Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A nonbarbiturate anesthetic consisting of ketamine HCl (Ketaset) and xlyazine (Rompun) was administered to assess the effects of anesthesia on hypothermia-induced retrograde amnesia in Long Evans hooded and Sprague-Dawley albino rats. Results from Experiment 1a indicate that this anesthetic does not attenuate retrograde amnesia, and the findings from Experiment 1b suggest that awakening from Ketaset/Rompun anesthesia at normal body temperature (following administration of deep body cooling) does not attenuate the resulting hypothermia-induced retrograde amnesia. Experiment 2 demonstrated that various delays between training and hypothermia resulted in a temporal gradient that was the same for animals cooled while either conscious or under anesthesia. The results of Experiment 3 showed that rats made amnesic while under anesthesia did not recover the target memory if given a recooling treatment, but rats that were made amnesic while conscious did recover the memory with the same reminder treatment. These findings indicate that the conscious processing of stimuli associated with hypothermia treatment is not necessary in inducing hypothermia-induced retrograde amnesia, but that conscious processing is an important factor if the amnesia is to be recovered with a recooling treatment.
Neurobiol Learn Mem 1995 Nov
PMID:Differential effects of Ketaset/Rompun anesthesia on hypothermia-induced retrograde amnesia and its recovery. 856 78

A number of phorboid 20-homovanillates were prepared by condensation of phorbol 12,13-diesters and 12-dehydrophorbol 13-esters with Mem-homovanillic acid followed by removal of the protecting group with SnCl4 in THF. These compounds were evaluated for their ability to inhibit [3H]resiniferatoxin (RTX) binding to rat spinal cord membranes. Compounds bearing a lipophilic ester group on ring C were considerably active, but a surprising tolerance of the vanilloid receptor toward the location and the orientation of this ester group was disclosed. Unexpectedly, these ligands could also diminish, to a variable degree, the positive cooperativity which characterizes RTX binding to the vanilloid receptor. Phorbol 12-phenylacetate 13-acetate 20-homovanillate (PPAHV, 6a), a compound which abolished binding cooperativity, was further tested in a variety of in vivo assay used to characterize vanilloid-like activity. PPAHV showed only a marginal pungency and failed to induce a measurable hypothermia response at doses (up to 200 mg/kg) at which it effectively desensitized against neurogenic inflammation. These data suggest that the peculiar binding behavior of these ligands might be associated with a distinct spectrum of biological activity.
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PMID:Synthesis and evaluation of phorboid 20-homovanillates: discovery of a class of ligands binding to the vanilloid (capsaicin) receptor with different degrees of cooperativity. 875 33

During heart surgery, several humoral cascades (coagulation, complement, kallicrein-kinin, cytokines, fibrinolysis) and several cell systems (platelets, neutrophils, endothelial cells, ...) are activated. Numerous contributing factors have been reported: blood contact with foreign surfaces of the extracorporeal circuits, blood-air interface, lung and myocardial ischemia-reperfusion after unclamping, hypothermia, shear stresses, ... A post-perfusion syndrome may develop which include miscellaneous symptoms: coagulation disturbances and bleeding, neurological alterations, inflammatory syndrome, and, in extreme cases, multisystemic organ failure. Even if the present mortality of cardiac surgery is low, several approaches have been proposed to reduce such activations. They are based on changing in the circuit design, or in the composition of the luminal surfaces of the tubing and oxygenator, on improvement of the operative technique, and on modifications of the perfusion technique. Pharmacological agents are also used (anti-inflammatory drugs, corticoids, serine proteases inhibitor (aprotinin, ...). Nevertheless, the development of more biocompatible surfaces seems a promising goal.
Bull Mem Acad R Med Belg 1999
PMID:[Physiopathological disorders related to extracorporeal circulation. Pathogenesis and modes of prevention]. 1093 69

Alan Parkes was one of the most influential figures in the field of reproductive biology in the twentieth century. He had a huge impact on its growth and development during that time, and the legacy of his work still remains.His research was highly innovative and original because of his imaginative and inquiring mind, which, coupled with an entrepreneurial bent, led him into several very different fields and into unchartered waters. He played a leading role in the spectacular rise of reproductive endocrinology in Britain in the 1920s and 1930s when the nature and activity of many of the reproductive processes in animals and humans and was an essential factor in the development of methods for their control. Even more pioneering was his research in low-temperature biology in the years after World War II. This was sparked off by the discovery that glycerol had a remarkable property of protecting spermatozoa against damage during freezing and storage at very low temperatures. Far-reaching applications arose from this discovery, especially in the preservation of bull semen, which led to a worldwide revolution in artificial insemination in cattle. Later, many other cells and tissues were also successfully frozen, including red blood cells, ovarian tissue and bone marrow, and a new branch of biological science, which became known as 'cryobiology', was born, Effects of deep hypothermia, including freezing, on whole animals were also investigated at that time. Having successfully launched a new area of science, it was characteristic of Alan Parkes to switch to new fields. First he became interested in the influence of pheromones on mammalian reproduction. Then, resuming a long-standing interest in comparative aspects of reproductive physiology in British wild mammals, he became involved in the work of the Nuffield Unit of Tropical Animal Ecology in Uganda, where similar studies were carried out on African animals. Even after retirement from the academic field, he was for some years a consultant to an enterprise in the conservation and captive breeding of green sea turtles in the Cayman Islands. In addition to his research, Alan Parkes was just as influential through the huge amount of work that he did for committees and other activities. Over the years he was on 35 different committees, study groups or advisory groups, and these were concerned with a wide variety of interests. He often served as chairman or secretary and had a great ability to take on a large amount of work and responsibility. He threw himself wholeheartedly into promoting the interests of reproductive biology and was a founding member of both the Society of Endocrinology and the Society for the Study of Fertility. He also played a leading role in the establishment and running of the Journal of Endocrinology and the Journal of Reproduction and Fertility. Getting these journals established often required a considerable amount of financial acumen. One of his special concerns was a long-standing interest in demographic and population issues, which led to his working closely with the International Planned Parenthood Federation and the Family Planning Association. He saw the 'population explosion' as a growing threat to the environment and to human welfare, and he was an outstanding proponent of measures to effect population control. Sometimes this led him into controversial areas. He spoke strongly in support of women's right to abortion and questioned the morality of expensive measures to overcome infertility. Throughout his life he was a prolific and lucid writer and his many publications remain a lasting monument to his contribution to science. He entitled the first volume of his autobiography Off-beat biologist, which is perhaps a very apt description of this remarkable man.
Biogr Mem Fellows R Soc 2006
PMID:Sir Alan Sterling Parkes: 10 September 1900 - 17 July 1990. 1854 75

The effects of hypothermia on memory formation have been examined extensively, and while it is clear that post-training cooling interferes with the process of consolidation, the nature of the temperature sensitive processes disrupted in this way remain poorly defined. Post-training manipulations that disrupt consolidation tend to be effective during specific time-windows of sensitivity, the timing and duration of which are directly related to the mechanism through which the treatment induces amnesia. As such, different treatments that target the same basic processes should be associated with similar time-windows of sensitivity. Using this rationale we have investigated the possibility that cooling induced blockade of long-term memory (LTM) stems from the disruption of protein synthesis. By varying the timing of post-training hypothermia we have determined the critical period during which cooling disrupts the consolidation of appetitive long-term memory in the pond snail Lymnaea. Post-training hypothermia was found to disrupt LTM only when applied immediately after conditioning, while delaying the treatment by 10 min left the 24 h memory trace intact. This brief (<10 min) window of sensitivity differs from the time-window we have previously described for the protein synthesis inhibitor anisomycin, which was effective during at least the first 30 min after conditioning [Fulton, D., Kemenes, I., Andrew, R. J., & Benjamin, P. R. (2005). A single time-window for protein synthesis-dependent long-term memory formation after one-trial appetitive conditioning. European Journal of Neuroscience, 21, 1347-1358]. We conclude that hypothermia and protein synthesis inhibition exhibit distinct time-windows of effectiveness in Lymnaea, a fact that is inconsistent with the hypothesis that cooling induced amnesia occurs through the direct disruption of macromolecular synthesis.
Neurobiol Learn Mem 2008 Nov
PMID:Time-window for sensitivity to cooling distinguishes the effects of hypothermia and protein synthesis inhibition on the consolidation of long-term memory. 1879 38