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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Due to the considerable progress made by instrumental total body diagnostics (ECO,
CAT
, RMN, angiography, etc.) in recent years heart surgery has increasingly often been used to treat pathologies which are not primarily cardiac but which see the involvement of the heart and large vessels in the advanced stages of cancer and non-cancer diseases of other organs or apparatus. This is the case of malignant renal or adrenal tumours which infiltrate along the caval lumen until they reach the right atrium. In these cases caval and atrial involvement must be seen as a prolapse of the tumour and not a long-distance metastasis: prognosis only appears to be linked to the hemodynamic impairment caused by the obstacle to systemic lower venous drainage. On the bases of this observation radical surgery may be justified at a renal, caval and cardiac level. The authors report their preliminary experience in 6 patients with renal cancer (4 renal carcinoma, 1 Wilm's tumour, 1 adrenal carcinoma) who underwent combined surgery, in a single stage, involving enlarged nephrectomny and caval and atrial thrombectomy, the latter performed in profound
hypothermia
and cardiocirculatory arrest. Two patients died later and 4 are living, in good condition and with perviousness of the lower caval venous drainage. Similar to other analogous experience reported in the literature, the authors suggest taking a combined approach performed in a single stage into consideration for these patients.
...
PMID:[Neoplastic caval and intracardiac thrombosis secondary to reno-adrenal tumors. One-stage surgical treatment in deep hypothermia and cardiocirculatory arrest]. 797 82
After prolonged ischemia, reperfusion of the myocardium with oxygenated blood results in high levels of superoxide anions. Several mechanisms for superoxide anion generation have been proposed, including increased xanthine oxidase activity, neutrophil activation, and arachidonate cascade activation. Superoxide anion accumulation may cause enzyme inactivation and lipid peroxidation in the sarcolemma with resultant intracellular calcium accumulation and excitation-contraction uncoupling. A review of a number of animal studies has shown that free radical scavengers such as superoxide dismutase and
catalase
can preserve myocardial function and metabolism during transplantation. In addition, other data indicate a role for inhibitors of free radical generation (i.e., allopurinol or oxypurinol), iron chelators (i.e., deferoxamine), or metabolic substrates such as L-glutamate in the inhibition of free radical myocardial injury. In addition, glutathione has been demonstrated to produce faster recovery of ventricular function in
hypothermia
preserved and reperfused rat hearts, presumably by inhibiting free radical production. Confirmatory data for human cardiac transplantation is not yet available.
...
PMID:Oxygen free radicals in cardiac transplantation. 838
Two cases of severe hepatic injury in which selective hepatic artery embolization was used to control hemorrhage are presented. The first case is that of a 35 year old patient who sustained a severe liver injury after a car accident. A
CAT
scan of the abdomen revealed an AAST grade 5 liver injury, pooling of contrast material within the liver parenchyma, and blood within the peritoneal cavity. The patient was given fluid resuscitation and taken to angiography where bleeding from branches of the right hepatic artery was demonstrated. While angiography was being undertaken the hemodynamic status of the patient deteriorated, blood transfusion was started, and a selective embolization of the right hepatic artery was performed. The bleeding stopped promptly and hemodynamic stability was regained. The second case is that of a 40 year old pedestrian run over by a car. Abdominal ultrasound revealed free fluid in the peritoneal cavity and the patient was rushed to the O.R. Crushed right lobe of the liver, and inferior vena cava and bowel tears were found. After perihepatic packing and resection of the right and sigmoid colons retrohepatic vena cava tear was repaired and perihepatic packing restored. The abdominal cavity was closed and the patient was taken to the ICU for the correction of
hypothermia
, metabolic acidosis, and coagulopathy that had developed during the surgery. After 8 hours in the ICU the patient was transferred for angiography and a selective embolization of branches of the right hepatic artery was performed. The clinical course of the patients after angiographic embolization of the hepatic arteries is described and the literature that discusses the use of angiography and embolization of hepatic arteries after traumatic hepatic bleeding is reviewed.
...
PMID:[Selective embolization of hepatic arteries--an additional precaution to control hemorrhage in the management of severe liver trauma]. 1130 40
Total antioxidative activity, activity of water soluble fraction of antioxidative system, superoxide dismutase and
catalase
activities in brain, liver, myocard, skeletal muscle, kidney and serum at
hypothermia
30 degrees C, 20 degrees C and self-warming from 20 degrees C to 37 degrees C were studied. Activity of antioxidative system is sustained at high level, except superoxide dismutase. The latter is activated significantly at 30 degrees C
hypothermia
prolonged up to 3 h. Dalargin injection 30 min before onset of cooling stabilizes the erythrocyte membrane without enhancement of antioxidative activity in majority of investigated tissues.
...
PMID:[Antioxidant system in rat tissues in hypothermia and dalargin introduction]. 1218 26
Phagocytic cells contain NADPH oxidase that they use for host defense by catalyzing the production of superoxide. Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) has been found to stimulate NADPH oxidase in mobile and sessile macrophages and microglia. It also evokes fever in homeothermic animals and men, a reaction mediated by central nervous system (CNS) activities. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether reactive oxygen species are involved in LPS-induced fever. In rabbits we found that plasma hydroperoxide levels increased and
catalase
activity decreased 15 min after LPS injection and that fever started with a similar latency, while plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) increased 30 min after the injection. Treating rabbits with methylene blue or aspirin did not affect TNFalpha secretion but prevented the LPS-induced rise of hydroperoxides and the inactivation of
catalase
, abolishing fever. Incubation of human blood with nitroblue tetrazolium and LPS increased the number of formazan-positive neutrophils from 10 +/- 5 to 52 +/- 9%. Adding LPS to blood preincubated with either methylene blue, alpha-lipoic acid, or aspirin respectively decreased the number of formazan-positive neutrophils to 0.9 +/- 0.8, 0.8 +/- 0.9, or 2.0 +/- 0.9%, disclosing the antioxidant capacity of these drugs. Systemic application of 80 mg/kg alpha-lipoic acid elicited heat-loss reactions within 15 min and decreased core temperature by 2.2 +/- 0.3 degrees C within 2 h. Alpha-lipoic acid applied 45 min after LPS induced antipyresis within 15 min, and this antipyresis was associated with a decrease of elevated hydroperoxide levels and restoration of
catalase
activity. Our results show that fever is prevented when the production of reactive oxygen species is blocked and that an elevated body temperature returns to normal when oxygen radical production decreases. Estimation of plasma dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA) levels following injection of 80 mg/kg alpha-lipoic acid in afebrile and febrile rabbits revealed that this acid is converted into DHLA, which in afebrile rabbits increased the plasma DHLA concentration from 2.22 +/- 0.26 microg/ml to peak values of 8.60 +/- 2.28 microg/ml DHLA within 30 min and which in febrile rabbits increased it from 0.84 +/- 0.22 microg/ml to peak values of 3.90 +/- 0.94 microg/ml within 15 min. Methylene blue, aspirin, and alpha-lipoic acid, which all cross the blood-brain barrier, seem to act not only on peripheral tissues but also on the CNS. Brain structures that have been shown to sense oxidative stress are vicinal thiol groups attached to the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor. Their reduction by thiol-reducing drugs like dithiothreitol or DHLA has been found to increase glutamate-mediated neuronal excitability, while the opposite effect has been observed after their oxidation. Because we found that systemic application of alpha-lipoic acid in the afebrile state elicits
hypothermia
and in the febrile state is antipyretic, we think this type of NMDA receptor is involved in thermoregulation and that oxidation of its thiol groups induces fever. It appears that temperature homeostasis can be maintained only if the redox homeostasis of the brain is guaranteed.
...
PMID:Inhibition of oxygen radical formation by methylene blue, aspirin, or alpha-lipoic acid, prevents bacterial-lipopolysaccharide-induced fever. 1284 35
The pathological sequelae of traumatic brain injury (TBI) include increased oxidative stress due to the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Regulation of ROS levels following TBI is determined primarily by antioxidant enzyme activity that in turn can be influenced by nerve growth factor (NGF).
Hypothermia
is one of the current therapies designed to combat the deleterious effects of TBI. However, it has been shown to suppress post-trauma increases in NGF levels in rat brain. The present study sought to determine whether post-injury
hypothermia
also impairs the antioxidant response to injury, and if such an effect could be reversed by infusion of exogenous NGF. We employed a lateral controlled cortical impact injury model in rat, followed by moderate
hypothermia
treatment with supplemental intracerebroventricular infusion of NGF or vehicle. The time course of changes in post-injury/intervention levels of NGF and activity of three major enzymes responsible for ROS scavenging,
catalase
(
CAT
), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), was determined in the hippocampus. Relative to levels in injured, normothermic animals,
hypothermia
treatment not only suppressed NGF levels, but also attenuated
CAT
and GPx activity, and increased SOD activity. Infusion of NGF in injured,
hypothermia
-treated animals was ineffective in restoring hippocampal antioxidant enzymes activity to levels produced after injury under normothermic conditions, although it was able to increase septal cholinergic (choline acetyltransferase) enzyme activity. These results have implications for clinical treatment of TBI, demonstrating that moderate
hypothermia
suppresses NGF and the antioxidant response after TBI; the latter cannot be countered by exogenous NGF administration.
...
PMID:Effects of post-injury hypothermia and nerve growth factor infusion on antioxidant enzyme activity in the rat: implications for clinical therapies. 1528 6
In the present study, oral supplementation of l-arginine in rats was evaluated for its anti-stress and adaptogenic activity using the cold (5 degrees C)-hypoxia (428 mmHg)-restraint (C-H-R) animal model. A dose-dependent study of l-arginine was carried out at doses of 12.5, 25.0, 50.0, 100.0, 200.0 and 500.0 mg/kg body weight, administered orally 30 min prior to C-H-R exposure. The time taken by the rat to attain a rectal temperature of 23 degrees C (T(rec) 23 degrees C) during C-H-R exposure and its recovery to T(rec) 37 degrees C at normal atmospheric pressure and 32 +/- 1 degrees C were used as biomarkers of anti-stress and adaptogenic activity. Biochemical parameters related to lipid peroxidation, anti-oxidants, cell membrane permeability, nitric oxide and stress, with and without administration of the least effective l-arginine dose, were measured in rats on attaining T(rec) 23 degrees C and T(rec) 37 degrees C. The least effective adaptogenic dose of l-arginine was 100.0 mg/kg body weight. The C-H-R exposure of control rats, on attaining T(rec) 23 degrees C, resulted in a significant increase in plasma malondialdehyde (MDA), blood lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and a decrease in blood
catalase
(
CAT
) and plasma testosterone levels. On recovery (T(rec) 37 degrees C) of control rats, there was a further decrease in
CAT
and plasma testosterone, and an increase in LDH. l-Arginine supplementation resulted in a significant decrease in plasma MDA, an increase in blood superoxide dismutase (SOD),
CAT
levels maintained at control values and a lower increase in LDH compared with controls (45.3 versus 58.5% and 21.5 versus 105.2%) on attaining T(rec) 23 degrees C during C-H-R exposure and on recovery to T(rec) 37 degrees C. The results suggested that l-arginine possesses potent anti-stress activity during C-H-R exposure and recovery from C-H-R-induced
hypothermia
.
...
PMID:Anti-stress and Adaptogenic Activity of l-Arginine Supplementation. 1584 Dec 83
After an ischemic insult, a multi-faceted complex cascade of biochemical reactions occurs that ultimately causes neurons death. Above reactions exert an influence on: immunological changes (activation of the complement system and the generation of antibodies), increased inflammation (actions of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines), the production of reactive oxygen species leading to oxidative stress, diminished mitochondrial function and activation of apoptotic pathways. There is also intensive release and wrong reversible escapement many of neurotransmitters. The last one throught oxidative desamination are one of the main sources most of free radicals. Central nervous system is particularly susceptible to ROS-induced damage due to the high oxygen demands of the brain and low concentration of endogenous antioxidants. lts refer both enzymatic antioxidants:
catalase
, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, superoxide dismutase and nonenzymatic antioxidants glutathione, vitamin a, c, e, coenzym Q, uric acid etc. Presently there are no neuroprotective treatments and prevention. One way of treatment testing in clinical trials is
hypothermia
inhibits above-mentioned processes.
...
PMID:[Contribution and role of important biochemic factors in cerebral ischemia]. 1678 Feb 50
This study was carried out to examine the antioxidative potential, if any, of seabuckthorn leaf aqueous extract, administered orally in rats at a dose of 100 mg kg(-1) both in single and five doses, 30 min before cold (5 degrees C)-hypoxia (428 mm Hg)-restraint (C-H-R) exposure. The effect of the extract was studied on lipid peroxidation and antioxidant parameters in liver and gastrocnemius muscle of rats on attaining the rectal temperature (T(rec)) of 23 degrees C during C-H-R exposure and after recovery (T(rec)37 degrees C) from C-H-R-induced
hypothermia
. In untreated rats exposed to C-H-R, there was a significant increase in malondialdehyde (MDA) levels in liver and muscle along with decreased activity of
catalase
(
CAT
) and glutathione-S-transferase (GST) in liver and muscle. Single- and five-dose extract treatment restricted the increase in liver and muscle MDA levels and five doses of extract treatment further improved the levels of liver antioxidants, viz. reduced glutathione (GSH), on recovery of T(rec)37 degrees C, increased superoxide dismutase (SOD) during exposure and recovery, normalized
CAT
activity in liver during C-H-R exposure and an increase on recovery of T(rec)37 degrees C. The decreasing pattern of liver and muscle GST levels both in single-dose and five-dose extract treated rats was similar to that in untreated rats. Results suggested that supplementation with seabuckthorn extract helps to reduce oxidative stress in liver and muscle of rats during C-H-R exposure and post-stress recovery.
...
PMID:Modulatory effect of seabuckthorn leaf extract on oxidative stress parameters in rats during exposure to cold, hypoxia and restraint (C-H-R) stress and post stress recovery. 1805 38
The present study was carried out to study mechanism of adaptogenic activity of seabuckthorn leaf extract, administered orally in rats both in single and five doses at a dose of 100mg/kg body weight 30min prior to C-H-R exposure. The efficacy of the extract was studied on circulating energy fuels, lipid peroxidation and anti-oxidant parameters in rats on attaining the T(rec) 23 degrees C during C-H-R exposure and after recovery (T(rec) 37 degrees C) from C-H-R induced
hypothermia
. Single dose treatment in rats restricted rise in blood malondialdehyde (MDA) levels and decrease in glutathione (GSH) and
catalase
(
CAT
) levels. Both single and five doses also restricted the rise in serum free fatty acids (FFA) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels on attaining T(rec) 23 degrees C during C-H-R exposure, suggesting more efficient utilization of FFA for energy production and better maintained cell membrane permeability. This suggested that the adaptogenic activity of the extract might be due to its anti-oxidative activity, maintained blood glucose levels, better utilization of FFA and improved cell membrane permeability.
...
PMID:Effect of seabuckthorn leaf extracts on circulating energy fuels, lipid peroxidation and antioxidant parameters in rats during exposure to cold, hypoxia and restraint (C-H-R) stress and post stress recovery. 1816 86
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