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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 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.
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PMID:Effect of insulin-induced hypoglycemia on blood-brain barrier permeability. 298 97

A series is presented of 83 patients surgically explored for massive bowel infarction. Old men with previous heart disease and symptoms of peripheral atherosclerosis were primarily affected. Clinical presenting features were abdominal pain (100 per cent), peritonitis (57 per cent), shock (34 per cent) and hypothermia (26 per cent). A third-space syndrome with metabolic acidosis and uraemia was the most common physiological derangement. Age was the only factor that appeared to have influenced the surgeon's decision to perform massive bowel resection (71 years in non-resected versus 64 years in resected patients, P less than 0.006). The overall mortality rate was 71 per cent. Forty-four patients underwent massive bowel resection (mean length of remaining small bowel 60 +/- 40 cm) and twenty-four (54 per cent) survived the procedure. Axillary temperature was higher in survivors (36.7 degrees C versus 36.1 degrees C, P less than 0.03). Early postoperative total plasma protein and albumin concentrations were also higher in survivors (57 versus 46 g/l, P less than 0.005; 27 versus 22 g/l, P less than 0.02). Patients with previous symptoms of atherosclerotic disease and high pre-operative blood urea levels also had a bad prognosis. Survivors had a mean hospital stay of 57 days and parenteral nutrition had to be maintained for a mean of 34 days. The survival rate achieved with massive resection justifies this surgical approach in selected patients with massive bowel infarction.
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PMID:Mesenteric infarction: an analysis of 83 patients with prognostic studies in 44 cases undergoing a massive small-bowel resection. 339 20

Macaque monkeys acclimatized to a restraint chair were fitted with indwelling venous and urinary catheters. After basal rates of urine production and creatinine clearance were determined, a 50 mg dose of plasma dialysate albumin fraction obtained from the woodchuck was administered intravenously in a total volume of 2.5 ml. Plasma fractions were collected during the winter interval of hibernation (hibernation "trigger" or HT), or during the summer active (SAWA) period. Although the SAWA fraction exerted no effects on renal function, HT caused a significant reduction in creatinine clearance. In addition, a tendency toward reduced urine flow and creatinine production occurred following the HT infusion. These findings suggest that over and above the hypothermia, aphagia and opioid-like behavioral depression induced by HT, the albumin fraction (HT) present endogenously in the woodchuck during winter torpor, exerts a direct action on the kidney of the primate, possibly on the mechanisms underlying glomerular filtration and the tubular reabsorption process.
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PMID:Hibernation "trigger" alters renal function in the primate. 403 98

The function of kidneys stored for 48 to 72 hours in hypertonic crystalloid, intracellular solution, Euro-Collins (360 mOsm./l.), was compared with those stored in a new hyperosmolar (520 mOsm./l.) colloid solution designated as TP-II. The TP-II solution contained less K2HPO4 (1.05 gm./l.) and KH2PO4 (317 gm./l.) and more glucose (40 gm./l.) than the Euro-Collins, and also had an albumin concentration of 4.3 gm./dl. Kidneys obtained from beagle dogs were flushed with either Euro-Collins or TP-II solution (4C). Hypothermic storage followed for either 48 or 72 hours, prior to autotransplantation into the iliac fossa and contralateral nephrectomy. Four experimental groups were transplanted as follows: group 1 (n = 8) and group 2 (n = 7) received kidneys that were flushed with 250 ml. of Euro-Collins or TP-II solution, respectively, prior to 48 hours hypothermic storage. Group 3 (n = 5) and group 4 (n = 5) received kidneys that were flushed in the same way as those in groups 1 and 2, respectively, but were stored for a 72-hour period. TP-II appears to be superior to Euro-Collins for hypothermic storage of kidneys for periods as long as 48 hours. When hypothermic storage times are extended to 72 hours, the number of kidneys with normal function after transplantation is reduced for both solutions, however, TP-II solution has a slight advantage over Euro-Collins solution. Further studies will hopefully clarify this issue and lead to the application of TP-II in the clinical setting.
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PMID:Comparative results of prolonged hypothermic storage of canine kidneys preserved with hyperosmolar colloid (TP-II) or crystalloid (Euro-Collins) solution. 633 48

Blood has a number of rheological properties which partially determine flow, especially at capillary level, and its capacity to deliver oxygen. It is non-Newtonian, pseudoplastic, thixotropic and viscoelastic. Viscosity can be studied with different types of viscosimeters (coaxial cylinder or capillary viscosimeters). It can be defined by the ratio of stress of deformation to rate of deformation. Viscosity depends on macrorheological parameters: hematocrit, serum proteins, especially fibrinogen and globulins, and also on microrheological parameters: degree of aggregation and red blood cell deformability. Viscosity rises when the temperature falls and decreases with the radius of the tube through which the blood flows (Fahraeus-Linqvist effects). Blood viscosity is studied clinically at different temperatures, and, above all, at different rates of deformation by carefully recording the hematocrit. Plasma viscosity, fibrinogen, albumia and immunoglobulin levels, the viscosity of blood cell suspensions in normal saline must also be taken into consideration. Special investigations (rheoscopy, filtrability) provide information about red cell aggregation and deformability. Hyperviscosity syndromes are observed with: --raised hematocrit (polycythemia and pseudopolycythemia), --conditions with raised serum proteins or changes in their composition (especially hyperfibrinogenemia, raised immunoglobulins, low albumin levels); inflammatory syndromes, dysglobulinemias (Fahey's syndrome of plasma hyperviscosity), --low temperature (hypothermia), --increased red cell aggregability (shock, fat embolism), --reduced red cell deformability due to various congenital and acquired conditions (sickle cell anemia, renal failure, hyperlipoproteinemia, thrombosis, diabetes). Conversely, hypoviscosity may occur with a low hematocrit, hypoproteinemia, hypofibrinogenemia, and hyperthermia. Increased viscosity results in a slowing of blood flow, stagnation of its constituents and in ischemia. Therapeutic interventions may be considered on the different components of the hyperviscosity syndrome: hemodilation, plasmapheresis, dispersion of aggregants, agents acting on red cell deformability.
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PMID:[Blood hyperviscosity syndromes. Classification and physiopathological understanding. Therapeutic deductions]. 636 7

Using infections of Plasmodium berghei in laboratory mice, the following physiopathological changes were observed during the seven days of the infection: reduction in haematocrit, increases in parasitized erythrocytes, pulmonary oedema, hypothermia, formation of prostaglandin-like substances in the central nervous system, increases and decreases in plasma bradykininogen levels and leucocytosis, as evidenced by neutrophilia, lymphocytosis and monocytosis. We found no changes in total plasma protein levels and albumin/globulin ratio.
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PMID:Plasmodium berghei: physiopathological changes during infections in mice. 636 86

The present study was designed to determine if the addition of albumin or mannitol to the priming solution of the pump oxygenator would diminish edema in organs, without diminishing some of the beneficial effects of hemodilution on blood flow and renal function. Tissue blood flow (15 mu spheres), water content, and renal clearances were determined in 8 animals during cardiopulmonary bypass. A 2(2) factorial, completely fixed experimental design was used. All animals were placed on cardiopulmonary bypass with hemodilution (hematocrit 25 +/- 2%) and hypothermia (25 degrees +/- 1 degree C). Albumin decreased flow to the midmyocardium of the left ventricle and to the spleen, and increased flow to the inner cortex of the kidney. Albumin caused decreased urine flow and decreased urine sodium, and also diminished renal osmolar, sodium, and free-water clearances. both mannitol and albumin decreased lung water. Mannitol decreased water content of the outer renal cortex, and decreased flow to the inner cortex and medulla of the kidney and to the spleen. Mannitol had no significant effect on urine flow, renal plasma flow, or renal clearances. Neither albumin nor mannitol had any effect on water content of the intestine, stomach, liver, or myocardium where the greatest accumulation of water occurs with hemodilution. The effect of albumin on renal function is potentially deleterious during cardiopulmonary bypass because it decreases urine flow, and osmolar and free-water clearance.
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PMID:Effect of albumin and mannitol on organ blood flow, oxygen delivery, water content, and renal function during hypothermic hemodilution cardiopulmonary bypass. 680 88

The effects of two cardioplegic solutions (CPSs) on isolated, superfused, bovine coronary arteries were compared with those produced by changes in composition of standard Krebs medium. High potassium, low sodium content or the addition of albumin produced vasoconstriction; high magnesium, high glucose content or the addition of mannitol led to vasodilatation. In most cases hypothermia slightly reduced vasoconstriction and enhanced vasodilatation. The action of the two CPSs is the result of the interaction of these basic effects. The results suggest that the vasomotor reactions of coronary arteries to CPS may affect the delivery of the CPS to the myocardium and exert a critical influence on successful cardioplegia.
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PMID:Effects of cardioplegic solutions on conductive coronary arteries. 680 45

Accurate evaluation of the unavoidable liquid junction potentials (LJP) involved whenever bath (B) and perfusate (P) solutions differ in ionic composition is of fundamental importance in the determination of proximal convoluted tubule (PCT) transepithelial potential, psi T, and its active and diffusion components, psi A and psi D. Therefore, a precise method of measuring these LJP, using Ag/AgCl electrodes, has been developed and successfully tested. The measured LJP, psi B-P, between artificial bath serum containing 6 g/100 ml albumin and ultrafiltrate-like perfusate is +2.6 mV. The average measured potential difference (PD) in rabbit PCT with these solutions was -3.0 mV, psi T thus being only -0.4 mV. Three maneuvers known to abolish psi A (hypothermia, 10(-4) ouabain, or K-free bath) brought the PD close to the reference potential, indicating that psi A congruent to PD and that psi D congruent to psi B-P. From dilution potentials, after correction for LJP (4.3 in the absence and 6.2 mV in the presence of proteins), PNa/PCl was calculated to be 0.9 for midcortical and 1.1 for juxtamedullary PCT in the absence of proteins and slightly lower in their presence. These values of LJP obtained with Ag/AgCl electrodes are between 30 and 100% larger than the ones measured using a saturated KCl bridge or the ones in previous studies, indicating that in these studies psi T as well as PNa/PCl has been overestimated.
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PMID:Liquid junctions and isolated proximal tubule transepithelial potentials. 682 63

A review of 398 neonatal autopsies at Downstate Medical Center revealed 27 cases of kernicterus during the seven-year period from 1971 through 1977. With the current intensive care of the sick newborn, kernicterus continues to occur, mainly in premature infants with relatively low levels of serum bilirubin (mean of 11.5 mg/100 ml). To understand the factors contributing to the development of kernicterus, clinical and pathologic findings in 27 infants with kernicterus were compared to 103 "control" infants with retrospectively. Birth weight, gestational age, sex, and Apgar scores were comparable in both groups. The duration of survival was significantly shorter in infants with kernicterus than in the control infants. The clinical signs and symptoms of kernicterus were nonspecific and the premortem diagnosis of kernicterus was not suspected in most of the cases. There were no significant differences in the peak serum bilirubin values, incidence of hypothermia, hypoglycemia, convulsions, anemia, infection, use of phototherapy, transfusion and exchange transfusion in the two groups. Serum albumin values and bilirubin binding capacity measured by 2-(4-hydroxybenzeneazo)benzoic acid were significantly lower in the kernicteric group although the bilirubin-albumin molar ratio was equal in both groups. The incidences of severe acidosis and hypoxic encephalopathy were significantly higher in the kernicteric infants. In this study, acidosis, hypoxia, hypoalbuminemia, and low bilirubin binding capacity were seen more often in kernicteric infants than in control infants. However, analysis of previously suggested risk factors failed to identify any single factor or combination of factors which could be predictive to the development of kernicterus.
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PMID:Lack of predictive indices in kernicterus: a comparison of clinical and pathologic factors in infants with or without kernicterus. 719 47


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