Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of colchicine (1 mg/kg intraperitoneally on two successive days) on the absorption of isoniazid, quinidine and sulphafurazole (sulfisoxazole) from the rat small intestine was studied in situ and in vitro. Colchicine produced two different types of histological damage in the small intestine, one with degenerative and the other with regenerative changes predominating. The small intestinal surface area was variably reduced. The colchicine-treated rats were lethargic and hypothermic as compared to controls. Colchicine retarded the disappearance of fluid and all three drugs from the small intestinal lumen in situ 2 days after the first colchicine injection. In vitro the total amounts of fluid and drugs passed through the intestinal wall were not significantly changed by colchicine, although there was a slight tendency towards an increased absorption of quinidine. Hence, colchicine as an antimitotic drug decreases drug absorption from the rat small intestine in situ, apparently due to the decreased surface area of the small intestine, the decreased water flux through the intestinal wall, the retarded intestinal motility and hypothermia of the rats. In vitro the changes are small, which makes the in vitro tests less suitable for studying the effect of colchicine on absorption.
...
PMID:Effect of colchicine on drug absorption from the rat small intestine in situ and in vitro. 71 41

In order to minimize heat loss cold stress induces peripheral vasoconstriction via the sympathetic nervous system. This effect is most pronounced in the extremities. Vasoconstriction does not appear in the head-neck region--a fact of great importance in emergency situations. In order to compensate for heat loss shivering is an early event, where involuntary muscle contractions increase metabolic rate 2-6 fold. Early tachycardia and elevated blood-pressure, followed by progressive bradycardia and lowered pressure are common cardiovascular effects of hypothermia. Death due to ventricular fibrillation or asystole occurs between 28 degrees-25 degrees C. Cold stress causes an osmolal diuresis with sodium and chloride as the main constituents. The natriuresis is of tubular origin and could be due to impaired autoregulation in the kidney and/or depend on the natriuretic polypeptide. The augmented urine flow decreases blood volume, lowers physical working capacity and increases blood viscosity--all negative events in a hazardous situation. Sudden immersion initiates hyperventilation for 1-2 minutes with an increasing risk of drowning. Thereafter ventilation decreases to rates consistent with metabolic requirements. In severe hypothermia carbon dioxide retention causes respiratory and metabolic acidosis. Hypothermia induces progressive depression of mental functions starting with apathy and bizarre behaviour and ending in lethargy and coma often between 30 degrees-28 degrees C. The paradoxal feeling of heat with undressing in agony could depend on cerebral receptor disturbances.
...
PMID:Human physiology under cold exposure. 181 74

Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism was diagnosed in five young to middle-aged cats of mixed breeding. Three of the cats were male and two were female. Historic signs included lethargy (n = 5), anorexia (n = 5), muscle tremors (n = 4), weakness (n = 4), generalized seizures (n = 3), ataxia (n = 3), mental dullness or disorientation (n = 3), panting (n = 2), pruritus (n = 1), ptyalism (n = 1) and dysphagia (n = 1). Weakness (n = 4), dehydration (n = 2), cataracts (n = 2), hypothermia (n = 1), and bradycardia (n = 1) were found on physical examination. Results of electrocardiography revealed a prolonged Q-T interval in two cats. Results of initial laboratory tests revealed profound hypocalcemia and severe hyperphosphatemia with normal renal function. The diagnosis of hypoparathyroidism was made on the basis of the history, clinical signs, and results serum biochemical testing (i.e., severe hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia); in two cats, the diagnosis was also confirmed by histologic examination of parathyroid glands. Initial treatment included intravenous administration of 10% calcium gluconate and oral administration of large loading doses of calcium and vitamin D (dihydrotachysterol). Successful long-term management with dihydrotachysterol and calcium was achieved in all cats. The final dosage of dihydrotachysterol required to maintain normocalcemia in the five cats ranged from 0.004 to 0.04 mg/kg/day (mean = 0.015 mg/kg/day). Long-term calcium supplementation was given to three of the cats in dosages ranging from 29 to 53 mg/kg/day (mean = 42 mg/kg/day) of elemental calcium. One cat died after 28 months of therapy from widely metastatic hemangiosarcoma; the other three cats are still alive and well after 5 to 37 months of treatment.
...
PMID:Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism in five cats. 202 14

Four newborns with adenovirus infection are described, and the profile of neonatal adenovirus disease is outlined based on the cases of these newborns and nine previously described. Characteristic historical features included prolonged rupture of membranes, maternal illness, vaginal delivery, and onset of illness within the first 10 days of life. Clinical findings included lethargy, fever or hypothermia, anorexia, apnea, hepatomegaly, bleeding, and progressive pneumonia. Thrombocytopenia, coagulopathy, and hepatitis were typical laboratory manifestations. Illness was severe and generally unremitting; only two survivors have been reported. Pathologic changes were prominent in lung, liver, and brain. Virus isolates, predominantly serotypes 3, 7, 21, and 30 were obtained from multiple sites and organs. Epidemiologic evidence suggests that viral acquisition from the mother, perhaps via the birth canal, is a major mode of transmission. Neonatal adenovirus infection, which is frequently disseminated and generally fatal, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of neonatal sepsis and pneumonia.
...
PMID:Neonatal adenovirus infection: four patients and review of the literature. 203 95

This review deals with the comparative observations of brown fat tissue in the bat, a hibernator, and in man, a nonhibernator. In both mammals, the brown fat is distributed in restricted portions of the body and brought into a thermogenetic activity by an acute drop in ambient temperature. Light microscopic examination was performed on the interscapular brown fat of bats captured monthly throughout one year; electron microscopic observations were made using a bat captured in April and another in September. Human perirenal brown fat was investigated light-microscopically on tissues derived from 215 fresh necropsy cases (Japanese) of both sexes aged from one month to 93 years. Brown adipose tissue was recognized only in 162 (75%) of the 215 samples, because brown fat cells were reduced by transformation into white fat cells. Human brown fat cells were classified into six types according to the morphological features of their lipid droplets. These reflect different functional states of intracellular heat production. The Type 1 (D) cell is a fat-depleted brown fat cell with a darkly stained cytoplasm; it is specific to humans. Human perirenal brown fat cells begin to show a transformation into white fat cells already at the infantile stage. This change occurs from the peripheral toward the central portion of the lobule, so that various functioning cell types remain only in the central area of the lobules. In contrast to humans, bat interscapular brown fat cells exhibit regular seasonal changes in size and lipid droplet content, so that the cells could not be classified as in humans into definite types according to the features of their lipid droplets. The most conspicuous difference between brown fat tissue in the nonhibernator and hibernator is that in the latter, white fat cells never occur within the brown fat tissue. In the hibernator, thermogenesis in the brown fat is necessary for both the arousal from hibernation and the maintenance of hibernation as well as rutting. In human perirenal brown fat tissue, darkly stained fat-depleted cells (D) occupy, with other cell types (CR, CR'), an important part in the reversible heat production cycle of the brown fat tissue. The "hypothermic" or "cold syndrome (cold injury)" is a disorder affecting inadequately protected infants in severely cold seasons, accompanied by lethargy, hypothermia and lactation refusal and revealing hemorrhagic pneumonia in necropsy. The brown fat tissue in such infants is composed exclusively of fat-depleted brown fat cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Morphological studies on brown adipose tissue in the bat and in humans of various ages. 203 57

Congenital hypothyroid dwarfism was diagnosed in a family of Giant Schnauzers. Three female and two male puppies from different litters were evaluated for dwarfism, lethargy, somnolence, gait abnormalities, and constipation. On physical examination, disproportionate dwarfism (n = 5), macroglossia (n = 3), hypothermia (n = 3), delayed dental eruption (n = 3), ataxia (n = 2), and abdominal distension (n = 1) were identified. Results of initial laboratory tests showed anemia (n = 4), hypercholesterolemia (n = 4), hypercalcemia (n = 2), and transudative abdominal effusion (n = 1). Radiographic skeletal surveys disclosed epiphyseal dysgenesis and delayed skeletal maturation (n = 5). A diagnosis of hypothyroidism was established on the basis of low basal serum thyroxine concentrations that failed to increase following the administration of TSH (n = 5) and markedly reduced to absent thyroid image when evaluated with gamma camera imaging of the thyroid gland (n = 4). In the two dogs that were most thoroughly evaluated, the results of thyroid histology, prolonged TSH testing, and repeat thyroid imaging, after three daily injections of TSH, were all consistent with secondary or tertiary, rather than primary, hypothyroidism. When TSH was administered over a period of 3 consecutive days (5 IU/day, subcutaneously), serum thyroid hormone response became normal and resulted in a normal thyroid image in the two dogs re-evaluated with gamma camera imaging. Daily treatment with oral levothyroxine (20 micrograms/kg) resulted in complete remission in puppies (n = 4) treated prior to 4 months of age. The other puppy failed to attain normal breed standards for height.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Congenital hypothyroid dwarfism in a family of giant schnauzers. 174 85

Violent shaking causes severe injury in infants, but the diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome is often difficult to make because of the lack of obvious external signs. Consultations by other specialists may not be helpful, since the findings of most organ systems, taken in isolation, are usually nonspecific. Shaken baby syndrome should be considered in infants presenting with seizures, failure to thrive, vomiting associated with lethargy or drowsiness, hypothermia, bradycardia, hypertension or hypotension, respiratory irregularities, coma or death. Shaken babies are usually less than one year old, and most are under six months of age. Head injury (notably subdural hemorrhage) and retinal hemorrhages are the hallmarks of the syndrome.
...
PMID:Shaken baby syndrome. 218 31

A 28-day-old infant developed lethargy, hypotonia, and hypothermia following a phenobarbital overdose secondary to a pharmacist's error. He was treated with multiple dose activated charcoal (MDAC) and alkalinization of the urine, which resulted in prompt recovery with rapid elimination of the drug (t1/2-11.2 hours, expected 45 to 118 hours). The use of MDAC in this newborn was safe and effective. We suggest that age should not pose a barrier to the use of MDAC, when indicated.
...
PMID:Treatment of phenobarbital poisoning with multiple dose activated charcoal in an infant. 221 64

As an example of spontaneous cooling in homeothermic organisms, hibernation of mammals is described. Based on the fact that all hibernators, at their regulated minimal body temperature, display a uniform turnover rate, related to body weight, the hypothesis is developed that cold tolerance of mammals is generally limited by a common specific minimal metabolic rate, which larger organisms, because of their lower basal metabolism, already attain in less profound hypothermia. The observation that there is, in natural lethargic states, a certain independence between metabolic rate and body temperature, subsequently leads to considerations on the presumable modulating influence exerted by the acid-base balance. Finally, referring to the time limitations of such adaptation strategies, the cold-induced disintegration of metabolic processes with differing temperature dependence is illustrated which, however, will be more pronounced in the intermediate temperature range than in lower cooling. Thus, despite a limited cold tolerance, an extremely profound hypothermia of short duration seems not altogether impossible even for large homeotherms, provided some adequate conditions of rewarming are observed.
...
PMID:Metabolic reduction in hypothermia: pathophysiological problems and natural examples--Part 2. 223 81

Primary hypoadrenocorticism was diagnosed in ten young to middle-aged cats of mixed breeding. Five of the cats were male, and five were female. Historic signs included lethargy (n = 10), anorexia (n = 10), weight loss (n = 9), vomiting (n = 4), and polyuria (n = 3). Dehydration (n = 9), hypothermia (n = 8), prolonged capillary refill time (n = 5), weak pulse (n = 5), collapse (n = 3), and sinus bradycardia (n = 2) were found on physical examination. Results of initial laboratory tests revealed anemia (n = 3), absolute lymphocytosis (n = 2), absolute eosinophilia (n = 1), and azotemia and hyperphosphatemia (n = 10). Serum electrolyte changes included hyponatremia (n = 10), hyperkalemia (n = 9), hypochloremia (n = 9), and hypercalcemia (n = 1). The diagnosis of primary adrenocortical insufficiency was established on the basis of results of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulation tests (n = 10) and endogenous plasma ACTH determinations (n = 7). Initial therapy for hypoadrenocorticism included intravenous administration of 0.9% saline and dexamethasone and intramuscular administration of desoxycorticosterone acetate in oil. Three cats were euthanatized shortly after diagnosis because of poor clinical response. Results of necropsy examination were unremarkable except for complete destruction of both adrenal cortices. Seven cats were treated chronically with oral prednisone or intramuscular methylprednisolone acetate for glucocorticoid supplementation and with oral fludrocortisone acetate or intramuscular injections of repository desoxycorticosterone pivalate for mineralocorticoid replacement. One cat died after 47 days of therapy from unknown causes; the other six cats are still alive and well after 3 to 70 months of treatment.
...
PMID:Primary hypoadrenocorticism in ten cats. 246 93


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>