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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To examine the influence of preexistent diabetes mellitus on left ventricular performance and coronary blood flow responses to acute
ischemia
, mild normoglycemic diabetes was induced in nine mongrel dogs after three doses of alloxan, (20 mg/kg, iv), at monthly intervals. Hemodynamic measurements and coronary blood flow (85Kr clearance) were obtained before and after the onset of
ischemia
. This was produced by occlusion of the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery via a balloon-type catheter in nine intact anesthetized diabetic dogs and 10 nondiabetic dogs. During the 1st hour of
ischemia
in the diabetic group, the end-diastolic pressure rose from 7 +/- 1.1 (mean +/- SE) mm Hg to 23.8 +/- 2.3 without a significant increase of end-diastolic volume. In controls end-diastolic pressure rose from 8.6 +/- 1.1 mm Hg to 15.3 +/- 1.4, and end-diastolic volume was significantly increased, so that the ratio of end-diastolic pressure and volume was significantly higher in the diabetic group (P less than 0.005). Although indices of contractility did not differ, stroke volume and work reductions were significantly greater in diabetics, despite the fact that coronary blood flow was reduced to a similar extent. Size of the ischemic areas appeared comparable as judged by distribution of dye injected distal to the occlusion. Since potassium loss and sodium gain in the inner and outer layers of ischemic tissue did not differ between the two groups, the intensity of
ischemia
seemed similar. Glycogenolysis was unimpaired in the diabetic ischemic muscle but triglyceride levels remained elevated. Morphologically the diabetic myocardium was characterized by a diffuse accumulation of periodic acid-Schiff-positive
glycoprotein
in the interstitium, which was thought to limit diastolic filling of the ischemic ventricle and to contribute to the substantial reduction of ventricular performance.
...
PMID:Myocardial function and coronary blood flow response to acute ischemia in chronic canine diabetes. 87 Feb 38
Sulfated
glycoprotein
-2 (SGP-2) is emerging as a prominent marker of neurodegeneration in mammalian brain. Regulation of brain SGP-2 was studied in adult male Wistar rats subjected to 30 min of forebrain
ischemia
by four vessel occlusion. By 3 days after the ischemic insult, SGP-2 RNA levels were increased two fold in caudate nucleus and hippocampus. SGP-2 protein levels assessed by immunoblots were markedly increased in both brain regions following
ischemia
. GFAP RNA levels also increased over 5 fold in caudate nucleus and hippocampus following the ischemic insult. Despite significant elevations in GFAP RNA, protein levels of GFAP assessed by immunoblot were only marginally affected. The elevated expression of SGP-2 in rodent brain following this and other experimental lesion paradigms (e.g., excitotoxic lesions, deafferentation) suggest some general involvement of SGP-2 in neurodegeneration and remodelling following neuronal injury.
...
PMID:Sulfated glycoprotein-2 expression increases in rodent brain after transient global ischemia. 127 48
Endothelial dysfunction, as evidenced by decreased stimulated release of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), occurs after reperfusion of the ischemic myocardium. To better understand this endothelial dysfunction, isolated cat hearts were perfused under constant flow by the Langendorff procedure with Krebs-Henseleit solution devoid of blood cells. Following global
ischemia
(90 minutes) and reperfusion (20 minutes), coronary vasorelaxation to the endothelium-dependent vasodilator acetylcholine (ACh) was 70 +/- 3% of initial values (p less than 0.01) compared with 90 +/- 4% in nonischemic control perfused hearts. No decrement occurred in response to the endothelium-independent vasodilator nitroglycerin (NTG). Coronary artery rings isolated from the ischemic left circumflex coronary artery showed a similar degree of endothelial dysfunction to ACh, with normal relaxation in response to NaNO2. Autologous cat neutrophils (100 million cells), activated with 100 nmol/L f-met-leu-phe infused into the heart directly before and throughout reperfusion, resulted in a further decrement in ACh-induced vasodilation, to 55 +/- 5% of initial response, with no effect on NTG-induced vasodilation. Similar results were obtained with coronary artery rings isolated from perfused cat hearts and exposed to neutrophils. This neutrophil-enhanced endothelial dysfunction was inhibited by human superoxide dismutase as well as by an antibody to the adherence
glycoprotein
complex CD-18 (i.e., MAbR 15.7). Therefore endothelial dysfunction occurs initially upon reperfusion of the previously ischemic heart and is aggravated by superoxide radicals produced by activated neutrophils.
...
PMID:Activated neutrophils aggravate endothelial dysfunction after reperfusion of the ischemic feline myocardium. 824 14
Ischemic injury is characterized by neutrophil (PMN)--endothelial cell adhesion and diapedesis associated with thromboxane (TX) generation. Neutrophil-endothelial cell interaction is regulated in part by the leukocyte adhesion receptor CD 18
glycoprotein
complex and the endothelial intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1). This study tests the role of TX in
ischemia
-induced diapedesis and evaluates whether the diapedesis is regulated by neutrophil or endothelial adhesion receptors. Plasma derived from rabbit hind limbs made ischemic for 3 hours (n = 6) and reperfused for 10 minutes had increased levels of TXB2 3,450 pg/ml, which was higher than sham rabbit (n = 6) values of 653 pg/ml (p less than 0.05). When introduced into abraded skin chambers placed on the dorsum of other normal rabbits (n = 6), this ischemic plasma induced 1,000 pg/ml of new TX synthesis and diapedesis of 1,235 PMN/mm3. The total TX concentration and PMN accumulations in blister fluid were correlated (r = 0.88, p less than 0.05). In contrast, sham rabbit plasma induced no TX synthesis and diapedesis of only 77 PMN/mm3 (p less than 0.05). Administration of 50 ng/ml of authentic TXB2 into blisters induced an accumulation of 453 PMN/mm3, which was higher than that in saline controls (18 PMN/mm3) (p less than 0.05). Pretreatment of normal rabbits used for the diapedesis assay (n = 4) with the TX synthetase inhibitor OKY 046 (2 mg/kg/hr) limited ischemic plasma and authentic TXB2 induced diapedesis to 142 and 76 PMN/mm3, respectively (both p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Thromboxane mediates diapedesis after ischemia by activation of neutrophil adhesion receptors interacting with basally expressed intercellular adhesion molecule-1. 167 29
Activated leukocytes appear to be directly involved in ischemic central nervous system injury. A surface
glycoprotein
(CD18) on the leukocyte is required for endothelial adherence and subsequent function and can be blocked with leukocyte adhesion antibody treatment. We used two animal models to determine the efficacy of anti-CD18 antibody treatment in preserving neurologic function after central nervous system
ischemia
. We gave a dose of 1 mg/kg anti-CD18 to treatment rabbits 30 minutes before inducing irreversible
ischemia
in the brain with intraarterial microspheres or in the spinal cord using reversible aortic occlusion. Treatment with anti-CD18 produced a significant reduction in neurologic deficits in the reversible spinal cord model, but not in the irreversible microsphere model. This protective effect supports the active role of leukocytes in central nervous system reperfusion ischemic injury and offers potential for future therapy.
...
PMID:Reduction of central nervous system ischemic injury in rabbits using leukocyte adhesion antibody treatment. 167 19
The effect of
ischemia
on hepatic protein synthesis during sepsis is not known, but is of clinical relevance, since hepatic blood flow decreases during the late phase of sepsis. In this study, synthesis of acute-phase proteins was measured in perfused livers of rats 16 hours after sham operation or cecal ligation and puncture. Livers from each group had 45 minutes of complete
ischemia
or control perfusion. Protein synthesis was measured during two hour perfusion after the
ischemia
or control period, by determining incorporation of 3H-leucine into total secreted trichloracetic acid precipitated proteins, immunoprecipitated complement component C3 and albumin and phosphotungstenate-precipitated alpha 1-acid
glycoprotein
. Lactate, glutamine-oxalacetic transaminase (GOT) and glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (GPT) levels in the perfusate were measured during preischemic and postischemic perfusion. Tissue glutathione levels were measured at the end of the perfusion. Synthesis of alpha 1-acid
glycoprotein
was increased by 100 per cent and albumin synthesis decreased by 46 per cent in septic livers, consistent with an acute-phase response and apparent downregulation of albumin synthesis during early sepsis. Synthesis rates were reduced by 50 to 60 per cent after
ischemia
in perfused livers from sham operated rats and 70 to 80 per cent in livers from septic rats. Hepatic production of interleukin-1 was not different between the groups during perfusion. GOT and GPT levels increased significantly during
ischemia
of both nonseptic and septic livers and rapidly returned toward baseline during reperfusion. Lactate levels were higher in perfusate of septic than of nonseptic livers before
ischemia
and increased further during
ischemia
. The results suggest that
ischemia
inhibits production of secreted hepatic proteins similarly in nonseptic and septic livers, but perhaps to a slightly greater extent in septic livers.
...
PMID:Effect of ischemia on protein synthesis in the septic liver. 170 61
Glucocorticoids are potent anti-inflammatory agents which affect cell growth and migration in a wide variety of systems and have profound effects on monocytes, decreasing their circulating number as well as inhibiting their accumulation at sites of inflammation and injury. Although the mechanisms by which glucocorticoids regulate gene induction have been established, the mechanisms by which they inhibit inflammation or cell growth and migration have yet to been determined. JE is one of the most abundant genes induced by platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) in vitro and is also induced in vivo in response to
ischemia
or injury. JE encodes a low molecular weight
glycoprotein
that functions in part as a monocyte chemotactic factor and thus may be important in recruiting monocytes to sites of tissue injury and/or inflammation. We report that glucocorticoids block the induction of JE mRNA by serum or PDGF in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells. The effect of glucocorticoids appears largely due to destabilization of JE mRNA and has specificity for JE, in that other "early" PDGF-inducible genes are not inhibited by glucocorticoids. The effect of glucocorticoids also occurs in vivo: methyl prednisolone blocks the constitutive expression and inhibits the
ischemia
-induced elevation of JE mRNA levels in rat kidneys. The inhibition of JE mRNA accumulation by glucocorticoids may be related to the anti-inflammatory effects of these agents and defines JE as a member of what may be a group of PDGF-inducible genes that are responsive to corticosteroids.
...
PMID:In vivo and in vitro inhibition of JE gene expression by glucocorticoids. 193 62
Tissue injury resulting from
ischemia
and reperfusion forms the basis of several important disorders including myocardial infarction, stroke, and circulatory shock. To examine the role of neutrophils in this process and to determine the extent to which injury is a consequence of reperfusion, we utilized the monoclonal antibody 60.3, directed to CD18, the human leukocyte adherence
glycoprotein
, to block intravascular neutrophil aggregation and neutrophil adherence to endothelium in a rabbit model of tissue
ischemia
and reperfusion. Antibody treatment either before
ischemia
or after
ischemia
, but prior to reperfusion, resulted in the same degree of significant protection against endothelial, microvascular, and tissue injury. We conclude that neutrophils and increased neutrophil adhesiveness are important in the development of microvascular and tissue injury after
ischemia
and reperfusion and that under these circumstances, injury is primarily a consequence of reperfusion.
...
PMID:Inhibition of leukocyte adherence by anti-CD18 monoclonal antibody attenuates reperfusion injury in the rabbit ear. 196 37
Neutrophils and eicosanoid chemoattractants are centrally involved with
ischemia
-reperfusion (I/R) injury. The CD 18 complex of adhesive glycoproteins, readily up-regulated by chemoattractants in vitro, is required for polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) adherence to endothelium. This study tests whether CD 18 is up-regulated by
ischemia
in vivo and its role in mediating PMN diapedesis. Anesthetized rabbits underwent 3 h of bilateral hindlimb tourniquet
ischemia
(n = 16). Ten min after tourniquet release, levels of plasma leukotriene (LT)B4 increased to 390 +/- 62 pg/ml (mean +/- SE), higher than 134 +/- 26 pg/ml in control rabbits (n = 13, p less than 0.01). Aliquots of plasma were added to whole blood from normal rabbits (n = 6) for flow cytometric analysis of neutrophils with the CD 18 mAb R 15.7. Addition of I/R plasma failed to demonstrate an increase in surface expression of CD 18. Similarly, no CD 18 up-regulation was observed in vivo upon reperfusion in ischemic animals pretreated with mAb R 15.7 (n = 3). However, I/R plasma when introduced into plastic chambers taped atop dermabrasion sites in normal rabbits (n = 12) resulted in diapedesis, measured by the accumulation after 3 h of 1130 +/- 125 PMN/mm3 in the chambers relative to 120 +/- 31 PMN/mm3 with control plasma (p less than 0.01). Diapedesis in response to I/R plasma was abolished by pretreatment with mAb R 15.7 (less than 5 PMN/mm3, n = 6), was reduced by U 75,302, an LTB4 receptor antagonist (253 +/- 101 PMN/mm3, n = 6) (both p less than 0.01) and was not protein synthesis dependent. These results demonstrate that PMN diapedesis in response to I/R plasma is exclusively dependent upon the CD 18
glycoprotein
complex by an LTB4-dependent mechanism, despite the fact that CD 18 is not up-regulated on circulating PMN in
ischemia
. These data indirectly indicate the functional importance of conformational changes of CD 18 in determining PMN adhesion.
...
PMID:Neutrophil adherence receptors (CD 18) in ischemia. Dissociation between quantitative cell surface expression and diapedesis mediated by leukotriene B4. 197 61
The activation and accumulation of leukocytes during inflammatory processes such as that initiated by myocardial ischemia and reflow appear to be major determinants of irreversible tissue injury. Myocardial salvage by dual cyclooxygenase/lipoxygenase inhibitors and selective 5-lipoxygenase inhibitors has suggested a role for lipoxygenase (LOX) products, such as the potent chemotactic factor leukotriene B4, in
ischemia
-reflow injury. However, many LOX inhibitors are antioxidants and several have been shown to directly inhibit neutrophil function in vitro, thereby questioning the role of LOX products in reperfusion injury. To clarify further the protective mechanism of lipoxygenase inhibitors, we have examined the effects of two nonantioxidant inhibitors, SK&F 86002 and REV-5901, on human neutrophil activation and function in vitro. The antioxidant LOX inhibitor nordihydroguiaretic acid, which served as a positive control, exhibited a concentration-dependent inhibition of N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP) and recombinant C5a-induced neutrophil bipolarization, fMLP-induced upregulation of the adherence
glycoprotein
Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18), fMLP-induced aggregation and neutrophil adherence to and migration through interleukin-1-stimulated human endothelial monolayers. In contrast, neither SK&F 86002 nor REV-5901 (in concentrations up to 50 microM) had any effect on these functions, nor did they inhibit neutrophil oxidative metabolism (phorbol myristate acetate-induced chemiluminescence). Inasmuch as both of these agents have been observed to reduce myocardial ischemia-reflow injury in vivo, their failure to directly inhibit neutrophil function further supports an important role for chemotactic LOX products in the pathogenesis of reperfusion injury.
...
PMID:Comparison of antioxidant and nonantioxidant lipoxygenase inhibitors on neutrophil function. Implications for pathogenesis of myocardial reperfusion injury. 215 49
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