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

Monitoring the central peripheral temperature gradient in critically ill surgical patients is a simple, sensitive, noninvasive and inexpensive method that can accurately reflect the state of peripheral circulation. It serves as an early warning sign, and its return to normal is a good measure of the efficacy o f therapy. Recognition of the cause of an abnormal gradient is essential to successful management since it can result from pain as well as hypovolemia. Warm-up patterns vary, and every patient should be treated individually. Forcing vasodilatation is usually unnecessary and amy be dangerous in hypothermic patients and in patients with hypovolemia if blood volume is not corrected simultaneously. Peripheral vascular disease, central hypothermia and the use of vasoactive drugs limit the usefulness of this method.
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PMID:Central peripheral temperature gradient. Its value and limitations in the management of critically iii surgical patients. 743 17

Since nitric oxide (NO) has been implicated in nociceptive processing, the present study examined whether NO synthase inhibition with either Nw-nitro-L-arginine (L-NA) or its methyl ester (L-NAME) would alter antinociception elicited by either continuous (CCWS) or intermittent cold-water swims (ICWS) on the tail-flick and jump tests. Whereas CCWS antinociception on both tests was significantly potentiated by a dose range of L-NA (0.1-4 mg/kg IP) and L-NAME (1 mg/kg IP), ICWS antinociception was largely unaffected by these manipulations. In contrast, administration of the less active D isomer (D-NAME) failed to alter CCWS antinociception and reduced ICWS antinociception. The ability of NO synthase inhibition to potentiate CCWS antinociception could not be explained by changes in CCWS hypothermia. Since ICWS antinociception is mediated by mu-opioid manipulations and CCWS antinociception is sensitive to delta-opioid and nonopioid manipulations, this indicates that NO synthase inhibition may be acting upon a selective form of pain inhibition.
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PMID:Nitric oxide synthase inhibition selectively potentiates swim stress antinociception in rats. 751 79

A 73-year-old female complaining of left thoracic pain was referred to our hospital. In 1988, she had the first CABG of the left circumflex coronary artery (CX) and right coronary artery. On admission in April 1994, chest X-ray and CT scan revealed a saccular aortic aneurysm, 5 x 5 cm in size, extending to the distal to the left subclavian artery. Coronary arteriography showed a patency of the CX graft, but 99% stenosis of the proximal left anterior descending branch (LAD) with delayed opacification. After the repeated median sternotomy, cardiac arrest was achieved with the aortic cross clamping and St. Thomas Hospital solution infusion. CABG to the LAD branch using a saphenous vein was accomplished. Following this, the replacement of the aortic aneurysmal lesion with a prosthetic graft was performed under the selective cerebral perfusion with deep hypothermia. Proximal anastomosis of the vein graft was completed during a rewarming period. The operation was performed without complications. Postoperative course was satisfactory except a few minor transient complications such as athelectasis of the left upper lobe and the intra-thoracic hematoma. After one month's hospitalization, she was discharged, and currently (six months postoperative) remains asymptomatic.
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PMID:[Simultaneous operations for both the repair of the aortic arch aneurysm and repeated CABG]. 760 6

We report the case of a 9-year-old girl with multiple problems due to hypothalamic dysfunction of obscure origin: apnoeic spells, behavioural problems, developmental delay, hypodipsia with bouts of hypernatraemia, episodes of spontaneous hypothermia, obesity, petit-mal seizures, non-progressive precocious puberty, absence of respiratory response to CO2 and probably insensitivity of hyposensitivity to pain. She also had hyperprolactinaemia and decreased human growth hormone secretion. Hypothyroidism of central origin and hyposecretion of cortisol were also present. Multiple brain CT-scans failed to reveal any tumour or other anatomical abnormality. Her clinical course was improved initially by treatment with clomipramine, but she died suddenly, and the autopsy failed to disclose any anatomical lesion. We compare this case with three similar previously reported cases.
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PMID:Hypothalamic dysfunction in a child: a distinct syndrome? Report of a case and review of the literature. 768 46

Radical prostatectomy is widely used to treat prostate cancer. Complications such as hemorrhage, hypothermia, impotence and pain can occur with this surgery. This case study discusses preoperative autologous blood donation as well as explains staging and grading systems used for prostate cancer. Fluid management also is reviewed. Postoperative treatment of the patient with cancer of the prostate is rapidly changing. Emphasis is placed on the follow up of and rationale behind treatment after surgery.
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PMID:Radical prostatectomy: a case study. 770 59

Ingested polyunsaturated fatty acids are postulated to lead to changes in central nervous system activity, presumably by altering the lipid composition of neuronal membranes. In support of this hypothesis, we and other investigators have previously demonstrated cognitive effects in rats fed oils that contain both alpha-linolenic acid (18:3 omega 3) and linoleic acid (18:2 omega 6), with the relative content of alpha-linolenic acid being seen as the critical variable. The present study in rats examined the effects of preparations containing different ratios of highly purified free alpha-linolenic acid to linoleic acid (about 25 mg/kg of body weight daily) on learning performance (Morris water tank), pain thresholds (heated plate), and thermoregulatory control of d-amphetamine-induced hypothermia during 4 weeks of treatment. Preparations with omega 3-to-omega 6 ratios ranging from 1:3.5 to 1:5 (specifically a ratio of 1:4) produced significant favorable effects on all of these variables. Although the specific mode of action remains to be elucidated, these results suggest that such preparations of free fatty acids should be evaluated in the treatment of memory disorders and pain conditions.
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PMID:Modulation of learning, pain thresholds, and thermoregulation in the rat by preparations of free purified alpha-linolenic and linoleic acids: determination of the optimal omega 3-to-omega 6 ratio. 790 53

Activation of the immune system in response to either infection or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) produces neurophysiological, neuroendocrine and behavioral changes. Some of the physiological consequences of LPS are mediated by endogenous opioid peptides. The following studies were designed to characterize the effects of LPS in several behavioral paradigms, and to determine the role of opioids in mediating these effects. The effects of LPS on locomotor and self-care activity were assessed in the open field test. Rats were injected with either saline or a dose of LPS (25, 50, 100, or 1000 micrograms/kg). 4 h later, the animals were placed in an open field and the numbers of line crossings, rearings and grooming episodes were counted. LPS significantly suppressed the three open field behaviors in a dose-related manner. The effect of LPS on sensitivity to pain was determined using the hot-plate and tail-flick tests. Administration of LPS (200 micrograms/kg) increased pain sensitivity in the hot plate test 30 min after drug administration, but produced a significant analgesic response 4 h after drug administration in both tests. Further characterization of LPS-induced analgesia demonstrated that it began about 2 h after and disappeared 30 h after the administration of LPS. Administration of naltrexone completely blocked the analgesic effects of LPS 4 h after its administration, but had no effect on LPS-induced suppression of activity in the open field. The effect of LPS on body temperature was biphasic, producing hypothermia at 2 h and hyperthermia at 8-30 h after its administration. Naltrexone had no effect on the body temperature changes induced by LPS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Behavioral effects of lipopolysaccharide in rats: involvement of endogenous opioids. 792 30

A 68-year-old patient presented with an extensive aortic aneurysm extending from the aortic valve to the aortic bifurcation associated with severe continuous pain, dysphagia, and hoarseness. Because of the risk of impending rupture and an "elephant trunk" procedure not being an option, the entire aorta from the aortic valve to the aortic bifurcation was replaced during one operation using deep hypothermia with circulatory arrest and retrograde perfusion of the brain through the jugular veins. Seven months after the operation the patient walks more than 3 km a day and lives a normal life. The operative repair is presented.
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PMID:Replacement of entire aorta from aortic valve to bifurcation during one operation. 794 72

Intraabdominal pain, shoulder pain and tachycardia are observed after pelviscopic interventions. Recent publications blame this on hypothermia caused by the CO2 gas used. The authors discuss in detail the physics of the problems connected with the heating of CO2 gas. The heating of carbon dioxide gas to 37 degrees C in the heating tube of the WISAP-Flow-Therme will not only reduce intra-operative hypothermia (down to 28 degrees C intra-abdominally and 34 degrees C in the rectum) but also the occurrence of tachycardia (reduced by 40% to 11%). Heating will also result in reduced CO2 consumption, which is also of ecological significance. As a result of the overall improvement of the female patients' perception of pain there is a significant reduction in postoperative palliative medication required by 31%. The physical laws and data permit fitting the WISAP Universal Flow Therme to all commercially available CO2 gas insufflators. The rinse water, as an additional factor causing hypothermia, should be preheated to 40 degrees C (WISAP water bath).
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PMID:[Pain reduction after pelvi/-laparoscopic interventions by insufflation of CO2 gas at body temperature (Flow-Therme)]. 760 73

Non-traumatic dissection of the thoracic aorta is a degenerative vascular disease with a high morbidity and mortality. The main symptom is stabbing thoracic pain, but the diagnosis is made difficult when the clinical picture is dominated by symptoms caused by the aorta's neighbouring structures. The definitive diagnosis is made by aortography. Treatment and prognosis depend on the anatomic placement of the dissection. In dissection of the ascending aorta (type A) the treatment is solely surgical, whereas a combined medical and surgical treatment is recommended for dissections of the descending aorta (type B). The most common postoperative complication in type B dissection is paraplegia, which occurs in up to 40% of cases. The cause of paraplegia is postoperative ischaemia of the spinal medulla. Many methods and treatments have been used to avoid medullary ischaemic damage. The most important ones are reducing the time length of aortic clamping, maintaining an adequate perfusion pressure, and the use of moderate hypothermia. Spinal drainage with or without pharmacological intervention possibly has a preventive effect, but convincing clinical documentation is lacking.
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PMID:[Non-traumatic dissection of the thoracic aorta. A review with special emphasis on postoperative paraplegia]. 806 95


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