Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Whether induced by infection, inflammation, ischemia, and/or surgical injury, peritoneal adhesions are the leading cause of pelvic pain, bowel obstruction, and infertility. Although some patients develop limited scar tissues, others for unknown reasons develop severe adhesions from seemingly equal procedures. Additionally in the same patient, adhesions develop at one surgical site but not in another. The mechanisms underlying the predisposition to form scars as well as their site specificity are unknown. Because a large number of intraperitoneal surgical procedures are performed each day, many patients are at risk of developing postoperative adhesions. As such, understanding the nature of molecular events and their mechanisms of action is essential, and in the absence of such information, attempts to prevent patients from developing adhesions will remain an empirical process. An unprecedented advancement in surgical techniques have resulted in minimizing peritoneal tissue injury that cause adhesion formation. Increased understanding of the cellular and molecular events that lead to scar tissue formation has also led to the identification of many biologically active molecules with the potential of regulating inflammatory and immune responses, angiogenesis, and tissue remodeling, events that are central to normal peritoneal wound healing and adhesion formation. This article attempts to highlight some of the key molecules (i.e., the transforming growth factor family and its regulatory mechanisms) that are recognized to regulate peritoneal wound repair and adhesion formation. Such understanding of peritoneal biology not only will assist us to better manage patients with adhesions but also will assist those with endometriosis and malignant diseases that affect the peritoneal cavity.
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PMID:TGF-beta system: the principal profibrotic mediator of peritoneal adhesion formation. 1875 7

Menstruation is widely viewed as serving no purpose other than to reinitiate the endometrial cycle in the absence of pregnancy. Yet, it is striking that cyclic endometrial decidualization followed by menstrual shedding is confined to the few species, including human beings, where placenta formation entails deep trophoblast invasion of maternal tissues and its vasculature. Both menstruation and pregnancy are inflammatory conditions that cause a degree of physiological ischemia-reperfusion tissue injury, albeit much more so in pregnancy. Thus, the emergence of cyclic menstruation may not have been an evolutionary coincidence but serves to protect uterine tissues from the profound hyperinflammation and oxidative stress associated with deep placentation, a process known as preconditioning. The concept of menstrual preconditioning provides a novel paradigm for understanding how reproductive disorders impact on pregnancy outcome. For example, endometriosis could be viewed as a disorder of exaggerated menstrual preconditioning that confers protection against placentation-related disorders, such as preeclampsia.
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PMID:A role for menstruation in preconditioning the uterus for successful pregnancy. 1913 85

Primary human endometrial cells were exposed to hypoxia preconditioning (HPC), HPC-hypoxia, and hypoxia conditions, and then endometrial tissue treated with ischemia preconditioning (IPC) was transplanted onto the chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane to investigate the role of slight ischemia of endometrium in the pathologic process of endometriosis. IPC up-regulated vascular endothelial growth factor expression and decreased apoptosis of endometrial cells, thus facilitating the endometrial fragments' ectopic implantation.
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PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor expression up-regulated by endometrial ischemia in secretory phase plays an important role in endometriosis. 2161 86

Angiogenesis or formation of new blood vessels from preexisting vasculature is a key process in some physiological conditions such as wound healing, growth, and action of female reproductive organs. Moreover, disturbance of the mechanisms of physiological angiogenesis has a role in pathogenesis of some diseases in the form of overproliferation of blood vessels such as cancers, psoriasis, arthritis, retinopathies, obesity, asthma, and atherosclerosis or impaired angiogenesis participates in diseases such as heart and brain ischemia, neurodegeneration, hypertension, osteoporosis, respiratory distress, preeclampsia, endometriosis, postpartum cardiomyopathy, and ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. Research and study in angiogenesis provide a potential to cure a variety of diseases such as cancers or cardiovascular diseases. Thus, in recent years, several methods for evaluation of angiogenesis have been introduced and selecting the most appropriate cure is very important. In this article, first, we briefly reviewed appropriate assays to evaluate therapeutic angiogenesis (clinical manipulation of angiogenesis) and its importance during some clinical diseases and then introduced in vitro, in vivo, and ex vivo assays of angiogenesis besides their benefits and disadvantages. Next, some quantitative techniques for assessing angiogenesis have been discussed.
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PMID:A review on angiogenesis and its assays. 2365 39

Objetives: The goal of this study was to determine if systemic and peritoneal oxidative stress biomarkers are related to each other and to retrograde menstruation in endometriosis. Methods: Plasma and peritoneal fluid oxidative stress biomarkers and hemoglobin and erythrocytes in peritoneal fluid as retrograde menstruation indicators, were measured in 28 patients with endometriosis and 23 without endometriosis. Results: In the peritoneal fluid, carbonyls and lipohydroperoxides, indicative of protein and lipid oxidative damage, were higher in endometriosis group (21%, p = 0.016 and 46%, p = 0.009, respectively). However, these biomarkers were not different in the blood plasma of both groups, and only protein dityrosine, was increased in the plasma of endometriosis group (31%, p = 0.04). The peritoneal fluid hemoglobin content was not higher in the endometriosis group, nor related to carbonyls and lipohydroperoxides. Additionally, the peritoneal fluid oxidative biomarkers were not correlated with the blood plasma ones, and only malondialdehyde, and ischemia-modified albumin were almost two times higher in peritoneal fluid. Discussion: Our results show a peritoneal and systemic oxidative stress biomarkers increase in endometriosis, but not related to each other, and do not support the hypothesis of an increase in hemoglobin-iron supply towards the peritoneal cavity that causes oxidative damage.
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PMID:Increased systemic and peritoneal oxidative stress biomarkers in endometriosis are not related to retrograde menstruation. 3122 Oct 43

Stem cell therapy and exosome therapy are the two experimental methods that are now at the center of attention. Various types of stem cells, especially mesenchymal stem cells and spermatogonial stem cells have been widely administrated in reproductive medicine. However, due to the limitation of injecting living cells, using their paracrine secretions such as exosomes seems to be a better option. Exosomes show regenerative, pro-angiogenic, anti-apoptotic, anti-inflammatory, anti-hypoxic, and anti-fibrotic characteristics. They can induce cell proliferation, cell viability, migration, oogenesis, spermatogenesis, capacitation, acrosome reaction, and embryonic implantation. Exosomes have shown promising results in regenerative medicine such as liver fibrosis, stroke, cardiac ischemia, and skin injuries. Exosomes have been used to treat reproductive diseases such as erectile dysfunction and primary ovarian insufficiency. However, the study of exosomes in reproductive medicine is limited. In this article, we are going to review some of the researches on the use of stem cells and exosomes in reproductive medicine and suggest administration of a combination of exosomes for alleviating the symptoms of endometriosis and asthenozoospermia based on previous studies.
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PMID:A review on the stem cell therapy and an introduction to exosomes as a new tool in reproductive medicine. 3290 Jun 39


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