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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Colloidal lanthanum salts have an average particle size of 40 degrees A; consequently, this electron-opaque marker remains extracellular and does not cross the intact plasma membrane. The affinity of lanthanum for calcium-binding sites on mitochondrial membranes makes it possible to demonstrate loss of plasma membrane integrity at the cellular level in ischemic myocardium. Biopsies were obtained from infarcted, marginal and normal areas 3 1/2 hours after
ischemia
was produced in 9 anesthetized closed-chest dogs by electrically induced thrombosis of the left anterior descending coronary artery. The tissue was immediately fixed in 4% glutaraldehyde and 0.1 M cacodylate buffer containing 1.3% La(
NO3
)3, pH 7.4, for 2 hours. In normal control tissue prepared this way the lanthanum tracer, as expected, was confirmed to the extracellular spaces, including, basement membranes, gap junctions and portions of the intercalated discs. Specimens taken near the center of frank infarctions all contained intracellular as well as extracellular lanthanum. Intracellular lanthanum could be seen evenly distributed around lipid droplets and in focal deposits around mitochondria. Only when mitochondria were disrupted did lanthanum gain access to internal sites on mitochondrial membranes. Areas marginal to the infarct contained cells in varying stages of degeneration including many that appeared normal by morphologic criteria alone. Intracellular lanthanum was present in many but not all of the marginal cells in which degenerative changes could be seen. Similarly a few of the cells that appeared morphologically normal contained intracellular lanthanum. The entry of lanthanum into some of these marginal cells and its exclusion from adjacent cells demonstrated that ischemic injury affects the permeability properties of the plasma membrane and independently of other intracellular morphologic changes and that lanthanum can be a sensitive indicator of such alteration in membrane permeability.
...
PMID:Colloidal lanthanum as a marker for impaired plasma membrane permeability in ischemic dog myocardium. 114 60
Peroxynitrite
(ONOO-), the reaction product of superoxide (O2-) and nitric oxide (NO), may be a major cytotoxic agent produced during inflammation, sepsis, and
ischemia
/reperfusion. Bovine Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase reacted with peroxynitrite to form a stable yellow protein-bound adduct identified as nitrotyrosine. The uv-visible spectrum of the peroxynitrite-modified superoxide dismutase was highly pH dependent, exhibiting a peak at 438 nm at alkaline pH that shifts to 356 nm at acidic pH. An equivalent uv-visible spectrum was obtained by Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase treated with tetranitromethane. The Raman spectrum of authentic nitrotyrosine was contained in the spectrum of peroxynitrite-modified Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase. The reaction was specific for peroxynitrite because no significant amounts of nitrotyrosine were formed with nitric oxide (NO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), nitrite (NO2-), or nitrate (
NO3
-). Removal of the copper from the Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase prevented formation of nitrotyrosine by peroxynitrite. The mechanism appears to involve peroxynitrite initially reacting with the active site copper to form an intermediate with the reactivity of nitronium ion (NO2+), which then nitrates tyrosine on a second molecule of superoxide dismutase. In the absence of exogenous phenolics, the rate of nitration of tyrosine followed second-order kinetics with respect to Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase concentration, proceeding at a rate of 1.0 +/- 0.1 M-1.s-1.
Peroxynitrite
-mediated nitration of tyrosine was also observed with the Mn and Fe superoxide dismutases as well as other copper-containing proteins.
...
PMID:Peroxynitrite-mediated tyrosine nitration catalyzed by superoxide dismutase. 141 74
The role of anions in the initiation of
ischemia
- and reperfusion-induced arrhythmias is unknown. We examined the antiarrhythmic effects of isotonic substitution of extracellular Cl- with
NO3
- by using the rat Langendorff preparation (n = 12 per group). During 30 minutes of regional
ischemia
, the incidence of ventricular fibrillation (VF) was reduced from 50% in hearts perfused with control solution (containing a Cl-:
NO3
- ratio of 100:0) to 25%, 0% (p less than 0.05), 0% (p less than 0.05), and 0% (p less than 0.05) by perfusion with solution containing Cl-:
NO3
- ratios of 75:25, 50:50, 25:75, and 0:100, respectively. The incidence of reperfusion-induced VF was also reduced from 58% to 25%, 8% (p less than 0.05), 8% (p less than 0.05), and 0% (p less than 0.05), respectively. Similar effects were produced in hearts reperfused after briefer durations of
ischemia
(10 or 15 minutes). Substitution of
NO3
- for Cl- also facilitated spontaneous termination of VF. Heart rate and occluded zone size were not affected by anion manipulation. Coronary flow was affected by
NO3
-, but changes did not correlate with arrhythmias. During
ischemia
, electrocardiographic changes indicative of class III activity (widening of the ventricular complex) were produced by anion substitution. These changes occurred selectively in the ischemic tissue with no significant influence before
ischemia
onset. However, the relation between this effect and arrhythmia reduction was not linear and a cause-effect relation is therefore unlikely. In separate groups of hearts (n = 12 per group), switching from 100:0 to 0:100 Cl-:
NO3
- solution or vice versa 10 seconds after coronary occlusion or just before reperfusion demonstrated that 1) protection against
ischemia
-induced VF resulted partly from an action in the ischemic zone and partly from an action in the nonischemic zone, and 2) protection against reperfusion-induced VF resulted principally from an action occurring during reperfusion and within the reperfused tissue. To assess whether benefit was offset by deleterious effects on contractile function in nonischemic tissue, we constructed Starling curves in isolated rate hearts. The 0:100 Cl-:
NO3
- solution had no effect on compliance or contractility at physiological end-diastolic pressures but reduced the slope of the peak systolic pressure-volume relation by approximately 20% as end-diastolic pressure was increased above 10 mm Hg. In conclusion, anions appear to play a hitherto unrecognized role in arrhythmogenesis in
ischemia
and reperfusion. Manipulation of anion homeostasis may represent a novel target for antiarrhythmic drug development.
...
PMID:Anion manipulation: a new antiarrhythmic approach. Action of substitution of chloride with nitrate on ischemia- and reperfusion-induced ventricular fibrillation and contractile function. 155 Nov 89
Fetal
ischemia
or hypoxia can lead to cerebral palsy, mental retardation and epilepsy. We propose that the production of nitric oxide and oxygen radicals by neurons when ischemic or hypoxic brain is reperfused may contribute to cerebral injury.
Ischemia
will depolarize neuronal membranes causing the synaptic discharge of the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate, which in turn opens the voltage-dependent, N-methyl-D-aspartic acid-specific glutamate receptor/ionophore, allowing calcium to accumulate in the neuron. Calcium in turn activates an oxygen-dependent neuronal nitric oxide synthetase, which oxidizes arginine to produce nitric oxide (.NO) when oxygen is readmitted to brain by reperfusion. Nitric oxide reacts with the oxygen radical superoxide (O2-), also produced by reperfusion, to form peroxynitrite (ONOO-).
Peroxynitrite
can diffuse for several micrometers before decomposing to form the powerful and cytotoxic oxidants hydroxyl radical and nitrogen dioxide. The hypothesis is consistent with available evidence on the protective action of glutamate antagonists and of oxygen radical scavengers for limiting cerebral infarction following focal
ischemia
.
...
PMID:The double-edged role of nitric oxide in brain function and superoxide-mediated injury. 167 55
The antitumor agent flavone-8-acetic acid (FAA) is remarkable because it induces hemorrhagic necrosis, altered tumor blood flow, and cytokine synthesis. We show here that FAA and structurally related analogues increase plasma nitrite plus nitrate (NO2-/
NO3
-) levels in mice. Dose-dependent increases in plasma NO2-/
NO3
- concentrations, which reached maximum levels at 12 h, were found following administration of FAA. Furthermore, the presence of a palpable s.c. Colon 38 tumor significantly enhanced the response. Tumor-dependent increases were also observed with the active FAA analogues xanthenone-4-acetic acid, 5-methyl XAA, and 5,6-dimethyl XAA, while the inactive analogue 8-methyl XAA failed to increase plasma NO2-/
NO3
- concentrations substantially above basal levels. Increased plasma NO2-/
NO3
- levels were also observed in response to endotoxin (100 micrograms/mouse) and to recombinant human tumor necrosis factor alpha (4 to 16 micrograms/mouse). NO2-/
NO3
- levels may signify nitric oxide production as a result of stimulation of the L-arginine-dependent pathway in activated macrophages. The tumor dependence of the response may reflect the immunological stimulus imposed by tumor implantation. A clear relationship was found between increased plasma NO2-/
NO3
- levels and tumor growth delays induced by FAA and xanthenone-4-acetic acid analogues. It is suggested that nitric oxide may contribute to tumor cell death by two mechanisms, alteration of blood flow contributing to tumor
ischemia
and direct tumor cell killing. Plasma NO2-/
NO3
- concentrations may be a sensitive indication of the antitumor response to this class of compounds.
...
PMID:Tumor-dependent increased plasma nitrate concentrations as an indication of the antitumor effect of flavone-8-acetic acid and analogues in mice. 198 9
To elucidate the critical role of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and nitric oxide in brain injury and systemic circulation during brain
ischemia
, we performed bilateral carotid artery ligation (BCAL) on rats and evaluated the effects of NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) and a long-acting SOD derivative (SMA-SOD). After administration of L-NMMA, specific inhibitor against nitric oxide synthase (NOS), most of BCAL rats died within 6 h while no BCAL rats without L-NMMA died at all. Administration of SMA-SOD exhibited no effect on the life span of BCAL rats. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and microscopic analysis for the ischemic brain revealed that, although administration of L-NMMA showed no significant effect on the ischemic brain of BCAL rats, SMA-SOD effectively prevented the ischemic changes based on permeability edema in the frontal lobe. Measurement of changes in the blood flow of the ischemic brain revealed that administration of L-NMMA decreased the blood flow in the BCAL rats while no remarkable changes were seen after administration of SMA-SOD. Urinary secretion of NO2-/
NO3
-, the metabolites of nitric oxide, was increased by challenging BCAL, and the presence of L-NMMA or SMA-SOD diminished this elevation. Blood pressure was increased by performing BCAL to rats, and administration of L-NMMA showed further elevation of the blood pressure. On the contrary, administration of SMA-SOD decreased post-ischemic hypertension. These results suggest that SOD may play a protective role for brain
ischemia
by suppressing increased vascular permeability, while nitric oxide showed beneficial effect on the ischemic brain by increasing the blood flow in the ischemic brain.
...
PMID:Role of superoxide dismutase and nitric oxide on the interaction between brain and systemic circulation during brain ischemia. 752 76
Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is used increasingly to correct cyanotic heart defects during early infancy, but myocardial dysfunction is often seen after surgical repair. This study evaluates whether starting CPB at a conventional, hyperoxic pO2 causes an "unintentional" reoxygenation (ReO2) injury. We subjected 2-wk-old piglets to ventilator hypoxemia (FIO2 approximately 0.06, pO2 approximately 25 mmHg) followed by 5 min of ReO2 on CPB before instituting cardioplegia. CPB was begun in hypoxemic piglets by either abrupt ReO2 at a pO2 of 400 mmHg (standard clinical practice) or by maintaining pO2 approximately 25 mmHg on CPB until controlling ReO2 with blood cardioplegic arrest. The effects of abrupt vs. gradual ReO2 without surgical
ischemia
(blood cardioplegia) were also compared. Myocardial nitric oxide (NO) production (chemiluminescence measurements of NO2- +
NO3
-) and conjugated diene (CD) generation (spectrophotometric A233 measurements of lipid extracts) using aortic and coronary sinus blood samples were assessed during cardioplegic induction. 30 min after CPB, left ventricular end-systolic elastance (Ees, catheter conductance method) was used to determine cardiac function. CPB and blood cardioplegic arrest caused no functional or biochemical change in normoxic (control) hearts. Abrupt ReO2 caused a depression of myocardial function (Ees = 25 +/- 5% of control). Functional depression was relatively unaffected by gradual ReO2 without blood cardioplegia (34% recovery of Ees), and abrupt ReO2 immediately before blood cardioplegia caused a 10-fold rise in cardiac NO and CD production, with subsequent depression of myocardial function (Ees 21 +/- 2% of control). In contrast, controlled cardiac ReO2 reduced NO production 94%, CD did not rise, and Ees was 83 +/- 8% of normal. We conclude ReO2 injury is related to increased NO production during abrupt ReO2, nullifies the cardioprotective effects of blood cardioplegia, and that controlled cardiac ReO2 when starting CPB to correct cyanotic heart defects may reduce NO production and improve myocardial status postoperatively.
...
PMID:Role of controlled cardiac reoxygenation in reducing nitric oxide production and cardiac oxidant damage in cyanotic infantile hearts. 820 Oct 4
The effect of various oxidants on bovine aortic prostacyclin synthase was tested with 14C-labelled prostaglandin endoperoxide as substrate. No sensitivity against hydrogen peroxide, superoxide or hydroxyl radicals was observed but hypochlorite inhibited with an IC50 value of 7 microM. Among the reactive nitrogen species nitric oxide and nitrogen dioxide radicals were ineffective, but peroxynitrite irreversibly blocked prostacyclin biosynthesis with an IC50 value of 50 nM.
Peroxynitrite
acted within seconds whereas hypochlorite required up to 30 min for completion. Simultaneous generation of nitric oxide and superoxide also caused inhibition which suggested that under pathological conditions like
ischemia
-reperfusion not only the vasodilatory effects of nitric oxide but also those of prostacyclin could be eliminated.
...
PMID:Peroxynitrite formed by simultaneous generation of nitric oxide and superoxide selectively inhibits bovine aortic prostacyclin synthase. 861 27
Peroxynitrite
is a reactive oxidant produced from nitric oxide (NO) and superoxide, which reacts with proteins, lipids, and DNA under conditions of inflammation and shock. Here we overview the role of peroxynitrite in circulatory shock and inflammation. Immunohistochemical and biochemical evidence demonstrate production of peroxynitrite in endotoxic and hemorrhagic shock, chronic bowel inflammation, and in various forms of
ischemia
-reperfusion injury. The reactivity and decomposition of peroxynitrite is determined by the chemical environment, and the ratio of superoxide versus NO.
Peroxynitrite
can initiate toxic oxidative reactions in vitro and in vivo. Initiation of lipid peroxidation, direct inhibition of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes, inactivation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, inhibition of membrane Na+/K+ ATP-ase activity, inactivation of membrane sodium channels, and other oxidative protein modifications contribute to the cytotoxic effect of peroxynitrite. In addition, peroxynitrite is a potent trigger of DNA strand breakage, with subsequent activation of the nuclear enzyme poly-ADP ribosyl synthetase, with eventual severe energy depletion of the cells. Pharmacological evidence suggests that the peroxynitrite-poly-ADP ribosyl synthetase pathway importantly contributes to the cellular injury in endotoxic shock, inflammatory pancreatic islet cell destruction, and central nervous system
ischemia
. The proposal that peroxynitrite is a major cytotoxic mediator would change the interpretation of previous data on the effects of NO donors, NO synthase inhibitors, and superoxide neutralizing strategies in shock and inflammation.
...
PMID:The pathophysiological role of peroxynitrite in shock, inflammation, and ischemia-reperfusion injury. 885 40
Nitric oxide (NO.) has been implicated in the process of cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury. We have examined the production of NO., as reflected by nitrite (NO2-) + nitrate (
NO3
-) accumulation, from synaptosomes isolated from neonatal or adult rat brain and subjected to a period of glucose and oxygen deprivation. There was a significant increase in the amount of NO2- +
NO3
- production from adult synaptosomes under these conditions, whereas there was no difference compared to control in the production of NO2- +
NO3
- from the neonatal synaptosomes. The total antioxidant status of the synaptosomes at these different stages of brain development was found to be the same. These data suggest that the vulnerability of the adult brain to
ischemia
/reperfusion injury may be associated with the production of NO. from nerve terminals. The ratios of antioxidant capacity to NO. production under such conditions have been shown here to be different between the neonatal and adult nerve terminals. Thus the well documented resistance of neonatal brain to
ischemia
/reperfusion injury may involve the neonatal nerve terminal being under less oxidative stress than the adult.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and antioxidant status in glucose and oxygen deprived neonatal and adult rat brain synaptosomes. 889 46
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