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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Apoptosis (programmed cell death) is a distinct form of controlled cell degeneration, different from necrosis. It serves multiple physiological functions, such as the control of cell numbers during development, the maintenance of tissue homeostasis and the deletion of abnormal cells. Apoptosis has unique morphological and biochemical features, especially at the nuclear level, in keeping with the idea of the active participation of the cell in its own demise. Gene regulation of apoptosis shows variability among different tissues, particularly regarding the signals that trigger cell death, but shares an effector phase highly conserved accross species. In the nervous system, genes have been identified which either i) promote apoptosis: Bax, Bcl-xS, c-fos, c-jun, p75NGFR and ICE-like proteases, or ii) block apoptosis: Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL. In addition, availability of trophic factors and expression of Trk membrane receptors allow for the fine adjustement of viable cells in each neuronal population. In some diseases, neuron loss takes place via apoptosis, whether exclusively or associated with necrosis, especially when cellular insults are of moderate intensity or death occurs in areas of the brain adjacent to necrotic foci. This has been shown in excitotoxicity, X-ray injury and hypoxia-
ischemia
. Activation of apoptosis occurs also in some neurodegenerative diseases.
Infantile spinal muscular atrophy
can be the first example of a pediatric hereditary disease where a deletion in the gene of a protein which inhibits neuron apoptosis has a pathogenic role. Last, some central nervous system infections produce abnormal activation of apoptosis.
...
PMID:[Apoptosis in the nervous system]. 897 37
Splanchnic
ischemia
-reperfusion (I/R) causes tissue hypoxia that triggers local and systemic microcirculatory inflammatory responses. We evaluated the effects of hyperoxia in I/R induced by 40-min superior mesenteric artery (SMA) occlusion and 120-min reperfusion in four groups of rats: 1) control (anesthesia only), 2) sham operated (all surgical procedures without vascular occlusion; air ventilation), 3)
SMA I
/R and air, 4)
SMA I
/R and 100% oxygen ventilation started 10 min before reperfusion. Leukocyte rolling and adhesion in mesenteric microvessels, pulmonary microvascular blood flow velocity (BFV), and macromolecular (FITC-albumin) flux into lungs were monitored by intravital videomicroscopy. We also determined pulmonary leukocyte infiltration.
SMA I
/R caused marked decreases in mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) and blood flow to the splanchnic and hindquarters vascular beds and pulmonary BFV and shear rates, followed by extensive increase in leukocyte rolling and adhesion and plugging of >50% of the mesenteric microvasculature.
SMA I
/R also caused marked increase in pulmonary sequestration of leukocytes and macromolecular leak with concomitant decrease in circulating leukocytes. Inhalation of 100% oxygen maintained MABP at significantly higher values (P < 0.001) but did not change regional blood flows. Oxygen therapy attenuated the increase in mesenteric leukocyte rolling and adherence (P < 0.0001) and maintained microvascular patency at values not significantly different from sham-operated animals. Hyperoxia also attenuated the decrease in pulmonary capillary BFV and shear rates, reduced leukocyte infiltration in the lungs (P < 0.001), and prevented the increase in pulmonary macromolecular leak (P < 0.001), maintaining it at values not different from sham-operated animals. The data suggest that beneficial effects of normobaric hyperoxia in splanchnic I/R are mediated by attenuation of both local and remote inflammatory microvascular responses.
...
PMID:Effects of hyperoxia on local and remote microcirculatory inflammatory response after splanchnic ischemia and reperfusion. 1271 29
Splanchnic
ischemia
/reperfusion (I/R) induces a systemic inflammatory response with acute lung injury. Impaired production of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) plays a key role in this process. We evaluated the effects of early treatment with inhaled NO (iNO) on lung microcirculatory inflammatory changes during splanchnic I/R. I/R was induced in rats by occlusion of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA; 40 min) and reperfusion (90 min). Four groups were studied: Control, anesthesia only; Sham, all surgical procedures without I/R, ventilated with air; Air,
SMA I
/R, ventilation with air; and NO,
SMA I
/R, ventilation with NO (20 ppm) starting 10 min before reperfusion. Intravital video microscopy was used to monitor pulmonary macromolecular flux and capillary flow velocity (CFV). Leukocyte infiltration was determined by morphometry.
SMA I
/R decreased mean arterial blood pressure, capillary CFV (P < 0.01), and shear rate (P < 0.01), and increased pulmonary macromolecular leak by 138% +/- 8% (P < 0.001). iNO markedly attenuated the increase in macromolecular leak (P < 0.01), blunted the decrease in capillary CFV (P < 0.05) and shear rate (P < 0.05), and prevented the increase in leukocyte infiltration of the lungs after
SMA I
/R (P < 0.05). The direct, real-time, in vivo data suggest that early institution of low-dose iNO therapy effectively ameliorates the acute remote pulmonary inflammatory response after splanchnic I/R.
...
PMID:Effects of inhaled nitric oxide on lung injury after intestinal ischemia-reperfusion in rats. 1566 30