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)

In Langendorff-perfused rat hearts, the perfusion pressure was reduced from 100 cm H2O to 20 cm H2O for 30 minutes to produce a model of global ischemia with a residual oxygen uptake. The release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and the occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias during reperfusion were dependent on the substrate. Glucose-perfused hearts had the highest rates of glycolytic ATP production (2.5 mumol/g per min) during ischemia with normal contents of tissue cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) and, during reperfusion, the release of LDH was lowest and severe ventricular arrhythmias did not occur. In pyruvate-perfused hearts, glycolysis was inhibited during ischemia, the rate of production of glycolytic ATP was only 0.5 mumol/g per min. and tissue cAMP doubled; during reperfusion, LDH release was 14-fold higher and ventricular arrhythmias were more severe. Total tissue contents of ATP and phosphocreatine were similar in glucose- and in pyruvate-perfused hearts. In hearts perfused with acetate, there was virtually no glycolytic ATP synthesized during the last 5 minutes of ischemia and cAMP increased further. Acetate- and palmitate-perfused hearts showed greatest release of LDH and had severest arrhythmias during reperfusion, suggesting that it was the metabolic and not the detergent effects of palmitate that were operating. Lipolysis was not a major factor in the cause of reperfusion LDH release. A role of glycolytic ATP in the maintenance of membrane integrity is postulated.
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PMID:Effects of substrates on tissue metabolic changes in the isolated rat heart during underperfusion and on release of lactate dehydrogenase and arrhythmias during reperfusion. 20 59

Primary cultures of rat heart endothelial cells were subjected to simulated conditions of ischemia: hyposia and glucose deprivation for 4 and 24 hr. Cellular injury was evaluated by measuring changes in viability, total protein, cellular morphology, and leakage of cytoplasmic enzymes from the cells into the culture medium. Deprivation of oxygen and glucose for 4 or 24 hr did not lethally injure the cells as noted by no change in cell viability, morphology, and total protein when compared to controls. However, reversible or non-lethal cellular injury was produced as reflected by a significant release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from the cells into the medium after treatment with hypoxia and glucose deprivation for 4 or 24 hr. When the cultures were deprived of glucose, but were oxygenated, cellular injury was not evident after 24 hr. Deprivation of oxygen but not glucose resulted in significant loss of LDH after 4 or 24 hr. When the cultures were allowed to recover after oxygen and glucose deprivation in complete medium containing 1000 mg glucose per 1 and a normal atmosphere of 20% O2, they had levels of LDH leakage comparable to those of control cultures.
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PMID:Injury to primary cultures of rat heart endothelial cells by hypoxia and glucose deprivation. 54 Sep 18

An in vitro model of myocardial ischemia has been established with primary monolayer cultures of postnatal rat myocardial cells. Ischemic conditions were simulated in vitro by subjecting the myocardial cell cultures to various levels of oxygen and glucose deprivation. The experimental protocol consisted of treatment with 20% or 0% O2 and 1000, 500 or 0 mg glucose per 1 of medium for 4 or 24 hr. Control cultures were treated with 20% O2 and 1000 mg glucose. After the ischemic treatments, cultures of beating muscle (M) cells were evaluated for signs of injury, i.e. leakage of cytoplasmic enzymes into the culture medium. Differences were found in leakage of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and creatine phosphokinase (CPK) from the cultures that were exposed to partial ischemia of glucose deprivation and from those cultures that were exposed to total ischemia of oxygen and glucose deprivation. Glucose deprivation along resulted in a slight-to-moderate loss of LDH and CPK from the cells, whereas total ischemia resulted in a significant release of the two cytoplasmic enzymes. When the cultures were allowed to recover after ischemic treatment in complete medium (1000 mg glucose) and a normal atmosphere of 20% O2, they had levels of LDH leakage comparable to those of control cultures. Cell viability and total protein content of the ischemic cultures did not differ significantly from controls.
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PMID:Ischemic myocardial injury in cultured heart cells: leakage of cytoplasmic enzymes from injured cells. 68 9

The measurement of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release into perfusates after hypothermic storage was found to be a reliable index of ischemic injury of rabbit kidneys. Kidneys were exposed to warm and cold ischemia for varying periods. Each kidney was perfused before and after storage at simple hypothermia with 25 ml of a modified Collins solution. The venous effuent was collected in 5 ml fractions. Total LDH activity was measured in the first fraction after storage and used as a measure of ischemic tissue damage. It was confirmed that increasing the period of cold ischemia result in significant increases in LDH activity. The release of LDH into perfusates was then used to compare kidney damage after preservation with various fluids. With this method, it was not possible to demonstrate any difference in the extent of tissue damage after preservation with sodium-rich vs. potassium-rich perfusion fluid. Addition of steroids, vitamins and essential amino acids did not prevent or reduce tissue damage, estimated in this way. The effects of adding cryoprotectants to the perfusion fluid varied; LDH release following addition of 5% DMSO was significantly greater, and after addition of 5% glycerol smaller than the release after perfusion with a modified Collins solution alone. Stepwise addition of DMSO up to 20% resulted in serious tissue damage with a large LDH release into the perfusate.
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PMID:LDH release into perfusates of preserved kidneys. 78 32

In thrombocytes of patients with ischemic and hemorrhagic insult a transformation in the isozyme spectrum of lactate dehydrogenase was observed without an alteration in the reaction rate. In this case LDH3 was decreased and LDH1 and LDH4 were increased. The correlation was not found between the type of insult and the character of the isozyme spectrum. The alterations were considered as an adaptive mechanism and the reflected the extent of immediate or intermediate effect of ischemia on thrombocytes.
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PMID:[Activity of lactate dehydrogenase and its isoenzymes in the thrombocytes in different forms of cerebral circulatory disorder]. 103 Aug 86

The perfused rat heart was used to assess the possible contribution of glycolytically produced ATP to the maintenance of the action potential in the normoxic heart, and to the maintenance of membrane integrity in the underperfused, ischemic heart. During normoxia, pyruvate (10 mM) was nearly as able as glucose (10 mM) to maintain the normal action potential. During ischemia (reduction of perfusion pressure of Langerdorff heart from 100 to 20 cm H2O), total tissue values of ATP and creatine phosphate were similar in pyruvate and in glucose hearts. However, pyruvate-perfused hearts had higher tissue levels of cyclic AMP during the ischemic period, and during the reperfusion period they had an increased release of lactate dehydrogenase and an increased incidence of arrhythmias when compared with glucose hearts. It is proposed that these differences can be related to a higher rate of production of glycolytic ATP. The anatomical, biochemical, and pharmacological evidence favoring a cytoplasmic compartment of ATP located in relation to the cell membrane is reviewed.
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PMID:Glycolytic ATP and its production during ischemia in isolated Langendorff-perfused rat hearts. 103 48

Twenty-four dogs were divided into five groups. Under pentothal sodium anesthesia, those in the control group received no further manipulation; another group underwent laparotomy only; and dogs in the last three groups had induced pancreatitis, intestinal ischemia and duodenal perforation, respectively. An analysis was made of serum and peritoneal lavage fluid in the dog of each group at 30 minute intervals for four and one-half hours. Parameters which were significantly elevated in dogs with pancreatitis compared with other groups included fluid amylase, lactate dehydrogenase, proteolytic activity and intestinal alkaline phosphatase and serum amylase. We judge that these biochemical differences in the lavage fluid, when taken with the physical characteristics of the fluid and the clinical symptoms, can significantly aid the clinician in arriving at the diagnosis of acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Use of peritoneal lavage in the diagnosis of experimental acute pancreatitis. 112 80

The involvement of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) in reperfusion-mediated vascular injury was studied in a model of ischemia and reperfusion in rabbit hindlimb. Ischemia was induced by 4-h occlusion of the left iliac artery followed by 4-h reperfusion. Plasma creatine kinase (CK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activities, hindlimb vascular resistance (HVR), and myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity in the postischemic extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle were measured to evaluate the extent of vascular and skeletal muscle injury. In addition, the ischemia/reperfusion-induced injury of the hindlimb vasculature was evaluated by electron microscopy. Ischemia and reperfusion (n = 10) was associated with an increase in CK (6,380 +/- 1,346 U/L, p < 0.05) and LDH (552 +/- 76 U/L, p < 0.05) activities which were significantly greater than those observed in sham-operated control animals (CK 1,651 +/- 207 U/L, LDH 246 +/- 14 U/L; n = 6). HVR in sham-operated animals decreased by 20 +/- 3%, but increased in the ischaemic group by 56 +/- 16% (p < 0.05). MPO activity of EDL muscle increased from 7.3 +/- 3.9 U per muscle (sham) to 28.0 +/- 5.9 U per muscle (p < 0.05) after ischemia and reperfusion. Morphologic analysis did not show any alteration in the microvascular bed of the hindlimb. Moreover, 1 mg/kg/h intravenous (i.v.) cloricromene, an antithrombotic drug that inhibits superoxide anion production as well as PMN adhesion to endothelium, reduced the increase in plasma CK and LDH and the increase in MPO and HVR observed in animals subjected to hindlimb ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of cloricromene during ischemia and reperfusion of rabbit hindlimb: evidence for an involvement of leukocytes in reperfusion-mediated tissue and vascular injury. 128 1

Indapamide, a nonthiazide chlorosulfamoyl diuretic, which possesses well-known antihypertensive properties, is able to scavenge free radical intermediates involved in lipid peroxidation. In this respect, it has almost the same level of action as alpha-tocopherol. Using an isolated working rat heart preparation, we investigated the effect of indapamide on the myocardial resistance to global total normothermic ischemia followed by reperfusion. The heart, isolated at the end of chronic oral pretreatment (7 day at 3 mg/kg body weight/day), was submitted to ischemia for 15 min and then reperfused. The main results were as follows: in the indapamide-treated group, 1) postischemic recovery of cardiac function was significantly better as compared to the untreated control group; 2) lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release measured after 15 min of reperfusion was significantly reduced; 3) the myocardial content of organic hydroperoxides (HPO), taken as an index of lipid peroxidation, was significantly lowered, whereas the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) remained unchanged; and 4) electron spin resonance (ESR) analysis of coronary effluents, collected during the first minutes of reperfusion in the presence of the spin-trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO), revealed a significant modification in the treated group. These findings suggest that indapamide treatment is able to afford some protective effect to cardiac tissue during the early stage of postischemic reperfusion, and that this effect might be related to the antioxidant properties of inadapamide.
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PMID:Beneficial effect of indapamide in experimental myocardial ischemia. 131 Jun 2

To elucidate the pathophysiological role of the hydroxyl radical (.OH) during the postischemic reperfusion of the heart, we measured the .OH product in the coronary effluent from isolated perfused rat heart during a 30-minute reperfusion period after various ischemic intervals of 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, and 60 minutes. Salicylic acid was used as the probe for .OH, and its derivative, 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (2,5-DHBA), was quantified using high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection. 2,5-DHBA was negligible in the effluent from nonischemic hearts, but a significant amount was detected from the hearts rendered ischemic for 10 minutes or longer. The peak of 2,5-DHBA was seen within 90 seconds after the onset of reperfusion in every group. The accumulated amount of 2,5-DHBA was maximal in the group with 15-minute ischemia (6.73 +/- 1.04 nmol/g wet heart wt after 30 minutes of reperfusion); it decreased as the ischemic time was prolonged and was 2.38 +/- 0.84 nmol/g wet wt after 30 minutes of reperfusion in the group with 60-minute ischemia. In the model of 15-minute ischemia/30-minute reperfusion, there was no correlation between the accumulated amount of 2,5-DHBA and functional recovery (+/- dP/dt, heart rate, and coronary flow), lactate dehydrogenase release, and morphological damage. Although treatment with 0.5 mM deferoxamine, an iron chelator, significantly decreased 2,5-DHBA (from 6.73 +/- 1.04 to 2.29 +/- 0.80 nmol/g wet wt after 30 minutes of reperfusion, p less than 0.01), it failed to reduce the postischemic myocardial injury in the group with 15-minute ischemia. The results suggest that .OH production is influenced by the preceding ischemic interval and that .OH does not exert an immediate direct effect on postischemic damage during early reperfusion in the isolated perfused rat heart, although a possibility remains that the small portion of .OH trapped by salicylic acid may not be intimately associated with myocardial injury.
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PMID:Quantification of hydroxyl radical and its lack of relevance to myocardial injury during early reperfusion after graded ischemia in rat hearts. 131 98


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