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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

After surface-induced hypothermia in 12 cats total body washout was performed followed by 60 min bloodless perfusion. In the rewarming period at 28 degrees C, packed red cells were added and at 35 degrees C, ECC was finished. Functional parameters of metabolism, liver, and kidney were measured and followed by histologic examination. Bloodless perfusion does not alter the morphology of the organs examined. Abnormal values of organ function and metabolic data seem to be reversible.
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PMID:[Metabolism and organ functions in experimental hypothermic, bloodless whole-body perfusion with hydroxyethyl starch (HES)]. 7 96

Elective intracardiac repair by the Mustard operation is recommented in patients with transposition of the great arteries and intact ventricular septum in the first year of life (Fig. 1). In patients with associated ventricular septal defect in the first three months of life, early banding followed by early debanding before the first year of life is recommended. When the left ventricular outflow tract obstruction is discrete at valvular or subvalvular level, Mustard operation, closure of the ventricular septal defect and direct relief of out-flow obstruction is acceptable, but in patients with an unfavorable left ventricular outflow tract anatomy, a preliminary shunt followed by a Rastelli operation after the age of four years will probably result in a greater salvage. The utilization of surface induced profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest allows for more precise and rapid surgery and is shown to be a definite advantage in the very young infant.
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PMID:Review: surgery for transposition of the great arteries in the first year of life. 7 16

Visual evoked potentials were recorded in eight children during hypothermia and circulatory arrest. The potentials were lost in all children recorded in late arrest. The evoked potential is a more sensitive indicator of CNS stress as provoked by combined hypothermia and hypoxia than is the EEG. EEG activity persisted in six of the eight children in this series even during circulatory arrest. The EEG had been seen to do the same in more than half of a larger series of children recorded at that stage. The results suggest that evoked potentials may be a sensitive indicator of early impairment of cerebral function and may demonstrate useful change sooner than the EEG. The examination may be useful in following children with illnesses producing hypoxia or anoxia. The N1 component was as easily and as frequently identifiable as the P2 component. Under the stress of this procedure, the latency of the P2 component became more variable than the N1 peak. The results suggest the N1 component may be as useful and perhaps more useful than the P2 wave in following the effect of some CNS stresses in children.
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PMID:Visual evoked potentials during hypothermia and prolonged circulatory arrest. 7 11

Subcollicular, volume-conducted auditory evoked potentials were obtained from the C57BL/6 laboratory mouse. Barbiturate-induced, whole body hypothermia was associated with a latency increase; between 37 and 31 degrees C, these values were 0.28, 0.48, 0.88 and 0.88 msec for PI-IV, respectively. The amplitude of the auditory nerve potential elicited by a 100 dB click doubled in amplitude between 16 and 42 days post partum. A progressive latency decrease, from PI to PIV, was observed during this age span. Acoustic stress produced differential changes within peripheral and central amplitude and latency measures, and these parameters were also sensitive to the method used to reduce body movement during the recording session. These changes were consistent with anatomical and physiological data from the auditory brain stem of other mammals.
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PMID:Differential changes of auditory nerve and brain stem short latency evoked potentials in the laboratory mouse. 8 41

To investigate the oxygen transport capacity of solutions for blood replacement the oxygen solubility coefficients (ml/ml atm) at 37 degrees C of 12 solutions for volume replacement were determined and compared with those of 12 solutions for parenteral nutrition, 4 electrolyte solutions and 5 solutions for osmotherapy. All solutions for volume replacement have lower values for oxygen solubility than human plasma which shows a very constant oxygen solubility value even under extreme conditions. For clinical use of volume replacement solutions it is recommended that the oxygen solubility of the substitute be considered when any of the following conditions presents: a) large amounts are infused (hemodilution), b) isobar of hyperbar oxygen therapy is employed (hyperoxia), c) the body temperature is lowered (hypothermia). This is valid especially in the case of any impairment of the microcirculation.
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PMID:[Oxygen transport by solutions for blood replacement in comparison with other infusion solutions (author's transl)]. 9 98

The authors report 5 cases of aberrant left pulmonary artery undergoing surgery with 3 successful results and 2 failures; 4 of the 5 operations were carried out through a sternal split with either extra-corporeal circulation or circulatory arrest and profound hypothermia. The authors have reviewed the cases reported in the literature which amount to 78, 51 of which have been operated on surgically, the condition having been corrected in only 34 of them. They have studied particularly the incidence of associated tracheo-bronchial lesions which are themselves the reason for the seriousness of the condition, as well as the longterm results and the possible incidence of thrombosis in the anastomosis. By contrast with the views of Sade, the authors are optimistic about the results which have been obtained in the survivors.
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PMID:[Aberrant left pulmonary artery. Apropos of 5 operated cases]. 9 78

Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB) was administered to adult and prepubescent rhesus monkeys intravenously in varying dosages while an electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded from scalp electrodes and the body core temperature was monitored. Blood and cerebrospinal fluid samples were assayed for gamma hydroxybutyrate. GHB produced a trancelike stupor in all the monkeys, associated with marked EEG changes and hypothermia. There was a striking age specificity in that prepubescent rhesus monkeys responded to a lower threshold dosage, had a higher incidence of myoclonic jerking, and showed characteristic EEG changes not seen in the adult animals. The EEG-behavioral changes paralleled the hypothermia. There was good correlation between the serum levels of GHB and the EEG-behavioral effects. These studies suggest that the GHB-treated monkey may have utility as a petit mal seizure model.
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PMID:Gamma hydroxybutyrate in the monkey. I. Electroencephalographic, behavioral, and pharmacokinetic studies. 9 74

The effects of morphine and delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol(THC)on the tail-flick reflex, body temperature, and catecholamine synthesis were examined in the mouse in order to compare their effects in a single species and strain under uniform conditions. Naloxone antagonism of THC and cross-tolerance between morphine and THC were also studied. Both morphine and THC produced antinociception, hypothermia, and increased catecholamine synthesis at 30 min after s.c. injection. Morphine produced greater increases in dopamine synthesis and was a more potent antinociceptive agent, while THC produced greater increases in norepinephrine synthesis and was a more potent hypothermic agent. Naloxone pretreatment (1 mg/kg) partially antagonized the hypothermia and increase in catecholamine synthesis produced by THC. There was also cross-tolerance between morphine and THC, but it was asymmetric in that THC-tolerant animals were cross-tolerant to only the hypothermic action of morphine and morphine-tolerant animals cross-tolerant to only the antinociceptive action of THC.
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PMID:A comparison of some pharmacological actions of morphine and delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol in the mouse. 9 3

The endogenous opioid met-enkephalin intraventricularly adminstered to the rat at the dose of 100 microgram raised rectal temperature, whereas 400 microgram of the pentapeptide caused a diphasic effect, i.e., hypothermia followed by hyperthermia. Met-enkephalin was ineffective when administered i.p. The effects on temperature were substantially similar to those elicited, for both routes of administration, by morphine, which may either raise or lower rat temperature depending on the dose. More naloxone was required to antagonize thermic effects of met-enkephalin than morphine. Finally, there was a lack of effects on temperature for met-enkephalin centrally administered to morphine-tolerant animals, thus providing further evidence, in vivo, of cross tolerance between opiates and naturally occurring ligands of opiate receptors.
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PMID:Effects of Met-enkephalin on body temperature of normal and morphine-tolerant rats. 9 98

During 1969-77, 20 episodes of severe hypothermia occurred in 19 diabetic patients in Nottingham. Thirteen were associated with ketotic hyperosmolar coma, two with lactic acidosis, and one with hypoglycaemia, while in four there was no loss of diabetic control. Ketoacidosis accounted for 11.8% of all admissions for severe accidental hypothermia and was a commoner cause than hypothyroidism (8%). Patients with ketoacidosis were younger and developed hypothermia as often during the summer as during the winter. The metabolic disturbance was characteristic, with severe acidosis (mean pH 7.04), a high blood glucose concentration (mean 56.6 mmol/l; 1020 mg/100 ml), and high plasma osmolality (mean 379.7 mmol (mosmol)/kg). Eight of the 13 episodes proved fatal. Hypothermia may aggravate ketoacidosis and complicate treatment and should be sought in all patients with severe diabetic coma.
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PMID:Hypothermia: a complication of diabetic ketoacidosis. 10 2


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