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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of
dehydration
on intrarenal blood flow was investigated in 11 dogs, using polarographic determination of H2-gas desaturation for measuring local blood flow in inner cortex (ICF) and outer cortex (OCF).
Dehydration
was induced by 48 h water deprivation +2-300 mg ethacrynic acid (EA) per os the day before the experiment. Compared to a control group (n=9) ICF was markedly reduced to 2.40 +/- 0.47 ml/min X g (control 3.23 +/- 0.64) whereas OCF 3.29 +/- 0.80 ml/min X g was nearly unchanged (control 3.59 +/- 0.85). The ratio OCF/ICF was increased to 1.37 (1.11). Further
dehydration
by hypertonic peritoneal dialysis for 3 h increased Hct to 60 +/- 4 and further reduced OCF and ICF, without significant change of the OCF/ICF-ratio. At Hct above 55 sudden and intermittent changes in local cortical blood flow were recorded randomly at individual electrode sites, showing ischemic periods lasting for 1 to 60 min. Such flow changes were observed in 13 of 14 expts. and were not accompanied by changes in RBF. It is concluded that moderate
dehydration
causes a greater reduction of ICF than of OCF. Severe
dehydration
gives in addition rise to patchy, intermittent
ischemia
in both cortical layers.
...
PMID:Effect of dehydration on renal blood flow in dog. 59 1
Selective renal angiograms and xenon washout curves were performed under general anesthesia with pentobarbital in hydrated or dehydrated dogs weighing 22-27 kg. Compared to the hydrated animals a significant overall decrease in the angiographic cortical perfusion was found in the dehydrated dogs which was reversible with the infusion of 200 ml isotonic saline. The total renal blood flow, the rapid flow component and the percent of total flow to the first compartment assessed with the xenon washout technique was however not significantly different in hydrated and dehydrated animals. It is suggested that temporary cortical
ischemia
might occur in
dehydration
which differs from the well known pathologic condition of cortical
ischemia
since total renal blood flow appears to be normal in the former and there is a fast recovery with isotonic saline infusion. The observed findings in
dehydration
could be explained with redistribution of blood away from the outer cortex to the inner cortex and to the medulla.
...
PMID:Comparison of renal cortical perfusion assessed with angiography and xenon washout technique in hydrated and dehydrated dogs: a preliminary observation. 88 92
Acute aortic thrombosis associated with spinal cord infarction in a 47-year-old man with nephrotic syndrome is described. He was admitted to our hospital presenting with the nephrotic syndrome. Renal biopsy revealed mild mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis. The urinary protein excretion rate transiently decreased after the start of treatment with prednisolone, but it increased again and was followed by the development of the signs and symptoms of spinal cord infarction, which was diagnosed by magnetic resonance signal abnormalities, and then symptoms of
ischemia
in the lower limbs. Digital subtraction angiography revealed an obstruction at the bifurcation of the abdominal aorta. Emergency thrombectomy was performed, and the arterial blood flow was reestablished. Laboratory data on the fibrinocoagulation system showed a hypercoagulable state. In this case, fibrinocoagulation abnormalities due to the nephrotic syndrome led to the hypercoagulable state, and
dehydration
might have triggered the thrombotic complication.
...
PMID:Acute aortic thrombosis associated with spinal cord infarction in nephrotic syndrome. 139 31
The barium enema is a safe and accurate diagnostic study of the colon but, in rare cases, complications may result. Many of these can be prevented by proper equipment and careful attention to technique. When a complication does occur, prompt recognition and management is vital in decreasing morbidity and mortality. Perforation of the bowel is the most frequent serious complication, occurring in approximately 0.02% to 0.04% of patients. Rarely the colon may burst due to excessive transmural pressure alone. However, a colon weakened by iatrogenic trauma or disease is more likely to perforate during an enema than is a normal healthy bowel. Injury to the rectal mucosa or anal canal due to the enema tip or retention balloon is probably the most common traumatic cause of barium enema perforation. Inflation of a retention balloon within a stricture, neoplasm, inflamed rectum, or colostomy stoma is particularly hazardous. Recent deep biopsy or polypectomy with electrocautery makes the bowel more vulnerable to rupture. The tensile strength of the bowel wall is impaired in elderly patients, patients receiving long-term steroid therapy, and in disease states including neoplasm, diverticulitis, inflammatory bowel disease, and
ischemia
. Intraperitoneal perforation leads to a severe, acute peritonitis with intravascular volume depletion. The ensuing shock may be rapidly fatal. Prompt fluid replacement and laparotomy are essential. If the patient survives the initial shock and sepsis, later complications caused by dense intraperitoneal adhesions may develop. Extraperitoneal perforation is usually less catastrophic but may result in pain, sepsis, cellulitis, abscess, rectal stricture, or fistula. Intramural extravasation often forms a persistent submucosal barium granuloma which may ulcerate or be mistaken for a neoplasm. The most dramatic complication of barium enema is venous intravasation of barium. Fortunately, this is quite rare as it may be immediately lethal. Most cases have been attributed to trauma from the enema tip or retention balloon, mucosal inflammation, or misplacement of the tip in the vagina. Bacteremia has been found in as many as 23% of patients following barium enema and, in rare cases, may cause symptomatic septicemia. Other less common complications include barium impaction, water intoxication, allergic reactions, and cardiac arrhythmias. Preparatory laxatives and cleansing enemas have been implicated in some instances of
dehydration
, rectal trauma, water intoxication, and perforation. Careful review of the indications for examination, previous radiographs, and clinical history will identify many of the patients at greater risk for complications so that appropriate precautions may be observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Recognition and prevention of barium enema complications. 188 35
Orthoiodohippuric (OIH) acid labeled with 131I is a widely used renal radiopharmaceutical agent and has been the standard radiopharmaceutical agent for the measurement of effective renal plasma flow (EPRF). Limitations to the routine clinical use of 131I OIH are related to the suboptimal imaging properties of the 131I radionuclide and its relatively high radiation dose. 123I has been substituted for 131I; however, its high cost and short shelf-life have limited its widespread use. Recent work has centered on the development of a new 99mTc renal tubular function agent, which would use the optimal radionuclidic properties and availability of 99mTc and combine the clinical information provided by OIH. The search for a suitable 99mTc renal tubular function agent has focused on the diamide dithiolate (N2S2), the paraaminohippuric iminodiacetic acid (PAHIDA), and the triamide mercaptide (N3S) donor ligand systems. To date, the most promising 99mTc tubular function agent is the N3S complex: 99mTc mercaptoacetyltriglycine (99mTc MAG3). Studies in animal models in diuresis,
dehydration
, acid or base imbalance,
ischemia
, and renal artery stenosis demonstrate that 99mTc MAG3 behaves similarly to 131I OIH. A simple kit formulation is available that yields the 99mTc MAG3 complex in high radiochemical purity. Studies in normal subjects and patients indicate that 99mTc MAG3 is an excellent 99mTc renal tubular agent, but its plasma clearance is only 50% to 60% that of OIH. In an effort to develop an improved 99mTc renal tubular function agent, changes have been made in the core N3S donor ligand system, but to date no agent has been synthesized that is clinically superior to 99mTc MAG3.
...
PMID:99mTc renal tubular function agents: current status. 213 59
The influence of different factors on the immediate function of the transplant was investigated retrospectively in 172 patients. The immediate function of the transplanted kidney was influenced negatively by
dehydration
of the patient, by intraoperative decrease in blood pressure above 30 mmHg, by an prolonged cold
ischemia
time, and by the "handling time".
...
PMID:[The effect of different factors on the immediate transplant function. A retrospective study of 172 kidney transplants]. 227 59
Renal vein thrombosis in early infancy is a complication of
dehydration
and prolonged hypotension. The onset is usually acute and the most common clinical signs are uni- or bilateral frank masses, hematuria, proteinuria and thrombocytopenia. In most cases, with conservative management, the late outcome is favorable. In the adult, renal vein thrombosis is often a silent complication of the nephrotic syndrome, the hypercoagulability of which may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of the thrombosis. Clinically, the presentation of a sudden complete occlusion is that of severe abdominal and lumbar pain with hematuria and loss of function of the kidney that suffers hemorrhagic infarction. Physical examination often reveals an enlarged kidney. With gradual occlusion, renal function is preserved. The initial diagnostic approach is with ultrasound studies and computed tomography; definitive diagnosis is established by renal venography or by selective renal arteriography. In general, a conservative approach including the use of anticoagulant treatment is preferred to surgical intervention. Priapism is a persistent painful penile erection due to ischemic or non-ischemic causes; therapeutic intracavernosal injection of papaverine is becoming the most common cause. In early and mild stages, aspiration of blood from the corpora cavernosa supplemented with intracavernosal irrigation with alpha-stimulating agents is the procedure of first choice; in late and severe
ischemia
, a shunt procedure may become necessary. Hepatic vein thrombosis occurs in association with a number of conditions considered predisposing factors including the use of oral contraceptives. The clinical picture may be that of an acute illness with abdominal pain, hepatomegaly, ascites and hepatic failure as well as early death. More often, the onset is insidious with slowly developing ascites and wasting. For the diagnosis, hepatic scintigraphy may be helpful but, at present, ultrasonography, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning are procedures of choice. There is, as yet, no adequate treatment. A fatal outcome may be prevented by surgical decompression of the congested liver and, in recent years, liver transplantation has been employed. Portal vein thrombosis, in children, is usually considered a complication of umbilical sepsis or a result of a congenital abnormality of the portal vein. In adults, the most frequent causes are hepatic cirrhosis and neoplasia. Clinically, there may be a sudden appearance of ascites with resolution in a symptom-free interval until the onset of other features of portal hypertension occur. Currently, ultrasound real-time imaging supplemented with Doppler capability, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning provide the necessary diagnostic information. Variceal hemorrhage is often the first major complication requiring treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Thrombosis in particular organ veins. 268 Aug 53
When
dehydration
, infection, and mechanical trauma are prevented, procedures (such as cooling and/or oral antithromboxane) designed to diminish
ischemia
in experimental zone-of-stasis burns have been associated with no or only minor improvement in wound healing. To test the hypothesis that ongoing skin damage occurring postburn (PB) may in part be due to release of oxygen-derived free radicals during the 16-hour through 4-day PB period of reperfusion in such burns, beginning immediately and for a period of 5 days PB, equal numbers of guinea pigs received: allopurinol 150 mg/kg PO q 6 h vs. placebo, dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) 75% applied topically q 12 h vs. placebo, or yeast-derived superoxide dismutase coupled with polyethylene glycol (PEG-SOD, Pharmacia) 10,000 U (Fridovich) given IV q 8 h producing a concentration of 16 U/cc of plasma 8 hr after injection vs. placebo. Gross and histologic examination of wounds by a 'blinded' investigator at 1 week and 3 weeks PB revealed no difference between treatment and control groups when rates of re-epithelialization and frequencies of hair-follicle retention were compared. Using the dosages, routes, and model described, treatment of a zone-of-stasis burn with PO allopurinol (a xanthine oxidase inhibitor), topical DMSO (a scavenger of the hydroxyl radical), or IV PEG-SOD (a scavenger of the superoxide radical) during the first 5 days PB was associated with no increase in the rate of re-epithelialization or frequency of hair follicle retention at 1 and 3 weeks PB when compared with controls.
...
PMID:Oxygen-derived free radical inhibition in the healing of experimental zone-of-stasis burns. 302 94
The local effects and radiographic efficacy of four water-soluble contrast media, barium and saline were evaluated in 91 anesthetized rats with a ligature applied to the anterior mesenteric artery and vein via laparotomy. The rats were observed for 8 hours after instillation of 3 mL of test substance via oro-gastric tube. Radiographs were taken after 1, 4 and 8 hours of observation. After 8 hours, the intestines were weighed, a biopsy was done for light microscopy, and blood and urine were sampled for testing. The roentgen contrast media caused
dehydration
and increased influx of fluid into the small bowel lumen in proportion to their osmolality. They diluted the bowel contents, enhanced their progression and distended the bowel walls. The diagnostic qualities of radiographic films were better using the new, low-osmolal contrast media than using either barium or sodium diatrizoate. The water-soluble contrast media were excreted in the urine, as demonstrated by dense opacification of the urinary bladder on abdominal films, and increased iodine concentrations at x-ray fluorescence analysis of the urine. This may be useful clinically in detecting bowel
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Water-soluble contrast media compared with barium in enteric follow-through. Urinary excretion and radiographic efficacy in rats with intestinal ischemia. 340 8
Although fluid restriction is often used to manage cerebral edema, there have been no controlled studies which demonstrate its benefit. We evaluated the effects of
dehydration
and overhydration on the development of cerebral edema in rats subjected to triethyltin poisoning or anoxic
ischemia
. Four days after triethyltin poisoning, the brains of control rats receiving maintenance hydration had a mean percentage of water of 79.56%;
dehydration
(5% of body weight) and overhydration groups were not statistically different at 79.95% and 79.86%, respectively. Forty-seven hours after an anoxic-ischemic insult consisting of unilateral carotid artery ligation and subsequent exposure to a 4% oxygen atmosphere for 30 min, the percentage of water in control rats was 79.12%;
dehydration
(13% of body weight) and overhydration groups were 79.10% and 79.16%, respectively. Histopathologic analysis of brain sections did not differentiate the hydration groups (triethyltin model only). Thus, cerebral edema was not altered by hydration status in either poisoned or ischemic animals.
...
PMID:Effect of hydration on experimentally induced cerebral edema. 400 97
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