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

Hemodynamic and metabolic effects of a lethal 5-hour infusion of Ps. aeruginosa at a dose 10(8) organisms per ml per min were studied in 39 dogs. Blood glucose, insulin, catecholamines, body temperature, WBC, and hemodynamic parameters were measured before and at 1-hour intervals during controlled bacterial infusions. Induced bacteremia in the upper 10(4) range per ml of blood was accompanied by a decline of mean arterial blood presure from 130+/-6 mm Hg to 84+/-12 mm Hg at 4 hours, hypothermia, leukopenia, and hypoglycemia. Death within 24 hours was associated with hypoinsulinemia and increased blood catecholamines. Survival was characterized by maintenance of arterial blood pressure, only moderate decline in blood glucose levels, and normal plasma insulin concentrations with little change in plasma catecholamines. Mortality could be reduced significantly by glucose administration. This was associated with correction of hypoglycemia, rise in plasma insulin activity and increased energy production.
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PMID:Metabolic effects of experimental bacteremia. 40 94

There are 2 competing methods for cooling the kidney in situ during surgical ischemia: from without by applying ice to the renal surface and from within by perfusing the renal artery. The latter procedure is said to be superior in protecting renal function. Herein the protective effect on renal function of both methods are compared. Pigs of 15--25 kg weight underwent nephrectomy on one side. The remaining kidney was subjected to cold ischemia during 90 minutes while perfusion- or surface cooling was performed. For perfusion cooling the aorta was punctured and the catheter introduced into the renal artery. The perfusing liquid consisted of a physiologic electrolyt solution (Ringer-Lactate) with heparin kept at a temperature of 3--5 degrees C. The initial perfusion lasted 10 minutes and resulted in a median renal core temperature of 23 degrees C. Then the kidney was put on a cooling pad and every 15 minutes again perfused for one minute. For surface cooling sterile melting ice made of glucose solution 5% was applied directly to the kidney. The renal core temperature could be kept at 15--20 degrees C. The two methods of hypothermia were judged by comparing the serum creatinine levels and the I131-hippuran clearances one month after surgery. There was no difference whatever as analysed by the t-test. Hypothermia by applying ice to the renal surface therefore proved to be equivalent to hypothermia by perfusion. Moreover it is much simpler.
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PMID:[Renal hypothermia in situ. Comparison between surface and perfusion cooling concerning renal function in pigs (author's transl)]. 41 41

Segments of superficial and juxtamedullary proximal convoluted tubules of the rabbit were perfused in vitro to examine the mechanisms responsible for net volume reabsorption. The very early postglomerular segments were not studied. Fluid reabsorptive rates and transepithelial potential differences were compared under various conditions: (a) with perfusate that simulated glomerular filtrate; (b) with perfusate that lacked glucose, amino acids, and acetate and that had HCO(3) and Cl concentrations of 5 and 140 mM, respectively; (c) with perfusate that lacked glucose, amino acids, and acetate but with 20 meq of NaHCO(3) replaced with 20 meq of Na cyclamate; (d) with the same perfusate as in b but in the presence of ouabain in the bath; (e) with ultrafiltrate of rabbit serum titrated with HCl to final HCO(3) and Cl concentrations of 2 and 134 mM, respectively. Tubules were perfused with this titrated ultrafiltrate at 37 degrees C, 21 degrees C, and in the presence of 0.1 mM ouabain in the bath. Bath fluid in all experiments was regular rabbit serum. Under conditions a and b superficial proximal convoluted tubule (SFPCT) and juxtamedullary proximal convoluted tubule (JMPCT) behaved similarly with the exception that SFPCT exhibited a lumen-positive and JMPCT a lumen-negative electrical potential under condition b. However, under condition c SFPCT failed to exhibit net volume reabsorption, whereas reabsorption in JMPCT continued unchanged. Ouabain did not affect volume reabsorption in SFPCT under condition d, whereas neither ouabain nor hypothermia affected SFPCT under condition e. In contrast, ouabain and hypothermia totally inhibited volume reabsorption in JMPCT under conditions d and e. These studies document heterogeneous mechanisms responsible for volume reabsorption in the major portions of SFPCT and JMPCT with passive forces predominating in SFPCT and active forces in JMPCT.
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PMID:Characteristics of volume reabsorption in rabbit superficial and juxtamedullary proximal convoluted tubules. 42 62

Fortyone of 187 infants undergoing corrective surgery for their congenital cardiac lesions using profound hypothermic circulatory arrest were randomly selected for metabolic studies. Deep hypothermia of 21 to 22 degrees C core temperature was reached by two different techniques: 1. Perfusion cooling by extracorporeal circulation (ECC-C) 2. Surface cooling with ice bags combined with perfusion cooling (SC + ECC-C) After circulatory arrest (34.2 min. ECC-C v.s. 46.7 min. SC + ECC-C) bypass rewarming was used in both groups. The metabolic reaction to these interventions are described. No significant differences in acid base status in oxygen consumption, lactate concentration, serum electrolytes (K+, Na+, Ca++,Cl-) and serum enzyme activity (CPK, alpha-HBDH, LDH, SGOT, SGPT) could be demonstrated between the two groups of patients during the entire course of cooling, circulatory arrest and rewarming. The glucose concentration was significantly lower in the ECC-C group during the entire period of operation. Total cooling time was significantly shorter in the group without surface cooling. (ECC-C: 12 min, v.s. SC + ECC-C: 64 min). Since no favourable effects of the SC + ECC-C method on systemic metabolism could be demonstrated and operative results were similar we now prefer the time-saving ECC-C technique.
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PMID:The effects of deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest on systemic metabolic state of infants undergoing corrective open heart surgery: a comparison of two methods. 46 66

The effects of a dopamine antagonist (pimozide) and an alpha-adrenergic receptor blocking agent (phenoxybenzamine) on caffeine-induced changes in oxygen consumption. body temperature, blood glucose and non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA) were studied in mice. Both drugs had no effect on the increase of the oxygen consumption produced by caffeine. The decline of the body temperature induced by caffeine was not significantly influenced by pimozide, while phenoxybenzamine accentuated the hypothermic effect of caffeine. The results indicate that alpha-adrenergic and dopamine receptors do not play an essential role in the caffeine-induced stimulation of overall metabolism and hypothermia.
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PMID:Failure of phenoxybenzamine and pimozide to diminish changes in oxygen consumption and body temperature produced by caffeine. 48 30

Blood glucose, lactate, plasma free fatty acid and plasma and tissue individual free amino acid levels were followed in newborn rabbits exposed for 10 h to an environmental temperature of 25 degrees C. Severe hypothermia developed with an increase of blood lactate and accumulation of total free amino acids in plasma and liver. Alanine, isoleucine, leucine, valine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, ornithine and taurine were elevated in the plasma; alanine and ornithine in the liver; leucine and isoleucine in the muscle.
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PMID:The metabolic effects of cold exposure in the newborn rabbit. 48 11

Blood glucose, blood lactate, plasma free fatty acids, plasma alpha-amino nitrogen, plasma free amino acids and blood urea nitrogen were measured in 15 hypothermic preterm infants (mean rectal temperature: 34.5 +/- 0.28 degrees C) during a 2-hour 'warming-up' period following admission to our neonatal intensive care unit. Hypothermia was associated with lactacidemia and hyperalaninemia. The increase in body temperature of the infants resulted in the decrease of lactacidemia and hyperalaninemia. Normal levels of other metabolites remained unchanged.
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PMID:Effect of hypothermia on plasma metabolites in preterm newborn infants with particular references to plasma free amino acids. 48 12

Canine kidneys were subjected to continuous nonpulsatile perfusion using 200 ml of a perfusate containing 50 g/l albumin. When optimal oxygenation was achieved, perfusate K+ contents were unchanged for 24 h, indicating adequate membrane function but tended to increase thereafter. Lowered oxygen pressures resulted in significant cellular K+ loss during the first hours of perfusion. During oxygenated perfusion, glucose and free fatty acids (FFA) were oxidized in considerable amounts with a preferential consumption of octanoate. A capacity for long-chain FFA oxidation became obvious when the octanoate had been used up, but the amount of these FFA in the perfusate depended preferentially on FFA being liberated from tissue lipids during the 1st day of perfusion. Glucose consumption rates were highest during the first 2 days of perfusion but the subsequent reduction of the metabolic rate was not accompanied by an accumulation of lactate. Thus medium-chain FFA and glucose should be supplied to the continuously perfused kidney in hypothermia and optimal oxygenation of the perfusate should be guaranteed. However, it seems to be unnecessary to supply exogenous long-chain FFA.
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PMID:Free fatty acid and glucose metabolism during hypothermic perfusion of canine kidneys. 48 47

A total of 113 children with brain edema of infectious and toxic nature were studied. The main clinical syndrome in these conditions was an epileptical status. Among anticonvulsive drugs used seduxen appeared to be the most effective. The use of GABA, gas narcosis and myorelaxants is recommended as well. The rehydration by plasma, low molecular plasma substitutes and glucose-polyion solutions are discussed. The paper contains some information on contraindications for early dehydration and rehydration. Hypoxia is eliminated by providing adequate lung ventilation, oxygenotherapy or hyperbaric oxygenation, by using oxidative enzymes and drugs increasing the resistance of the brain to hypoxia and hypothermia. It is recommended that hormonal therapy should be used. The techniques of urgent measures and their sequence are given.
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PMID:[Principles for intensive therapy of status epilepticus in children]. 49 5

Plasma lipids, blood glucose, plasma insulin (IRI) and serum dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH) were measured in 30 subjects undergoing surface-induced deep hypothermia with circulatory arrest for open-heart surgery. Non-esterified fatty acid (NEFA) in the plasma rapidly increased at the lowest temperature (23 degrees C) reached and other lipids in the plasma decreased during the cooling period. An increase of NEFA and a decrease of triglyceride have been attributed to the action of lipoprotein lipase activity stimulated by heparin. It is also likely that the decrease of other lipids and beta-lipoprotein in the plasma results from the transient hypofunction of the liver due to hypothermia. Blood glucose increased during the cooling period, while plasma insulin showed no significant change. Serum DBH reflecting catecholamine also showed no significant change during the cooling or rewarming periods. Therefore, hyperglycemia in hypothermic open-heart surgery may result from the decrease of peripheral utilization of glucose and from the inhibition of insulin secretion due to the transient pancreatic hypofunction.
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PMID:Studies on lipid and carbohydrate metabolism during surface-induced deep hypothermia with circulatory arrest for open-heart surgery. 60 91


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