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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Metabolic acidosis immediately after surgical operation is followed by metabolic alkalosis. Hormonal change by surgical stress and anaerobic glucolysis due to tissue ischemia cause initial lactic acidosis. Later alkalosis may be caused by secondary aldosteronism and bicarbonate production from lactate and citrate supplied by massive infusion and transfusion. Postoperative complications, such as respiratory insufficiency, renal failure and hypovolemic or septic shock, cause acidosis. In the gastrointestinal surgery, acidosis can be caused by
starvation
and loss of bicarbonate contained in bile, pancreatic juice or intestinal fluid, and alkalosis can be caused by loss of HCl in gastric juice. Severe acidosis can be caused by extracorporeal circulation,
hypothermia
, low output syndrome or declamping shock in cardioaortic surgery.
...
PMID:[Acid-base disturbances in surgical operation]. 143 18
The purpose of this review is to describe the diagnosis, emergency treatment and further observation and complications. Alcohol poisoning and complications are underdiagnosed problems. Intoxication in young children is accidental and due to lack of experience in older children. Strong spirits are usually involved. The speed of elimination is greater than in adults and presumably 3-8 mmol/l/h. Fatal cases with alcohol concentrations less than 3.0% have been reported. The lethal dose is presumably 3 g/kg. Symptoms are as in adults but appear at lower concentrations. Infants do not reach a stage of exitation. Children are more prone to develop complications such as
hypothermia
, acidosis, electrolyte disturbance and trauma. Hypoglycaemia develops in 24-50% of cases, more frequently in infants and after
starvation
. The treatment is aspiration, admission to hospital, close observation, determination of core temperature, alcohol concentration, blood glucose-concentration and determination of serum-electrolytes. Blood glucose should be monitored. Treatment is conservative but severely intoxicated children may require dialysis.
...
PMID:[Acute alcohol intoxication in children. Diagnosis, treatment and complications]. 221 77
Perinatal mortality is affected by a variety of management factors and disease processes that create significant losses for the sheep industry. Annual production losses prior to weaning include roughly 15% to 20% of the lamb crop. The majority of these perinatal losses occur during the prenatal, natal, and early postnatal periods, with the predominant wave of mortality occurring during the first several days following birth. Causes of perinatal mortality may vary between flocks and between geographic areas; however, four dominant categories of lamb loss consistently surface: (1) abortions; (2)
hypothermia
,
starvation
, and exposure; (3) pneumonia; and (4) stillbirth and dystocia. They account for roughly 50% to 75% of all documented perinatal losses. Veterinarians and producers need to work together to document the type of losses that occur in a given flock and then design economic prevention programs that address these problems. In most cases, traditional prevention programs will need to be replaced by a comprehensive management scheme addressing nutrition, genetics, housing, marketing, lambing husbandry, and labor.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and control of neonatal losses in sheep. 224 60
Investigation showed that the common causes of death in North Ronaldsay lambs were trauma due to behavioural patterns and
starvation
/
hypothermia
due in part to poor condition of the ewes.
...
PMID:Causes of death in the native sheep of North Ronaldsay, Orkney. II. Lambs. 233 91
The incidence of perinatal mortality in mink was investigated in commercial farms in Argentina. Of a total of 2122 kits, 548 of those that were born alive died within the first four weeks of life (25.8% mortality) and there were also 62 stillborn kits. Death resulted from a variety of causes of which septicaemia,
starvation
and
hypothermia
were the most common conditions. The highest mortality occurred within the first week of life (61.9%). The lesions found in young kits at post-mortem examination are described and related to contributory factors such as weight, litter size and age at death.
...
PMID:A survey on perinatal mortality in young mink. 238 4
Previous studies have shown that central injection of bombesin produces
hypothermia
in food-deprived, but not food satiated rats at normal ambient temperatures. The present study evaluated the effects of bombesin on core body temperature (Tb) and feeding behavior in rats pretreated with insulin. Administration of bombesin (0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 microgram) into the lateral cerebral ventricle produced
hypothermia
in rats injected with insulin (10 U/kg; i.m.). No significant change in core temperature was observed in control rats following bombesin. Insulin treatments significantly stimulated feeding behavior and the highest dose of bombesin significantly reduced feeding behavior. The results demonstrate bombesin-induced
hypothermia
under metabolic conditions similar to acute
starvation
. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that bombesin-induced
hypothermia
in food-deprived rats is directly related to the fasting state.
...
PMID:Bombesin produces hypothermia in insulin treated rats. 266 43
It has been observed that basal and/or TRH-stimulated serum TSH levels occasionally conflict with the actual values of circulating thyroid hormones in patients with anorexia nervosa. In the present study sixteen female patients with anorexia nervosa during self-induced
starvation
displayed clinical findings suggesting hypothyroidism, e.g., cold intolerance, constipation, bradycardia,
hypothermia
and hypercholesterolemia in association with decreased serum total T3 (62.8 +/- 5.2 ng/dl) and T4 (6.6 +/- 0.3 micrograms/dl). Markedly decreased T3 correlated positively with average heart rate (r = 0.5655, P less than 0.025) and negatively with total cholesterol (r = -0.7413, P less than 0.005). This result may suggest that peripheral metabolic state of the underweight anorexics depends considerably upon the serum T3 concentration. Despite decreased total thyroid hormones, free T4 assayed by radioimmunoassay was normal in all five cases examined (1.4 +/- 0.2 ng/dl) and the free T4 index in fifteen cases was normal except in one case. Basal TSH was not increased and TSH response to exogenous TRH was not exaggerated in any. These results may be compatible with a theory that free T4 has a dominant influence on pituitary TSH secretion. Furthermore, glucocorticoids may also have some influence on depressed TSH response, because an inverse correlation between increased plasma cortisol and the sum of net TSH increase after TRH was observed in twelve cases examined. In conclusion, it is suggested that normal sensitivity of peripheral tissues and pituitary thyrotroph to different circulating thyroid hormones is maintained in anorexia nervosa patients even during severe self-induced
starvation
, and that the metabolic state in these patients is considerably under the influence of circulating T3.
...
PMID:Assessment of the relationship between serum thyroid hormone levels and peripheral metabolism in patients with anorexia nervosa. 319 56
As whole organisms, most mammals have a poor tolerance for
hypothermia
. But their cells may have a capacity for a far wider cold tolerance, which may be expressed in peripheral tissues, sporadically in core tissue and in cultured cells. Against this background the cold resistance of cells of deep hibernators may be seen as the extreme of a continuum and is complicated by the consideration that the voluntary
hypothermia
of hibernation is probably in most cases a metabolic adaptation to forestall
starvation
. Similarly, cold resistance of peripheral tissues may in diving animals be confounded by the need to be adapted to hypoxia as well. Hence, attempts to analyse cold resistance by comparisons of absolute rates of arbitrarily chosen reactions may be misleading. A more useful approach is analysis of maintenance of balance: balance between ATP synthesis and utilization, balance between macromolecule synthesis and degradation and balance between pumps and leaks. Cation pumps and leaks constitute a major component of energy utilization and are central to other cell functions, even during minimal metabolism. Hence, the maintenance of ion gradients is a central issue in understanding adaptation not only to
hypothermia
but also to
starvation
and
hypothermia
. Of the three hypometabolic states,
hypothermia
has been best studied in this regard. In most cases, passive permeability is more reduced at low temperature in cold-tolerant cells than in cold-sensitive ones. In some cases there is also a difference in Na-K pump activity and perhaps in ATP dependent Ca-pump activity. Pump activities and probably the maintenance of minimal leak require ongoing metabolism. The question of whether, in cold-sensitive cells, energy supplies are adequate at low temperature was once the focus of this field, but has been ignored for a decade without having been fully resolved. There are many instances of less temperature sensitivity of specific metabolic activities (mitochondrial respiration, etc.) in hibernators than in non-hibernators, without any verification of whether this is essential for survival at low body temperature. Certainly, robust pumping has been found in some failing cold-sensitive cells at low temperature, suggesting no shortage of ATP in these cases, but in other cases the issue may be a more complex one than just that of ATP availability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cold tolerance in mammalian cells. 333 88
The birth and fate of 818 lambs born to 571 ewes on a low-ground farm in the Scottish Borders with a history of substantial perinatal mortality were monitored with a range of physiological, biochemical and pathological measurements. In lambs which survived, the rectal temperature, birthweight and plasma concentrations of fructose, insulin, thyroxine and the third component of complement at birth, and the weight at four months of age, decreased with litter size. One hundred and thirty-seven lambs were stillborn or died within four days and seven others died later. The mothers of 77 per cent of these lambs had low condition scores, but the lamb deaths did not correlate significantly with the condition scores. From data relating to birthweight, temperature, packed cell volume and plasma composition it was deduced that placental insufficiency was involved in 24 per cent of these deaths; acute hypoxaemia at birth accounted for 35 per cent, inadequate thermogenesis for 12 per cent and
starvation
for 13 per cent. The remaining 16 per cent of dead lambs could not be assigned to any of these categories. Using only clinicopathological criteria, 37 per cent of the lamb deaths were attributed to antenatal influences which included immaturity, developmental anomalies, and degenerative or inflammatory changes. Thirty-three per cent of the deaths were due to post natal factors which included, in declining order of frequency,
starvation
, enteritis, misadventure, pneumonia, navel infections and septicaemia. No conclusions could be drawn from the pathological examinations alone in the remaining 30 per cent, although almost half of these had low rectal temperatures after birth, death being attributed to
hypothermia
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical, biochemical and pathological study of perinatal lambs in a commercial flock. 359 May 87
Aldosterone diminishes the ability to endure
starvation
. Its exogenous administration to adrenalectomized rats advances the onset of
hypothermia
and death. The impairment seems to lie in an inability to mobilize energy stores fully: animals given the steroid are unable to lose weight at a normal rate. The findings help to establish the significance of mineralocorticoids in the regulation of energy exchange and solve some theoretical questions as to their general mode of action.
...
PMID:Aldosterone and the mobilization of energy. 359 52
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