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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Protective action of aprotinin froom ischemic myocardial damage was evaluated in 9 patients compared to non-treated 18 patients, who underwent open heart surgery (22 ACB, 3 AVR and 2 MVR) with respect to the alterations of beta-glucronidase, acid-phosphatase, MB-CPK and m-GOT. Cold cardioplegia with glucose-
insulin
-potassium solution was used in this investigation. Average arrest time was 78.6 +/- 4.9 minutes associated with
hypothermia
between 25 and 28 degrees C in rectal temperature. Aprotinin was administered in 9 patients intravenously with 5,000 KIU/Kg 30 minutes prior to CPB and then 5,000 KIU/Kg in the prime solution. Activity of beta-glucronidase was significantly suppressed in the aprotinin-treated group compared to the non-treated group following cardioplegia and in the reperfusion period up to 6 hours, however, acid-phosphatase failed to demonstrate significant difference among two groups. Serum MB-CPK and m-GOT levels in the aprotinin-treated group did not elevate the beginning of reperfusion following cardioplegia. These data suggest that aprotinin add myocardial protection to cold cardioplegia.
...
PMID:Additive protection of aprotinin, protease inhibitor to cold cardioplegia from ischemic myocarium. 615 91
Polypeptides are endogenous agents, involved in the regulation of many physiologic functions and the pathogenesis of several diseases. Polypeptide antagonists form a group of new chemical entities which may provide valid therapeutic agents. Some polypeptides (angiotensin, kinins) are released through the action of proteolytic enzymes (renin, kallikreins) and act as hormones or autacoids; others (substance P, neurotensin) are synthetized by nervous cells to serve as neurotransmitters or neuromodulators. The main homeostatic role of the renin-angiotensin system is to uphold high systemic arterial blood pressure. Overproduction of renin and insufficient checking of renin secretion are among the most common causes of arterial hypertension. Several forms of arterial hypertension (neurovascular, idiopathic) benefit from a reduction in renin-angiotensin system activity. This is achieved either through decreasing renin secretion, by inhibiting conversion of angiotensin I into angiotensin II, or through blocking the peripheral actions (at the receptor sites) of angiotensin II. Renin secretion is very significantly reduced by beta-blocking agents (propranolol); conversion of angiotensin I into angiotensin II is inhibited by teprotide, captopril and their derivatives; peripheral actions of angiotensin II are blocked by saralasin. Bradykinin and related agents produce vasodilation, increase vascular permeability and stimulate pain fibers. Kinins thus reproduce the cardinal features of inflammation and are held to be mediators of the inflammatory reaction. The substance P neuropeptide is found in the brain and bowel; it may act as a transmitter of the sensation of pain at the spinal cord and central nervous system sites. Among other effects outside of the brain, substance P is a potent vasodilator and inhibits renin secretion. Neurotensin is a neuropeptide which produces
hypothermia
, muscular relaxation and analgesia. Outside of the brain, this peptide is involved in the regulation of gastric secretion, intestinal motility and
insulin
and glucagon secretion. The vasoactive intestinal peptide, found in certain cholinergic nerve endings, is a large peptide which inhibits gastric secretion, intestinal motility and vascular tone.
...
PMID:[Polypeptides and antagonists]. 620 6
The influence of living Bordetella pertussis on the induction and duration of pathophysiological reactions in mice infected intranasally with graded doses of culture was studied. Lethally infected mice showed loss of body weight, spleen atrophy, pronounced
hypothermia
and hypoglycemia, and highly elevated levels of leukocytes and serum immunoreactive
insulin
. Sublethally infected mice showed normal weight gain, practically normal temperature, spleen enlargement, lesser pronounced hypoglycemia, lower but significantly elevated levels of leukocytes and serum immunoreactive
insulin
, and histamine sensitization. Intensity of each reaction was related to the degree of lung infectivity.
Hypothermia
and leukocytosis were highly correlated. Concentration of serum immunoreactive
insulin
was closely related to the level of leukocytosis but not to the level of glucose. The strain and age of mice significantly affected the degree and duration of the reactions. The results suggest that the intranasally infected mouse may provide a useful model for investigations on whooping cough.
...
PMID:Bordetella pertussis respiratory tract infection in the mouse: pathophysiological responses. 624 73
In order to clarify the inhibitory mechanism of
insulin
secretion associated with open-heart surgery, the influence of
insulin
antagonistic hormones on
insulin
secretion was studied in 20 patients with congenital heart diseases undergoing open-heart surgery, under simple deep
hypothermia
. Despite a hyperglycemia, plasma immunoreactive
insulin
and C-peptide showed no change during the cooling period, while with the exception of plasma human growth hormone, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, immunoreactive glucagon, cortisol and cyclic AMP in plasma, either showed no change, or a decrease during the cooling period. It is assumed that catecholamine, glucocorticoid and glucagon do not play an important role in the inhibitory mechanism of
insulin
secretion during hypothermic open-heart surgery, and a transient hypofunction of the pancreas as well as the liver and the adrenal gland is probably involved.
...
PMID:Inhibitory mechanisms of insulin secretion associated with hypothermic open-heart surgery. 627 5
Plasma growth hormone, cortisol,
insulin
and blood glucose concentrations were measured intra- and postoperatively in ten patients who underwent open heart surgery with moderate
hypothermia
. Diazepam-ketamine anaesthesia for 10-20 min failed to precipitate any significant alterations in the levels of measured hormones and blood glucose. In the pre-bypass period of surgery, an increase in cortisol and a slight elevation in growth hormone levels was observed;
insulin
level showed no change in spite of marked hyperglycaemia. The bypass period, including
hypothermia
and haemodilution, was accompanied by unchanged cortisol and elevated growth hormone levels, while
insulin
demonstrated a slight rise which did not correspond with the degree of hyperglycaemia. The post-bypass period with rewarming the restoring spontaneous circulation was characterized by further marked increase in cortisol and growth hormone levels and, in spite of decreasing levels of blood glucose, by a paradoxical elevation in plasma
insulin
. It is suggested that
hypothermia
, haemodilution, reduced tissue perfusion affecting endocrine glands, as well as denaturation of some hormones in the oxygenator, participate in the moderate endocrine response, disproportionate to the stress of cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. The rise in hormone levels on terminating bypass seems to be dependent on the improved blood flow to endocrine glands due to recovered spontaneous circulation, rewarming and, as for
insulin
, presumably even on the reduced inhibitory effect of catecholamines.
...
PMID:The effects of open heart surgery on growth hormone, cortisol and insulin levels in man. Hormone levels during open heart surgery. 632 66
Procedures related to profound
hypothermia
and circulatory arrest have produced a great improvement in the operative results of cardiac repair in neonates and infants. As we already obtained data on the effects of these procedures on cerebral metabolism, we focussed our attention on carbohydrate metabolism to determine whether or not cardiopulmonary bypass with pulsatile flow would improve the results of bypass method for core cooling and rewarming. In 12 mongrel dogs under conditions of
hypothermia
, plasma levels of glucose,
insulin
and glucagon as well as cortisol and noradrenaline were monitored in both pulsatile and non-pulsatile bypass groups. The hyperglycemia was significantly depressed and
insulin
levels increased in cases of pulsatile flow. Thus, even under conditions of
hypothermia
, pulsatile flow results in an improvement of the blood flow in the pancreas and there is a more extensive utilization of glucose and a greater protective effect on the function of the visceral organs during bypass.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate metabolism during pulsatile cardiopulmonary bypass under profound hypothermia. 634 59
In order to determine the influence of hibernation depth upon the secretion and the effect of
insulin
, two groups of edible dormice were maintained in winter under different climatic and nutritional conditions, and their pancreatic B-cell function was tested during the spring arousal. The first group of animals was exposed to a moderate temperature and fed ad libitum. Their periods of
hypothermia
were short and irregular and the active periods sometimes lasted several days; their body weight increased during the winter months; in spring, the sensitivity of B cells to glucose was low, decreasing
insulin
secretion in vivo and in vitro, and the adipocytes were
insulin
resistant. The second group of fasting animals was exposed to a low and constant temperature (5 degrees). Their phases of lethargy were long and regular (about 15 days), separated by active periods (6-8 hr); their body weight decreased during the winter months; in spring the B-cell secretion was increased and the sensitivity of the tissues to
insulin
ensured a high peripheral glucose utilization. These data show that the winter climatic and nutritional conditions which influence the depth of hibernation modify the edible dormouse B-cell activity during the spring arousal.
...
PMID:Hibernation depth influences the edible dormouse pancreatic B cell during the spring arousal. 637 92
Short-lasting
hypothermia
raises the FFA level in the blood and this rise is associated with increased lipid-mobilizing activity and higher lipolytic activity of the serum. Raised FFA level and increased lipid-mobilizing activity of the serum persist even when the degree of general anaesthesia is sufficient for preventing thermogenesis signs (shivering and piloerection) caused by falling body temperature. Beta-adrenergic blockade fails to abolish the effect of lipolysis activation caused by
hypothermia
. These observations suggest that during
hypothermia
in the blood of the animals appear factors stimulating lipolysis in the adipose tissue. One of these factors may stimulate tissue lipolysis independently of beta-adrenergic receptors.
Insulin
blocks significantly lipolytic processes in the adipose tissue of hypothermic animals, but its administration is connected with the danger of hypoglycaemia development.
...
PMID:Effect of hypothermia on lipolytic processes in blood and adipose tissue of rat. 637 60
When using methods of perfusion to preserve the rat pancreas, we found that perfusion into the celiac axis was the most effective. The viability of the cadaver pancreas from decapitated rats preserved by perfusion into the celiac axis for 6 hours under various conditions of
hypothermia
, hyperbaria and oxygenation was investigated. The condition of perfusion affected the ratio of degenerative islets/normal islets in the pancreas. The ratio, under conditions of
hypothermia
and oxygenation was the lowest, while that under conditions of hyperbaria was the highest.
Insulin
-releasing activity of islets from 6-hour-perfusion-pancreas, under conditions of
hypothermia
and oxygenation was 86.5 per cent or more of that of the control. Stainings with fluorescent antibody and peroxidase antiperoxidase, revealed a large number of A and B cells in the islets of the pancreas, in cases of up to 6 hours of perfusion.
...
PMID:Perfusion preservation of cadaver rat pancreas: I. Morphological observation and biological function of the islets. 637 97
We designed a new process for culturing pancreatic islets and applied this method to cultures of rat pancreatic islets which had degenerated during preservation by the perfusion-method for 6 hours under the condition of
hypothermia
and oxygenation. The objective was to determine the extent of the original function. Transplantation of these so-treated islets was also attempted. When pancreatic islets isolated from the pancreas after 6-hour-perfusion were cultured, morphological restoration was apparent within the first 3-4 days.
Insulin
contents of the culture media renewed every 3 days, ranged from 851 to 1,134 microU/ml/two islets during culture period of 21 days. In the glucose-loading test,
insulin
secretion of the islets was the same as that of islets in the control experiments. Transplantation of these islets into the portal vein of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats resulted in a good recovery from the diabetic state.
...
PMID:Perfusion preservation of cadaver rat pancreas: II. Culture after perfusion and successful transplantation. 642 98
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