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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Geriatric patients are preferentially involved in ischemic bowel disease. The sudden occlusion of the large mesenteric arteries (a. mesenterica superior (more frequently) and inferior) is followed by intestinal gangrene and peritonitis with a poor prognosis and a high letality (greater than 90%). In chronic intestinal ischemia the leading clinical symptom is postprandial pain ('claudicatio intestinalis'). In some cases of acute mesenteric artery occlusion no embolus or thrombus will be found. In these cases the circulation in the arteriosclerotic vessels falls below a critical value due to cardiac insufficiency, shock, digitalis overdose and others. In less severe ischemia the mucosa is involved being most sensitive to O2 deprivation. It usually regenerates within a few days. This form is found more frequently in the colon than in other parts of the gut (about 40%): ischemic colitis. The therapy - if possible in acute, fulminant ischemia or if necessary in chronic intestinal ischemia - is surgical consisting in reconstructive procedures of the mesenteric circulation.
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PMID:[Ischemic bowel disease (author's transl)]. 1 31

The response of cerebrospinal fluid pressure to increased arterial carbon dioxide tension was examined in 5 control dogs and 7 dogs with experimental communicating hydrocephalus. The cerebrospinal fluid pressure in control animals only rose to 35 mm Hg after elevation of the arterial CO2 tension. In dogs with experimental communicating hydrocephalus, however, a significant rise of intracranial pressure to 60 mm Hg can be demonstrated. This is accompained by a marked simultaneous decrease of cerebral perfusion pressure in hydrocephalic animals. Progression of communicating hydrocephalus can be explained as damage to the cerebral tissue by increased intracranial pressure waves and by ischemia due to low cerebral perfusion pressure.
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PMID:[Alterations of cerebrospinal fluid pressure in experimental communicating hydrocephalus. Response of CSF-pressure to increased CO2-tension (author's transl)]. 2 69

In open chest dogs up to 8 side branches of the R, circumflexus and descendens were embraced and could selectively be occluded. With a new developed method local myocardial length changes in the ischemic areas, and with H+-sensitive minielectrodes the interstitial H+-activities were measured. All changes which were observed during the 3-30 min lasting coronary artery occlusions (H+-increases to about 500 neq/1, increases of diastolic length, decreases of the contraction amplitude, ST-elevations) returned to preocclusion levels during reperfusion. LVP and dp/dt remained unchanged during ischemia and reperfusion.
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PMID:[Local contractility and acidosis in the ischemic myocardium of the dog (author's transl)]. 2 39

This study evaluated the coronary flow and the internal diameter, pressure, and metabolism of the left ventricle using four different cardiopulmonary bypass techniques. Conditioned dogs underwent a 30-minute stabilizing period on cardiopulmonary bypass with a beating, empty heart (normothermia and a flow of 80 ml/kg/min). They were then fibrillated and subjected to four experiments: Group A (7 dogs)--left ventricular vent, caval tapes open; group B (7 dogs)--left ventricular vent, caval tapes closed; group C (7 dogs)--no vent, caval tapes open; group D (4 dogs)--no vent, caval tapes closed. There was no major difference in any of these variables among Groups A and B (both ventricles vented). Group D (no vent, tapes closed) had significantly increased wall tension, decreased coronary flow, decreased subendocardiac flow, and ischemia. In contrast, Group C dogs (no vent, tapes open) had only a slight increase in left ventricular diameter and pressure, with no change from Group A and B dogs in coronary flow, lactate extraction, hydrogen ion production, or potassium difference. Therefore, venting the fibrillating ventricle, either with or without snaring of the caval tapes, is probably the best method to use during the distal anastomosis in a coronary artery bypass operation. However, if a vent is not used, the caval tapes should be left open to allow complete diversion of the venous blood and decompression of the left ventricle.
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PMID:Is a left ventricular vent necessary during cardiopulmonary bypass? 2 81

A rat gastric chamber preparation was used to determine the interrelations between H+ back diffusion, mucosal blood flow, the area of mucosa treated with bile salts and ulcer formation. The rate of H+ back diffusion was found to be dependent on both mucosal blood flow and the area of mucosa exposed to bile salts. It is concluded that, although H+ back diffusion is a convenient measure of barrier permeability under conditions of normal mucosal blood flow, during mucosal ischemia this parameter fails to reflect permeability because of decreased mucosal clearance of H+. These findings would explain apparent controversy whereby ulceration occurs under shock conditions in the absence of apparent H+ back diffusion.
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PMID:Interactions of gastric blood flow, barrier breaker, and hydrogen ion back diffusion during ulcer formation in the rat. 2 80

Antianginal drugs were evaluated on the basis of their ability to protect against subepicardial electrogram changes induced by local ventricular ischemia in anesthetized dogs. Sch 11973 [N-(2-phenylisopropyl)-N-p-toluene sulfonyl urea], a potential new antianginal agent, was also effective against local ventricular ischemia with its maximum effect appearing at 1mg/kg, i.v. or i.d. and with a duration of at least 2 hours. Nitroglycerin, at a dose of 0.04 mg/kg given bucally, exerted less protection, lasting on the average less than 15 minutes. Protection by propranolol at 1 mg/kg, i.v., was not better than nitroglycerin, but lasted up to one hour, while dipyridamole was ineffective when given in a dose range of 0.1-10 mg/kg, i.v. Sch 11973 differed from standard antianginal agents which may act via beta-adrenergic blocking activity or alteration of cardiac or circulatory dynamics since no acute pharmacological changes were observed after Sch 11973 was administered.
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PMID:Pharmacology of Sch 11973, N-(2-phenylisopropyl)-N-p-toluene sulfonyl urea, a potential new antianginal agent. 2 76

Muscle pH has been used to assess the perfusion of the muscles at the site of below knee amputation in 20 patients having ischemia at the periphery. The results show that a muscle pH above 7.0 did not correlate with the outcome of amputation but that, when the pH was below 7.00, healing was never achieved.
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PMID:Muscle perfusion and the healing of below knee amputations. 2 98

Recent studies are reviewed on the etiology of primary dysmenorrhea as well as on proper treatment, based on physiology, of this disorder. These studies suggested that increased endometrial prostaglandin production and release may cause dysmenorrhea. Since prostaglandins cause myometrial contractility, then if production and release of prostaglandins are excessive, uterine ischemia and pain result. Studies of therapeutic value of prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors show good results; agents such as indomethacin and the fenamates inhibit the synthesis of prostaglandin through the synthetase system as well as antagonize prostaglandins' conventional action at the cell receptor level. Other more conventional forms of therapy for dysmenorrhea have also garnered good results, these include ingestion of oral contraceptives and dilatation of the cervix, and their effectiveness can be explained partly on the basis of a reduced level of prostaglandins in the menstrual fluid. The need for further evaluation of antiprostaglandin compounds is promoted.
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PMID:New concepts in dysmenorrhea. 2 21

Histopathological observations on the conduction system of the heart were carried out in three cases of panarteritis nodosa. This specialized tissue was involved in each case secondary to ischemia and/or periarterial extension of the inflammatory process affecting the nutrient arteries of the conducting system. The high risk of disturbances in impulse formation and conduction in patients with panarteritis is emphasized as well as the need for appropriate clinical investigation (protracted cardiac monitoring and control by catheter recording and stimulation) in order to secure early detection and prevention of life-threatening arrhythmias.
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PMID:Involvement of the cardiac conducting system in panarteritis nodosa. 2 14

This study explores the use of both histamine H(1)- and H(2)-receptor antagonists in two different forms of circulatory shock and suggests that histamine may be involved in more than one way in the pathophysiology of circulatory shock. Various single doses of diphenhydramine, chlorpheniramine, promethazine, and burimamide were administered intravenously to Wistar rats subjected to hemorrhagic or bowel ischemia shock. Cumulative survival and mortality, as well as arterial blood pressures and microhematocrits, were monitored. Pretreatment of the animals with the three different H(1)-receptor antagonists exerted significant protection against both forms of shock. Rats pretreated with the H(2)-receptor antagonist, burimamide, demonstrated an exacerbated mortality after induction of shock. Animals pretreated with H(1)-receptor antagonists showed significantly higher mean arterial blood pressure, greater compensatory rebound of blood pressure after induction of shock, and greater responses to transfusion after hemorrhage than control, shocked animals. Similarly, rats pretreated with the H(1)-receptor blockers demonstrated significantly greater compensatory hemodilution which continued late in shock. In marked contrast, rats pretreated with burimamide exhibited opposite effects after hemorrhage and bowel ischemia, i.e., significant falls in blood pressure, lack of compensatory rebound and response to transfusion of shed blood, and a progressive hemoconcentration. This report clearly demonstrates beneficial actions of histamine H(1)-receptor antagonists and detrimental effects of H(2)-receptor antagonists on survival and other parameters in these forms of circulatory shock.
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PMID:Beneficial and detrimental actions of histamine H1- and H2-receptor antagonists in circulatory shock. 2 17


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