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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An acute circulatory renal failure (ARF) was induced in 18 rabbits by temporary
ischemia
of the remaining kidney 8 days after unilateral nephrectomy and subcuteaneous autotransplantation of renomedullary tissue.--Mortality in the postischemic course was 50% in treated animals but 100% in the control group (n = 18) without autotransplantation. In the postischemic period plasma
urea
concentration was significantly lower (p smaller than 0.005) in the surviving transplanted animals and excretion of sodium and water significantly higher (p smaller than 0.005) as compared with the control group. Plasma renin values which were significantly lower than thos of the control(p smaller than 0.005) had decreased significantly even as compared with the initial values. These results indicate that hormonal substances are produced in interstitial cells of renomedullary autotransplants exerting a distinct protective effect against experimental acute renal failure. Decreased plasma renin activity may point to an inhibition of circulating and/or intrarenal renin by lipids originating from the transplants. Changes in sodium and water excretion indicate effects of circulating prostaglandins
...
PMID:Experimental oliguric acute renal failure: protective effects of renomedullary autotransplants. 109 74
Tetrodotoxin has been reported to cause prolonged systemic hypotension without resultant ischemic damage. We tested its ability to protect the kidney during 60 minutes of warm
ischemia
in uninephrectomized rats. Protection was observed when tetrodotoxin was given intravenously at two microgram./kg. and four microgram./kg. as assessed by serial plasma blood
urea
nitrogen and creatinine measurements over two weeks. Tetrodotoxin was protective when given immediately before or immediately after the ischemic period. The renal protection of tetrodotoxin was not due to its effects on renal nerves as renal denervation did not protect the kidney from the ischemic damage. The renal protective effects of four microgram. tetrodotoxin/kg. were similar to those of four mg. captopril/kg. but the combination of the two was paradoxically without effect. We tested whether tetrodotoxin and captopril chemically antagonized each other, but in the presence of tetrodotoxin, captopril was still a potent inhibitor of the conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II. These results indicate that tetrodotoxin could be useful in elucidating the sequence of events associated with ischemic-reperfusion renal injury and in identifying ways of preserving renal function during renal surgery.
...
PMID:Tetrodotoxin protects against acute ischemic renal failure in the rat. 131 Jan 25
Ubiquitin-protein conjugates in the hippocampus were analyzed by immunoblotting with a monoclonal anti-ubiquitin antibody. In the CA1 region, Triton X-100 insoluble ubiquitin-protein conjugates increased after 24 hr following 20 min of
ischemia
. When the total hippocampi were fractionated subcellularly, ubiquitin-protein conjugates increased in the particulate, especially in the mitochondrial fraction. The ubiquitin-protein conjugates were solubilized by SDS, or were partially solubilized by
urea
. The results indicate that insoluble ubiquitin-protein conjugates increase after
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Subcellular distribution of ubiquitin-protein conjugates in the hippocampus following transient ischemia. 132 64
Triton X-100-, digitonin- and
urea
-insoluble ubiquitin conjugates (UC) in the mitochondrial fractions of the gerbil cortex and hippocampus were analysed. In the cortex, following 5 min of forebrain
ischemia
, UC increased at 30 min of reperfusion and returned to the control level at 24 h. Although chronological changes in UC in the hippocampus were similar to the cortex, a more sustained increase of UC was observed. Immunoblot analysis showed that UC above 50 kDa increased in both regions. The results indicate that insoluble UC increase in the early recovery stage after ischemic neuronal damages.
...
PMID:Post-transient ischemia increase in ubiquitin conjugates in the early reperfusion. 132 67
Renal function and morphology were studied before and after 60 min of renal ischemia and contralateral nephrectomy in two groups of rabbits. The animals were pretreated with ginsenosides (n = 22) and saline (n = 22) respectively, the latter as control. Results showed that ginsenosides (30 mg/kg body wt.) pretreatment by intravenous injection 10 min before warm
ischemia
resulted in the survival of all the animals with better renal function, 1, 3 and 7 days after blood
urea
nitrogen, fraction of excreted sodium and urine protein were observed in the control rabbits and a less pronounced increase was noted (P less than 0.05) after pretreatment with ginsenosides. The appearance of kidney tissue taken from surviving rabbits with Ginsenosides pretreatment was found to be normal under light microscope. Severe tubular necrosis was observed in kidneys of the control group. Tissues were examined with a transmission electron microscope. ginsenosides have protective effects on the epithelial cells of the proximal convoluted tubules, and microvilli and mitochondria were less damaged by
ischemia
than those of the control animals. There was also a large amount of ribosome on rough surfaced endoplasmic reticulum in the cells of ginsenosides-treated kidney, reflecting their ability to stimulate ribonucleic acid and protein synthesis. This is considered to be the basis of improvement of renal function.
...
PMID:[Protective effects of ginsenosides on warm ischemic damages of the rabbit kidney]. 132 38
The spin-trapping agent alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butyl nitrone (PBN) reduced the
ischemia
-reperfusion induced acute renal failure in the rat. Renal ischemia was produced in unilateral nephrectomized rats by complete occlusion of the left renal artery for 60 min. Perfusion of the kidney was then reestablished, and the rats were sacrificed 48 h later. PBN (100 mg/kg i.p.) administered 30 min prior to renal artery occlusion significantly reduced the increase in serum creatinine and
urea
and renal failure index, as well as the decrease in urine/plasma creatinine ratio and creatinine clearance compared to saline-injected ischemic rats. PBN injected to control rats had no effect on these parameters. These data support the hypothesis of an involvement of reactive free radicals in the pathogenesis of
ischemia
-reperfusion induced acute renal failure in the rat and suggest that PBN may be a useful agent for the prevention of renal ischemia-reperfusion damage.
...
PMID:Ischemia-reperfusion induced acute renal failure in the rat is ameliorated by the spin-trapping agent alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butyl nitrone (PBN). 146 97
In order to evaluate the role of nifedipine in the nephrotoxic effect induced by both
ischemia
and CyA, 18 healthy mongrel dogs were used. The kidneys were exposed and subjected to 1 h of
ischemia
by clamping both renal vessels. To the renal artery of the first group of kidneys (n = 9), 300 mL of cold Euro-Collins solution, in which nifedipine (Bay a 1040-10 mg) was diluted, was infused for 15 min (nifedipine group), while 300 mL of cold Euro-Collins solution plus 10 mg of placebo (Bay a 1040-placebo) was infused to the renal artery of the second group (n = 9) of kidneys (placebo group). Venous drainage was effected through a plastic cannula. All animals received through a nasogastric catheter 20 mg/kg cyclosporine A at the beginning of the
ischemia
. The 1 h of
ischemia
was divided in a 15-min period of cold
ischemia
and 45-min of warm
ischemia
, at the end of which the clamps were removed. During the 2 h (30 min x 4) after reperfusion, 10 mg of nifedipine and placebo was administered additionally by a peripheral vein to the nifedipine and the placebo group, respectively. Then the kidneys were removed for histological study. Urine volume and creatinine and
urea
clearances of the nifedipine group were significantly higher than the placebo group (p < 0.001) while TxB2 levels were higher in the placebo group in all studied periods (p < 0.001). Urine sodium, FENa, osmolar clearance, and LDH values were significantly different (p < 0.01), but the urine potassium concentration was not different in the two groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Reduction of CyA nephrotoxicity by nifedipine during and after experimental in situ renal preservation. 146 99
This study compared the function of reduced grafts prepared in situ or ex vivo and transplanted immediately or after 4 hr of cold storage. Measurements of acid/base balance, plasma electrolytes, albumin, and
urea
showed no differences between groups. There was no difference between the increase and decline of plasma AST in recipients of grafts transplanted immediately after either ex vivo or in situ reduction; the increase in plasma AST of recipients of stored grafts was up to 10-fold and persisted until the end of the study at 7 days, with some decline. Plasma fibrinogen decreased intraoperatively but levels were restored within 24 hr in all groups; plasma prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times were not significantly disturbed. The patterns of decline and return of tissue adenine nucleotides were similar in all groups. While the regenerative response measured by tissue thymidine kinase and mitotic figures was not different between the groups, comparison with results from a group of partially hepatectomized animals showed a 3-4-fold depression in response in reduced liver grafts. The contributions of the effects of
ischemia
, flushing, and preservation to the depressed regenerative response of reduced liver grafts need to be determined. The present studies suggest however, that with regard to functional assessment, results are not affected either by ex vivo or in situ reduction of the graft, or by cold storage for 4 hr.
...
PMID:Ex vivo versus in situ resection of segmental liver grafts in pigs--a comparison in immediate and four-hour-stored grafts. 158 63
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is now accepted as an important cause of chronic active gastritis. There also seems to be an association between the colonization of H. pylori in the gastric mucosa and peptic ulceration. However, it has not demonstrated that the instillation of H. pylori into the stomach produces the ulcerative gastric lesions in animals or humans. We carried out an experiment to study whether or not H. pylori has an ulcerogenic action in the ischemic stomach of rats, using an ex vivo gastric chamber. The rat stomachs were exposed to 1 ml of H. pylori solution (200 IU of urease/ml) and 1 ml of
urea
(400 mg/dl) for 60 min after the creation of
ischemia
in the stomach (by withdrawal of 3 ml of blood). The exposure of the stomach to both H. pylori and
urea
resulted in severe hemorrhagic gastric mucosal lesions with a marked decrease in potential difference (PD) with a concomitant increase in ammonia concentration in rats with
ischemia
, whereas gastric lesions and a fall in PD were hardly observed in rats without
ischemia
. These results have demonstrated that H. pylori has an ulcerogenic action on the stomach subjected to mucosal
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori has an ulcerogenic action in the ischemic stomach of rats. 162 66
Calcium-channel blockers (CCBs) have been shown to afford protection against acute (
ARF
) and chronic renal failure (CRF). The effects of CCBs against acute renal injury occur at both the vascular and tubular epithelial level. At the vascular level, experimental
ARF
-associated loss of renal autoregulation and hypersensitivity to renal nerve stimulation has been shown to be reversed by CCBs. These beneficial vascular effects of CCBs occur on the background of the finding that renal ischemic injury is associated with an increase in cellular Ca2+ concentration. A rise in tubular epithelial Ca2+ concentration also occurs very early after a renal ischemic insult. This effect of
ischemia
is associated with evidence of membrane depolarization, opening of slow calcium channels, increased cellular Ca2+ uptake, and reversal by CCBs. There is evidence that the increased cellular Ca2+ uptake activates phospholipases, which prolong and increase membrane damage. Experimental CRF is also associated with increased renal cellular Ca2+ concentration, an effect that can be attenuated by CCBs. The CCBs probably slow progression of CRF by both cytoprotective and antihypertensive effects. These findings of vascular and tubular effects of CCBs in experimental
ARF
and CRF have led to their clinical use to prevent initial dysfunction of cadaveric kidney transplants, cyclosporine nephrotoxicity, radiocontrast-induced
ARF
, and progression of CRF. Randomized clinical studies are necessary to further examine the efficacy of CCBs in
ARF
and CRF.
...
PMID:Role of calcium-channel blockers in preventing acute and chronic renal injury. 172 16
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