomography scan revealed an aneurysmal change of the origin of the brachiocephalic artery. Pseudoaneurysm due to infection and aortic dissection was considered as a preoperative diagnosis. A total arch replacement was performed under cardiopulmonary bypass, deep
hypothermia
, and selective cerebral perfusion. Postoperatively, a bacteriologic culture of the contents of the aneurysm revealed Staphylococcus aureus. Perioperative administration of antibiotics was effective and the postoperative course was uneventful.
...
PMID:Mycotic pseudoaneurysm of the brachiocephalic artery. 1507 52
Posttraumatic hyperthermia (PTH) is a noninfectious elevation in body temperature that negatively influences outcome after traumatic brain injury (TBI). We sought to (1) characterize a clinically relevant model and (2) investigate potential cellular mechanisms of PTH. In study I, body temperature patterns were analyzed for 1 week in male rats after severe lateral fluid percussion (FP) brain injury (n=75) or sham injury (n=17). After injury, 27% of surviving animals experienced PTH, while 69% experienced acute
hypothermia
with a slow return to baseline. A profound blunting or loss of circadian rhythmicity (CR) that persisted up to 5 days after injury was experienced by 75% of brain-injured animals. At 2 and 7 days after injury, patterns of cell loss and inflammation were assessed in selected brain thermoregulatory and circadian centers. Significant cell loss was not observed, but PTH was associated with inflammatory changes in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) by one week after injury. In brain-injured animals with altered CR, reactive astrocytes were bilaterally localized in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and the PVN. Occasional IL-1beta+/ED-1+ macrophages/microglia were observed in the PVN and SCN exclusively in brain-injured animals developing PTH. In animals with PTH there was a significant positive correlation (r=0.788, P<0.01) between the degree of postinjury hyperthermia and the total number of cells positive for inflammatory markers within selected thermoregulatory and circadian nuclei. In study II, a separate group of animals underwent the same injury and temperature monitoring paradigm as in study I, but had additional physiologic data obtained, including vital signs, arterial blood gases, white blood cell counts, and
C-reactive protein
levels. All parameters remained within normal ranges after injury. These data suggest that PTH and the alteration in CR of temperature may be due, in part, to acute reactive astrocytosis and inflammation in hypothalamic centers responsible for both thermoregulation and CR.
...
PMID:Development of posttraumatic hyperthermia after traumatic brain injury in rats is associated with increased periventricular inflammation. 1564 47
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) is an important suppressor of inflammation. However, TGF-beta has also been found to promote secretion of inflammatory cytokines, and transgenic mice, which constitutively express TGF-beta in liver, have been found to be more susceptible to endotoxemia. To approach this apparent paradox, we investigated the role of hepatic TGF-beta1 in endotoxemia by utilising inducible TGF-beta1-transgenic mice that express TGF-beta1 under control of the
C-reactive protein
promoter. In contrast to non-transgenic littermates, administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced strongly increased expression of TGF-beta and acute phase proteins in the TGF-beta1-transgenic mice. Hepatic TGF-beta1-expression in the transgenic mice started an inflammatory cytokine cascade, marked by increased and prolonged secretion of TNF-alpha and IL-6 by hepatocytes. The inflammatory response of the TGF-beta1-transgenic mice to LPS was associated with high rates of mortality due to endotoxemic shock, marked by systemic hypotension and
hypothermia
. Endotoxemic shock was primarily mediated by TNF-alpha and IL-6, since inhibitory antibody to TNF-alpha or, more effectively, to IL-6 could reduce mortality in these mice. In conclusion, while TGF-beta-signalling to immune cells may suppress inflammatory effector function, TGF-beta-signalling to liver cells seems to promote LPS-stimulated secretion of inflammatory cytokines and to predispose for lethal endotoxemic shock.
...
PMID:Hepatic over-expression of TGF-beta1 promotes LPS-induced inflammatory cytokine secretion by liver cells and endotoxemic shock. 1605 5
The cellular immune response is accompanied by the release of neopterin. The level of neopterin in serum is increased in patients suffering from viral infections, autoimmune diseases, systemic inflammation, allograft rejection and malignant diseases, while that of
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
) is known to rise during inflammatory diseases and traumas. To investigate postmortem neopterin and
CRP
concentrations with regard to the cause of death, we examined cardiac and peripheral blood samples in 474 autopsy cases without advanced decomposition (0-96 years of age, 343 males and 131 females), 2.8 h to 3 days (median, 18.0 h) after death. Survival time was 0.1 h to 5 months (median, 3.0 h) for traumatic death, and 0.1-1, 440 h (median, 2.5 h) for natural death. In autopsied subjects, neopterin concentrations were higher than the clinical reference, independent of the time after death, and depended on the survival time. In cases of acute and subacute death due to trauma, the neopterin level in right heart blood was mildly to moderately elevated (about 50-200 nmol/l) except for sharp instrument injury, whereas the
CRP
concentration usually remained low (<1 mg/dl). However, a moderate rise in the
CRP
level (around 1-10 mg/dl) was observed in fatal cases of
hypothermia
(cold exposure). Markedly elevated serum
CRP
and neopterin levels (>10 mg/dl and >500 nmol/l, respectively) were detected in cases of delayed death due to trauma involving systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and of fatal bacterial infections. For sepsis, the serum
CRP
level was markedly elevated but the neopterin level was low in some cases. Fatal viral infections usually resulted in a marked elevation in the serum neopterin level (>500 nmol/l) with a mild to moderate rise in the
CRP
level. Combined analyses of neopterin and
CRP
may be useful to investigate viral infections and delayed traumatic death involving SIRS to support pathological findings.
...
PMID:Comparative evaluation of postmortem serum concentrations of neopterin and C-reactive protein. 1854 95
The present study analyzed serum levels of urea nitrogen (UN), creatinine (Cr), and
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
), which are very stable during the early postmortem period, for investigation of the cause of death with special regard to hyperthermia (heat stroke) in serial medico-legal autopsy cases (n = 429), excluding fatal injury, intoxication, and fire fatality. In this series, mechanical asphyxiation, drowning, and sudden cardiac death cases (n = 56, n = 43, and n = 212, respectively) usually showed low levels within postmortem reference ranges for these serum markers, although UN and
CRP
levels were mildly elevated in cases of sudden cardiac death and cerebrovascular stroke. There were concomitant significant elevations in serum levels of UN (>50 mg/dL), Cr (>2 mg/dL), and
CRP
(>2 mg/dL) for chronic renal failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, pneumonia, and
hypothermia
(cold exposure). UN and
CRP
were especially high for chronic renal failure and pneumonia, respectively. However, hyperthermia cases showed an isolated elevation in the serum Cr level, suggesting an influence of systemic skeletal muscle damage. These serum markers may be practically useful for postmortem investigation of death due to hyperthermia (heat stroke), for which specific pathological and toxicological evidence may not be available.
...
PMID:Postmortem serum nitrogen compounds and C-reactive protein levels with special regard to investigation of fatal hyperthermia. 1929 58
Brain injury from ischemic stroke can be devastating, but full brain restoration is feasible. Time until treatment is critical; rapid rate of injury progression, logistical and personnel constraints on neurological and cardiovascular assessment, limitations of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) for thrombolysis, anticoagulation and antiplatelet interventions, and neuroprotection all affect outcome. Promising acute neuroprotectant measures include albumin, magnesium, and
hypothermia
. Long-term hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) is safe and holds great promise. Eicosanoid and cytokine down-regulation by omega-3 nutrients docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) may help quench stroke inflammation.
C-reactive protein
(
CRP
), an inflammatory biomarker and stroke-recurrence predictor, responds favorably to krill oil (a phospholipid-DHA/EPA-astaxanthin complex). High homocysteine (Hcy) is a proven predictor of stroke recurrence and responds to folic acid and vitamin B12. Vitamin E may lower recurrence for individuals experiencing high oxidative stress. Citicoline shows promise for acute neuroprotection. Glycerophosphocholine (GPC) is neuroprotective and supports neuroplasticity via nerve growth factor (NGF) receptors. Stem cells have shown promise for neuronal restoration in randomized trials. Endogenous brain stem cells can migrate to an ischemic injury zone; exogenous stem cells once transplanted can migrate (home) to the stroke lesion and provide trophic support for cortical neuroplasticity. The hematopoietic growth factors erythropoietin (EPO) and granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) have shown promise in preliminary trials, with manageable adverse effects. Physical and mental exercises, including constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) and interactive learning aids, further support brain restoration following ischemic stroke. Brain plasticity underpins the function-driven brain restoration that can occur following stroke.
...
PMID:Integrated brain restoration after ischemic stroke--medical management, risk factors, nutrients, and other interventions for managing inflammation and enhancing brain plasticity. 1936 91
According to increasing evidence,
hypothermia
can significantly improve outcomes in term neonates manifesting asphyxic insult and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. Oxidative stress plays a key role in hypoxic-ischemic and inflammatory brain injuries. We investigated the impact of
hypothermia
on oxidative stress in babies with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. Term infants were randomly selected for treatment with moderate whole body
hypothermia
or standard care on normothermia, after perinatal asphyxia. Total hydroperoxides as biochemical markers of oxidative stress, and
C-reactive protein
as a marker of inflammation, were assayed in blood samples drown at 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 postnatal hours. In both hypothermic and normothermic groups, total hydroperoxides and
C-reactive protein
exhibited a continuous increase in the first days after birth. Nevertheless, a tendency was evident for slower and smaller elevations of total hydroperoxides and
C-reactive protein
in hypothermic compared with normothermic infants. A significant correlation was observed between total hydroperoxides and
C-reactive protein
in all patients, indicating an association between inflammation and oxidative stress during asphyxia. The slower increase and lower peaks of total hydroperoxides in the hypothermic group support the hypothesis that postasphyxic oxidative stress may be reduced by
hypothermia
.
...
PMID:Whole body hypothermia and oxidative stress in babies with hypoxic-ischemic brain injury. 2083
1
2
Next >>