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)

The ability of the prostacyclin analogue iloprost to improve survival of ischemic experimental skin flaps was investigated. Unilateral island skin flaps based on the superficial inferior epigastric vessels were raised in 70 rats and subjected to varying lengths of primary ischemia. The flaps were divided into the following four groups: group I, no perfusion washout; group II, postischemic washout with lactated Ringer's solution; group III, postischemic washout with urokinase; and group IV, postischemic washout with iloprost. Flap survival rates for group IV were significantly higher than all other groups (p < 0.05). The primary ischemia time at which 50% of the flaps failed was 8.9 hours for group I, 9.5 hours for group II, 13.3 hours for group III, and 15.3 hours for group IV. This is the first study to investigate the effect of iloprost on skin flap survival. Iloprost was found to be significantly more effective than urokinase in salvaging ischemic experimental skin flaps.
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PMID:Iloprost improves survival of ischemic experimental skin flaps. 752 Feb 20

Gut mucosal ischemia has been associated with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and may contribute to postoperative systemic inflammatory response and multiorgan dysfunction. Hypertonic saline/dextran (HSD) has been previously shown to selectively increase mucosal blood flow in circulatory shock. To determine whether adding HSD to the prime solution for CPB improves gut mucosal blood flow and oxygenation, we performed normothermic, non-cross-clamped CPB in pigs with 1 ml/kg of HSD (25% NaCl/24% dextran 70) (HSD group, n = 9) or lactated Ringer's solution (LRS group, n = 9) as control added to a standard prime. Animals were instrumented with ultrasonic flow probes on the superior mesenteric artery (SMA), laser Doppler mucosal flow probes in the ileum, and indwelling portal vein catheters and tonometers for mucosal hydrogen ion measurements and pH calculations in the stomach, ileum, and rectum. The total infused volume and net fluid balance was significantly lower in the HSD than in the LRS group (649 +/- 171 ml vs 2075 +/- 385 ml and 502 +/- 182 ml vs 1891 +/- 363 ml, respectively, P < 0.01). SMA flow in the LRS group increased to 110-123% of baseline during CPB and was significantly higher than that in the HSD group which remained unchanged. Ileal mucosal blood flow decreased significantly to 70-50% of baseline in both groups with no difference between groups. Gut oxygen (O2) delivery decreased during CPB in both groups, but O2 consumption remained unchanged. Gastric, ileal, and rectal mucosal pH decreased progressively, and portal venous blood pH also decreased in both groups, but there was no significant difference between groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hypertonic saline/dextran for cardiopulmonary bypass reduces gut tissue water but does not improve mucosal perfusion. 752 80

We studied the effects of ATP depletion on neurotransmitter release in the rat brain using the microdialysis method. Ringer's solution containing 2 mM sodium cyanide (NaCN) was perfused into the hippocampus and striatum for 60 min via a microdialysis probe, and changes in serotonin (5-HT) and amino acids (glutamate, aspartate and taurine) levels in dialysates were investigated. NaCN perfusion induced a transient 3.9-fold increase in 5-HT levels in the hippocampal dialysate. Amino acid levels in dialysates also increased during NaCN perfusion, but differently in the striatum and hippocampus (glutamate: 1.3- and 2.4-fold, taurine: 2.3- and 1.3-fold, respectively). Perfusion of Ca(2+)-free Ringer's solution remarkably suppressed the NaCN-induced increase in 5-HT but not the increases in amino acid levels. Depolarization by 100 mM KCl perfusion could induce increases in 5-HT and amino acids in dialysates at 3 hr after NaCN perfusion similarly with that of control. These findings indicate that the sensitivity of nerve terminals to energy failure are different between neurons containing different neurotransmitters and also between brain regions, and suggest that this regionally different sensitivity of amino acid neurons might be involved in the underlying mechanism of the localized vulnerability to transient ischemia.
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PMID:[Increase in extracellular levels of serotonin and amino acids in the rat brain following cyanide-induced energy failure]. 758 27

Taurine (2-aminoethane sulfonic acid) is a physiologic amino acid involved in cellular osmoregulation in various species including man. This study was intended to compare the respective effects of cold storage and consecutive ischemic rewarming of the liver postischemic hepatic flow and hepatocellular outcome upon reperfusion with or without the addition of taurine to the preservation medium. Livers from male Wistar rats were rinsed free of blood via the portal vein and stored ischemically at 4 degrees C in UW solution. Livers from group 1 were then rinsed again with 10 ml Ringer's solution and reperfused with Krebs-Henseleit buffer at a constant pressure of 10 mmHg for 45 min at 37 degrees C in a nonrecirculating manner. Livers from groups 2 and 3 were subjected to 30 min of warm ischemia subsequent to cold storage and prior to reperfusion with 10 mM taurine added to the UW solution in group 3. While there were only very few signs of hepatic injury in group 1, the additional period of warm ischemia (group 2) led to a significant reduction in early perfusate flow and enhanced enzyme leakage from the livers during postischemic rinse and reperfusion. Livers in group 3 exhibited an amelioration in hepatic circulation and significantly reduced enzyme release as compared to group 2. The results clearly demonstrate a remarkable impact of postischemic rewarming on graft viability. Furthermore, the addition of taurine to the preservation medium was shown to improve hepatic circulation and enhance viability of the liver upon reperfusion.
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PMID:Effects of taurine on liver preservation in UW solution with consecutive ischemic rewarming in the isolated perfused rat liver. 762 75

Small bowel transplantation may eventually become the definitive solution for those patients who suffer from irreversible intestinal failure and that currently depend on parenteral nutrition for survival. Microsurgical transplantation models in rats are widely used for the application of a great variety of immunological and physiological tests. Herein we report our experience after 30 intestinal harvestings and 12 intestinal transplantations in rats. The following criteria were established to assess the surgical procedures: operative time (harvesting and back table, cold ischemic time and warm ischemic time), vascular and intestinal complications and gut histology before and after transplantation. Average time for the donor surgery (harvesting and back table) was 97.19 min. Average warm ischemic time (includes vascular anastomoses) was 115 min. Histological assessment after 3, 4 and 5 hours of cold ischemia (lactated Ringer's solution with 2.4% mannitol at 4 degrees C) showed only mild ischemic changes. Two thrombotic complications were observed: one at the site of the portalcava anastomosis and one at the aortic suture. Hypovolemic shock was the most common cause of death (9/12) and there was no survival beyond 48 hours. Post-transplantation gut histology showed moderate ischemic injury. We conclude that the harvesting technique, as well as the preservation method used are adequate to obtain grafts in a fast and reliable fashion. However, the number of rats transplanted in this experience do not permit statistical analysis of morbidity and mortality at the present time.
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PMID:[Small intestine transplantation. Experimental microsurgical model in rats]. 766 Jul 28

Milrinone improves function in failing adult hearts. This study examined its effect on immature myocardium. Using an isolated working neonatal rabbit heart preparation, we measured myocardial function, high-energy compounds, and cyclic adenosine monophosphate. Hearts were subjected to 1 hour of normothermic ischemia, 10 minutes of reperfusion with Ringer's solution, and 30 minutes of reperfusion with either unaltered Ringer's, Ringer's with dobutamine (0.1 microgram/mL), or Ringer's with milrinone (1 microgram/mL). These hearts were compared with each other, with a control group continuously perfused for 70 minutes, and with a group of hearts that were made ischemic and reperfused for only 10 minutes. There was a progressive decline in adenosine triphosphate levels measured in hearts from the groups receiving 10 and 40 minutes of reperfusion with unaltered perfusate, and cardiac output fell to 82% +/- 4% of preischemic control in the latter group. When either dobutamine or milrinone was added to the reperfusion solution, postischemic myocardial function was restored completely, and the loss of adenosine triphosphate with reperfusion was halted. Cyclic adenosine monophosphate level was highest in ischemic/40-minute reperfused hearts, and there was no measurable increase in cyclic adenosine monophosphate level in the group of hearts receiving milrinone. The mechanism of preservation of high-energy stores with inotropic agents is not known but may involve potentiation of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pharmacologic support with high-energy phosphate preservation in the postischemic neonatal heart. 777 22

Post traumatic ischemia appears to be largely involved for the extension of lesions in acute injury of the spinal cord. The present study evaluate the putative improvement of spinal cord blood flow (S.C.B.F.) by calcium channel blocker after acute spinal cord injury in baboons. S.C.B.F. measured by a scannographic technique with 133Xe were realised each thirty min for 4 hours and seven days later; somatosensory evoked potentials (S.E.P.) magnetic resonance imaging (M.R.I.) and histological study of the spine were realised at different time of the experimentation. Ten monkey were used. Acute trauma was achieved by compression of the cord at T1 by applying a 2.10(2) kPa (2 bar) pressure for 5 s with a balloon catheter inflated with Ringer's solution. Then, five monkeys received saline infusion for seven days and the other five received a nimodipine infusion (0.04 mg.kg-1.h-1) during the same time. Nimodipine improved significantly S.C.B.F. Two monkeys in the treated group showed improvement of axonal function as judged by S.E.P. Conversely no significant difference was noted by R.M.I. although the histological study showed smaller lesions in the treated group. Nimodipine could represent in the next years a new medical treatment in acute spinal cord injury in man.
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PMID:[Medical treatment of spinal cord injury during the acute phase. Effect of a calcium inhibitor]. 780 54

The relation between the level of cellular adenine nucleotides and graft viability after cold preservation and warm ischemia was studied by using a rat small-bowel transplantation model. The rat jejunum was preserved in lactated Ringer's solution at 4 degrees C for 120 min, and was then transplanted syngeneically under warm ischemia after between 60 and 180 min. The recovery levels of ATP and the energy charge at 30 min after reperfusion in the viable graft were significantly higher than those in the nonviable graft. None of the grafts were viable when the recovery level of ATP at 30 min after reperfusion was less than 2.8 mumol/g dry weight. These results suggest that the recovery level of ATP at 30 min after reperfusion is a reliable parameter for graft viability in small-bowel transplantation.
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PMID:Adenine nucleotide metabolism in relation to graft viability in rat small-bowel transplantation. 783 88

Oxidized glutathione (GSSG) but not its reduced form (GSH) is taken up by intact myocardial cells, and is rapidly converted into GSH. Reduced glutathione is an important intracellular defense against oxygen-derived free radicals and has been found to enhance calcium sensitivity in skinned cardiac fibers. We have investigated the effects of intravenous GSSG on left ventricular systolic pressure, maximal rate of rise of pressure and regional segment-shortening in dogs subjected to occlusion of the left anterior descending artery for 30 minutes, followed by 45 minutes reperfusion. Starting 10 minutes before reperfusion, the dogs were randomly treated with either GSSG (100 mM, 5 ml/min, n = 5) or Ringer's solution (5 ml/min, n = 5) until 30 minutes of reperfusion. Myocardial blood flow was measured by radioactive microspheres. Infusion of GSSG increased total glutathione content in both ischemic (47 +/- 16 mumol/g protein) and nonischemic myocardium (71 +/- 17 mumol/g protein) as compared to controls (23 +/- 2 mumol/g protein, p < 0.05). In both groups paradoxical wall motion occurred in the ischemic region during occlusion. On reperfusion, regional dyskinesia persisted in controls; while, in glutathione-treated dogs, systolic segment-shortening reached half the baseline values (p < 0.05, treated vs controls, at 15, 30, 45 minutes reperfusion). During ischemia the area of pressure-length loops, obtained from simultaneous recordings of left ventricular pressure and regional segment length, decreased to 30 +/- 7% of baseline in controls and to 40 +/- 18% of baseline in GSSG-treated animals. After 45 minutes reperfusion it was restored to 78 +/- 22% baseline in treated hearts but was still 36 +/- 16 of baseline in controls (p < 0.05). We conclude that infusion of GSSG increases the intracellular stores of glutathione and improves the contractile state of postischemic myocardium.
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PMID:Infusion of oxidized glutathione enhances postischemic segment-shortening in dog hearts. 791 48

Prostanoids such as prostacyclin and thromboxane A2 have recently been suggested to play important roles in cold ischemia/reperfusion injury. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of thromboxane A2 synthetase inhibitor (OKY-046) on cold-stored livers of the rat using an ex vivo perfusion system. Addition of OKY-046 to preservation solution and the perfusate of livers stored cold (4 degrees C) in lactated Ringer's solution resulted in significantly lower glutamic pyruvic transaminase release (3.01 +/- 0.86 IU/g liver vs. 1.79 +/- 1.08 IU/g liver at 120 min after perfusion; P < 0.05), reduced perfusate ammonia levels (8.51 +/- 2.51 micrograms/dl/g liver vs. 3.62 +/- 1.71 micrograms/dl/g liver at 60 min; P < 0.05 and thereafter), lower perfusate taurocholate levels (0.63 +/- 0.10 vs. 0.18 +/- 0.05 at 15 min; P < 0.01 and thereafter), perfusate hyaluronic acid clearance (0.934 +/- 0.132 vs. 0.76 +/- 0.127 at 30 min; P < 0.05 and thereafter), and a reduced number of trypan blue-positive sinusoidal lining cells (50.1 +/- 9.9%; vs. 17.4 +/- 7.0%; P < 0.01). Histologically, the liver preserved for 6 hr in simple cold lactated Ringer's solution exhibited interstitial edema, various degrees of hepatocyte swelling, and sinusoidal stenosis, as well as dilatation, while the livers treated with OKY-046 demonstrated much less hepatocyte swelling, and change in sinusoidal width was nearly absent. We conclude that OKY-046 reduces post-preservation reoxygenation injury by protecting sinusoidal endothelial cells and hepatocytes.
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PMID:Beneficial effect of thromboxane A2 synthetase inhibitor on cold-stored rat liver. 794 Jul 9


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