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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chloroform
, monochlorodifluoromethane and nitrous oxide produced dose-related decreases in the rectal temperatures of mice allowed to choose between a warm and a cool environment. The doses used were subanaesthetic, respectively 0.0013-0.004, 0.028-0.085 and 0.25-0.5 atm. The
hypothermia
(up to 3.6 degrees C) was usually associated with significant reductions in time spent in the warm. The log dose-hypothermic response plots were approximately parallel and there was a marked correlation between anaesthetic potency, as measured by the abolition of the righting response, and hypothermic potency.
...
PMID:Behavioural thermoregulation in mice: effects of low doses of general anaesthetics of different potency. 224 16
Oral administration of diethyldithiocarbamate (DTC) and carbon disulfide (CS2) protected mice against
CHCl3
-induced kidney injury, as evidenced by normalization of delayed plasma phenolsulfonphthalein clearance, suppression of increased kidney calcium content and prevention of renal tubular necrosis. In CCl4-treated mice, in which liver microsomal monooxygenase activities were decreased markedly, and kidney microsomal aniline hydroxylase and p-nitroanisole demethylase activities were increased to about twice those of the untreated mice, renal toxicity of
CHCl3
was greatly potentiated, and the latter effect was also blocked by both agents. DTC and CS2 per se markedly decreased kidney microsomal aniline hydroxylase and p-nitroanisole demethylase activities at 1 hr after oral administration, accompanying a moderate loss of cytochrome P-450 content, in both normal and CCl4-treated mice. The protection was not due to
hypothermia
, because pretreatment with DTC or CS2 (p.o.) also prevented the
hypothermia
induced by
CHCl3
. The mechanism of the protection may have involved inhibition of metabolic activation of
CHCl3
in the kidney rather than in the liver.
...
PMID:Protective action of diethyldithiocarbamate and carbon disulfide against renal injury induced by chloroform in mice. 631 19
Aqueous and organic extractions of ground seeds of Cassia occidentalis were obtained. Chickens were dosed with extracted material to assess the toxicity of the extracts. Organic extracts with methanol, ethanol,
chloroform
, ethyl acetate, and benzene were ineffective in removing the toxin from the seeds. Aqueous extractions, using 25 mM sodium bicarbonate or 250 mM sodium citrate, removed the toxin from the seeds, but left the toxin bound to particulate matter in the extract. Addition of Triton X-100 to the aqueous buffers effectively solubilized the toxin from the particulate matter. Signs of intoxication in the chickens were loss of weight, weakness, diarrhea,
hypothermia
, occasionally ataxia, and recumbency; then death. Gross lesions included paleness of skeletal and cardiac muscles and congestion of the liver. Microscopic lesions in muscle tissue were vacuolation, proliferation of sarcolemmal nuclei, and separation of myofibrils. Electron microscopic examination revealed disruption of mitochondrial cristae and swelling and rupture of mitochondria.
...
PMID:Preliminary isolation of a myodegenerative toxic principle from Cassia occidentalis. 688 74
Between 1978 and 1997 the Institute of Legal Medicine of the Hannover Medical School examined 17 fatal autoerotic deaths. The incidence for the Hannover region was 0.49 cases per million inhabitants per year. The victims included 17 men with an average age of 36.8 years; a peak in the age distribution was seen between 20 and 29 years. Twelve of the men were found by friends or family in a domestic environment, while other situations in which the victims were found included the victim's own car, a hotel room, a canal embankment, a public parking lot as well as the holding cell of the youth detention center. The men were of varying socioeconomic status and held a number of different types of jobs or still attended school. Five of the men were found completely nude, while five were only undressed below the waist. Four men wore women's clothes and two were fully clothed with exposed genitals. Besides women's clothes, other objects found at the scene included various types of sexual aids, including ropes, chains, metal bars, locks, sex magazines, condoms, plastic bags, rubber items, etc. In four cases blood alcohol levels between 0.1 and 2.5 per thousand (urine alcohol levels between 0.2 and 2.5 per thousand ) were found. Toxicologic examination revealed
chloroform
, ketamine, a propane-butane gas mixture in one case each, and in two cases cocaine and morphine. Causes of death included central paralysis after strangulation (seven cases), asphyxiation (4), subarachnoid hemorrhage (2), intoxication (1),
hypothermia
(1), left heart failure (1), and drowning (1). The history, findings at scene, and autopsy findings and, in individual cases, other investigations are of utmost importance to accurately reconstruct a fatal autoerotic accident.
...
PMID:Accidental autoerotic deaths between 1978 and 1997. Institute of Legal Medicine, Medical School Hannover. 1455 Jun 12
It has been shown in a previous work that the methanol extract obtained from the aerial part in blossom of Hypericum canariense L. and Hypericum glandulosum Ait. was active in the tetrabenazine and forced swimming test. In the present study, the central nervous effect of the aqueous, butanol and
chloroform
fractions obtained from the methanol extracts of these Hypericum species was investigated in mice, particularly in animal models of depression. It was found that the immobility time in the forced swimming test was significantly reduced by the butanol and
chloroform
fraction of both species assayed, producing no effects or only a slight depression on spontaneous motor activity when assessed in a photocell activity meter. In this regard, the efficacy of the
chloroform
extract from Hypericum glandulosum Ait. (500 mg/kg p.o.) in the forced swimming test was comparable to that of the tricyclic antidepressant imipramine (50 mg/kg p.o.). In addition, the Hypericum glandulosum
chloroform
fraction was also effective in antagonizing the ptosis induced by tetrabenazine. Moreover, Hypericum canariense butanol fraction and Hypericum glandulosum
chloroform
fraction produced a slight but significant
hypothermia
. Taken together, these data demonstrate that the butanol and
chloroform
fractions from Hypericum canariense and Hypericum glandulosum possess antidepressant-like effects in mice, providing further support for the traditional use of these plants in the Canary Islands folk medicine against central nervous disorders.
...
PMID:Antidepressant properties of some Hypericum canariense L. and Hypericum glandulosum Ait. extracts in the forced swimming test in mice. 1574 Aug 93
We previously reported that oral administration of the methanol extract obtained from the aerial part in blossom of Hypericum reflexum L. fil. was active in the tetrabenazine and forced swimming test. In the present study, the effect of the aqueous, butanol and
chloroform
fractions obtained from the methanol extract of this species on the central nervous system was investigated in mice, particularly in animal models of depression. Antidepressant activity was detected in the butanol and
chloroform
fractions of this species using the forced swimming test since both fractions induced a significant reduction of the immobility time, producing no effects or only a slight depression on spontaneous motor activity when assessed in a photocell activity meter. Moreover, these fractions did not alter significantly the pentobarbital-induced sleeping time. On the other hand, the
chloroform
fraction produced a slight but significant
hypothermia
and was also effective in antagonizing the ptosis induced by tetrabenazine. Furthermore, the butanol fraction produced a slight potentiation of the head twitches and syndrome induced by 5-HTP. Taken together, these data indicate that the butanol and
chloroform
fractions from Hypericum reflexum possess antidepressant-like effects in mice, providing further support for the traditional use of these plants in the Canary Islands folk medicine against central nervous disorders.
...
PMID:Antidepressant activity of some Hypericum reflexum L. fil. extracts in the forced swimming test in mice. 1738 28
Chloroform
is still encountered occasionally in clinical and forensic toxicology, hence knowledge of the special problems presented in the detection and measurement of this compound in biological specimens may be required. The aim of this paper is to review the available documentation on this topic in the context of a
chloroform
-related death. Early one morning in February 1999 a 34-year-old female was found dead fully clothed on a path near to a neighbour's garden. Amfetamine intoxication combined with
hypothermia
was accepted as the cause of the death in the absence of any other identifiable cause. Further investigation 17 months later revealed a blood
chloroform
concentration of 31 mg/L and the cause of death was revised to
chloroform
poisoning. A murder trial ensued, the indictment specifying forced inhalation as the route of exposure. The liver
chloroform
concentration measured 38 months after collection was reported as 1064 mg/kg and opinions were offered at trial that the autopsy findings, which included a gastritis, but no evidence of injury to the inside of the mouth and oesophagus, excluded the possibility of ingestion of a toxic dose of
chloroform
. It was asserted that the explanation for the high liver concentration was that the liver had concentrated
chloroform
from blood after death against a concentration gradient. At appeal against conviction 7 years later the conviction was quashed. It was found that the liver concentration should have been reported at trial as 1 mg/kg. Moreover,
chloroform
found in the stomach contents (162 mg/kg) 86 months after collection was irrefutable evidence that some, if not all, of the
chloroform
had been ingested. Screening for volatile poisons should always be considered if a cause of death is not immediately obvious, especially in young people and in known substance abusers. If the presence of an unstable or volatile analyte is suspected then sample collection, transport, and storage must be performed with the analysis in mind. Quantitative analysis of all available specimens should proceed forthwith once the presence of an unstable analyte is established if the cause of death is in doubt or if prosecution may follow. In the case of
chloroform
especial precautions are needed: (i) headspace analysis should be performed at 35 degrees C to preclude the possibility of artefactual formation from trichloroacetic acid, (ii) precautions to prevent cross-contamination of biological samples in the laboratory must be taken, and (iii) interpretation of analytical results must take account of the widespread presence of
chloroform
in the environment on the one hand, and that the toxicity of
chloroform
varies greatly depending on the circumstances and intensity of exposure on the other.
...
PMID:A chloroform-related death: analytical and forensic aspects. 2007 Nov 13