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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The action of
copper
(CuSO4, 5 mg/kg, oral) on selected neuropharmacological actions of cannabis resin (CI, oral) was studied on albino rats and mice.
Copper
potentiated the barbiturate hypnosis-potentiating activity of CI in albino rats and mice and had no effect on hypothermic activity in albino rats. Single doses of
copper
partially inhibited tolerance to barbiturate hypnosis-potentiation activity and markedly delayed the development of tolerance to hypothermic activity of CI. Oral as well as i.c.v.
copper
(CuSO4, 0.1 microgram) in single dose antagonised the tolerance to hypothermic activity of cannabis or THC for one to two weeks.
Copper
-CI interaction could be antagonised by penicillamine. Zinc (ZnSO4, 5 mg/kg, oral) had an action similar to that of
copper
in antagonising the development of tolerance to the hypothermic activity of CI, but magnesium (MgSO4, 5 mg/kg, i.p.) was devoid of any such action. Studies indicate that, although
copper
has no significant neuropharmacological action, it interacts with CI activity, especially in tolerant rats, in effects on
hypothermia
. The site of action of
copper
is possibly the hypothalamus, where it inhibits the processes of tolerance development to CI on the noradrenergic neurone.
...
PMID:Studies on the interactions of copper and cannabis. 41 40
To facilitate perfusion rewarming without the use of total body heparinization or an oxygenator following open-heart correction with surface
hypothermia
, we divised a pump circuit. The circuit, totally primed with 100 c.c. of saline, consists of polyurethane-polyvinyl-graphite (PPG) coated Tygon tubes (with one end tapered by heat treatment) and a
copper
-coil heat exchanger. A roller pump was used to achieve partial bypass from the left atrium to the ascending aorta with flow rates up to 70 c.c. per kilogram per minute. Experiments in dogs resulted in rapid rewarming, immediate return of cardiac function, and hematologic alterations similar to those noted during surface rewarming. The safety of the method was also demonstrated. Prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, and platelet values returned to control levels upon rewarming, and no thromboemboli or bleeding problems were noted. Six clinical experiences were accumulated. Details of the method, hematologic and blood chemical analyses in dogs, and the first clinical trial in a 3-month-old infant with transposition of the great vessels are reported.
...
PMID:Heparinless, oxygenatorless perfusion rewarming following surface-induced deep hypothermia for open-heart surgery. 126 65
Recent laboratory results have indicated that the ischemic brain is very sensitive to minor variations in temperature. This has created new interest in
hypothermia
and brain temperature. There is, however, very little information available regarding human intracerebral temperature and its relation to body core temperature during normal and pathological circumstances. We therefore made continuous measurements of the temperature of the lateral ventricle in 15 neurosurgical patients utilizing a newly developed technique with
copper
-constantan thermocouples introduced through a plastic catheter also used for monitoring intracranial pressure. The intraventricular temperature was higher than the rectal temperature during approximately 90% of all measurements. The largest temperature gradient measured was 2.3 degrees C. Usually the difference between the temperature of the rectum and the brain was much smaller, the mean value being 0.33 degrees C. For the patients in the most severe condition, the rectal temperature was sufficiently close to the brain temperature to afford a reliable basis for adequate clinical judgment.
...
PMID:Intracerebral temperature in neurosurgical patients. 187 49
The aim of the present study was to introduce a new method of external selective brain cooling in cats. By means of this device, which mainly consisted of a head-sized, closely fitting
copper
basin, it was possible to reduce brain temperature rapidly. The resultant difference between core and cerebral temperatures amounted to mean values of about 10 degrees C after a 20-min cooling period. Ventricular fibrillation lasting for 15 min was induced in 23 healthy adult cats by internal cardiac electrical overpacing and followed by cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). In several animals (n = 8) CPR efforts failed completely or they died without any indication of sufficient spontaneous circulation. In the initial postischemic period the remaining animals stayed normothermic and served as controls (n = 7) or received external brain cooling (n = 8), which was started simultaneously with CPR and continued for 30 min. During a survival time of 4 h cardiocirculatory function was stabilized pharmacologically and artificial respiration was performed, followed by transcardiac perfusion fixation. After removal from the skull, the brains were processed for histopathological evaluation of ischemic neuronal damage by light microscopy and morphometry. The clinical data obtained indicate that the described method provides a means for efficient heat exchange from within the intracranial space. Rapid, selective brain cooling could be achieved without any critical reduction of the core temperature and therefore, cardiac arrhythmias, a usual consequence of generalized
hypothermia
, could be avoided. The histopathological evaluation of ischemic neuronal damage showed a significantly higher percentage of unaffected cells in some areas of the cerebral cortex in animals treated with postischemic cerebral
hypothermia
than in the controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Selective cerebral hypothermia following cardiac arrest in the cat]. 192 14
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is a peptide secreted by macrophages in response to endotoxin that can produce many of the changes seen in septic shock. After cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) rats gradually develop tachycardia, hypotension, tachypnea, and
hypothermia
. At 5 h post-CLP, rats have a peak in serum levels of endotoxin and 60% of rats have blood cultures that grow Gram-negative rods (Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumonia). At 20 h post-CLP all rats develop positive blood cultures. Serum levels of TNF are not reproducibly measurable in rats following CLP. Rats undergoing CLP have a 50-80% mortality with deaths usually occurring 24-72 h postinjury. Repetitive (twice daily x 6 d) i.p. injection of sublethal doses of recombinant human TNF-alpha (100 micrograms/kg) to rats undergoing CLP 1 d after the treatment period resulted in a significant reduction in mortality compared to control rats previously unexposed to rTNF (P less than 0.03). Animals treated with rTNF had no hypotension or
hypothermia
after CLP and regained normal food intake faster than control rats. 12 h after CLP the gene expression for manganous superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), an inducible mitochondrial metalloenzyme responsible for cellular resistance to injury from toxic reactive oxygen species, was higher in livers of rats treated with rTNF suggesting that the TNF treatment augmented expression of this protective enzyme. Unlike MnSOD, expression of the gene for
copper
-zinc SOD was not affected by CLP or rTNF treatment. The results suggest that prior treatment with recombinant TNF can ameliorate the lethality, hypotension,
hypothermia
, and anorexia of Gram-negative sepsis in rats and that the mechanism may be related to enhanced hepatic expression of the gene for MnSOD. Repeated administration of recombinant TNF may be a strategy to minimize mortality and morbidity of Gram-negative sepsis.
...
PMID:Treatment with recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha protects rats against the lethality, hypotension, and hypothermia of gram-negative sepsis. 205 27
The ability of intraoperative
hypothermia
to modify the metabolic response to cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) was assessed by serial alterations in iron, zinc and
copper
, and in their molar binding ratios to their respective transport proteins, in 20 male patients under-going elective coronary artery surgery and randomised to an operative blood temperature of 28 degrees C or 20 degrees C. Decreases in serum iron and zinc concentrations, typical of the acute phase response, were preceded by early rises. Significant alterations in the metal: protein molar binding ratios preceded significant changes in the serum concentrations of the metals and occurred earliest in the zinc: albumin binding ratio, which was apparent by the time of skin incision. An intraoperative temperature of 20 degrees C modified iron and zinc concentrations and their protein binding ratios during surgery but not in the post-operative period. These early changes in trace metals and their protein binding ratios are a simple and inexpensive method of quantitating the response to surgical injury and may be useful in assessing new interventions in cardiopulmonary bypass. An awareness of the trace element response to surgical injury is essential to avoid misdiagnoses of iron deficiency anaemia or zinc deficiency.
...
PMID:The effects of intraoperative hypothermia and cardiopulmonary bypass on trace metals and their protein binding ratios. 226 37
To investigate the practicality of
hypothermia
and hypometabolism as sensitive indices of toxicity in the mouse, oxygen consumption was monitored continuously and body temperature was measured at 30 min postinjection following the intraperitoneal administration of various metal salts. Eleven metal ions were tested: Al3+, Cd2+, Co2+, Cr2+,
Cu2+
, Hg2+, Mg2+, Mn2+, Ni2+, Pb2+, and Zn2+. All metals induced dose-dependent reductions in both oxygen consumption (hypometabolism) and deep body (colonic) temperature. Comparative toxicity of the metal ions was evaluated by calculating the dose of metal ion in dimensions of mmol/kg body mass needed to reduce colonic temperature to 35 degrees C. The order of toxicity from lowest to highest was as follows: Cr less than Al less than Pb less than Mn less than Mg less than Zn less than Cu less than Co less than Ni less than Hg less than Cd. The threshold doses for reducing body temperature were less than 5% of the LD50 in 6 of the metals studied. Metal salts with relatively low LD50 doses such as Hg, Cd, and Ni were most efficacious in inducing
hypothermia
and hypometabolism. Moreover, there was a direct linear relationship between dose for inducing
hypothermia
or hypometabolism and the reported LD50. Hence, the
hypothermia
and hypometabolism test may prove to be a sensitive and rapid test for the evaluation of toxicity of environmental contaminants.
...
PMID:Hypothermia and hypometabolism: sensitive indices of whole-body toxicity following exposure to metallic salts in the mouse. 229 93
Although it has been known for a long time that pronounced
hypothermia
has a protective effect on the brain during ischemia, and that severe hyperthermia damages neuronal tissue, knowledge of human brain temperature is very limited. The recent findings by two independent research groups, that even small differences in brain temperature significantly influence the degree of neuronal damage following cerebral ischemia, became the incentive for measuring brain temperature in neurosurgical patients. The temperature of the lateral ventricle, epidural space, membrana tympani and rectum were measured with
copper
-constantan thermocouples. During the implantation of an intraventricular catheter for measuring intracranial pressure, a temperature gradient of 0.4-1.0 degrees C between the lateral ventricle and the epidural space was noted. Continuous measurements for 1-5 days showed that the rectal temperature usually adequately reflects the temperature of the epidural space, although the temperature of the membrana tympani followed changes in epidural temperature more closely. However, at times, and in one patient during most of the time, the temperature of the epidural space was up to 1 degree C above rectal temperature. The relevance of these findings for the care of neurosurgical patients is discussed in relationship to what is known about brain temperature from animal experiments.
...
PMID:Epidural temperature and possible intracerebral temperature gradients in man. 233 25
To examine how fat might influence the metabolic effects of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), human recombinant TNF alpha was given intravenously to rats that had been fed for 12 weeks on diets containing (g/kg) 200 maize oil or 190 coconut oil + 10 maize oil. Rectal temperature and tissue composition measurements were made 8 and 24 h after injection. Ambient temperatures of 20 degrees and 25 degrees were employed to accentuate rectal temperature changes. Doses of 30 and 300 micrograms TNF alpha/kg body-weight were given, and brought about depression of serum zinc and albumin and elevation of
copper
. Muscle protein content was decreased and liver protein and Zn content enhanced by TNF alpha. Serum Zn and liver Zn content were negatively correlated 8 h after injections.
Hypothermia
developed within 1 h of injection. All responses except the rise in serum Cu and gain in liver Zn were more intense at the higher than at the lower dose of TNF alpha.
Hypothermia
was exacerbated by an environmental temperature of 20 degrees. The coconut-oil diet blunted the
hypothermia
and likewise the changes in serum albumin and Cu content 8 h after injections and in muscle and liver protein after 24 h. Changes in eicosanoid metabolism may be involved in the modulatory effects of the coconut-oil-enriched diet.
...
PMID:Dietary fat modifies some metabolic actions of human recombinant tumour necrosis factor alpha in rats. 238 39
A male infant, 2-month-old, was delivered normally at term. He weighed 3.0 Kg and was stated to be quite well until convulsion was presented at the age of 1 month. The convulsion was complex partial seizure in character. Physical examinations showed body weight 2.7 Kg (less than 3 percentile), body temperature 35.7 degrees C, opisthotonic in posture, staring of eyes and unawareness of the outside environment. His hair appeared sparse, coarse and light yellowish color. Laboratory examinations showed normal hemogram and cerebrospinal fluid data. Low serum
copper
(10 mg/dl), ceruloplasmin (13.5 mg/dl) and hair
copper
(9.73 ppm) were found. The EEG revealed paroxysmal sharp waves with phase reverses at right temporal and occipital area. Fundus examination showed bilateral optic atrophy. Microscopic examination of the hair showed pili torti (twisting) of the hair. The baby was persisted in
hypothermia
, poor activity and poor weight gain. The convulsion was poorly controlled and progressed in opisthotonus. The baby died of unknown cause at 3 months of age.
...
PMID:[Menkes' kinky hair disease: report of one case]. 263 98
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