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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (lethargy)
5,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) were deprived of food and water for several weeks during the fall and winter in a cold-room hibernaculum (Ta 5-8 degrees C), and for several days at room temperature during the summer. Body temperatures (Tb) were determined periodically in nine animals by radiotransmitters implanted in the abdomen. Animals deprived of food and water in the summer were killed when maximum urine concentration was achieved. Eight animals in the winter were active when killed after 7-35 days in the hibernaculum with Tb between 18 and 36 degrees C. Five animals that became torpid periodically in the winter were killed after 19-42 days in the hibernaculum when their Tb indicated torpor (Tb less than 13 degrees C). Active animals in the summer and winter possessed pronounced renal corticomedullary urea and sodium concentration gradients. Torpid animals lacked these gradients and had lower urine and plasma osmotic concentrations than active animals. Plasma urea values and terminal osmolal U/P ratios were lowest in torpid prairie dogs.
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PMID:Effects of cold exposure and dehydration on renal function in black-tailed prairie dogs. 83 53

A 9-month-old sexually intact male longhair cat was examined because of lethargy, anorexia, cold intolerance, and failure to thrive since acquisition at an early age. Clinical signs of disease were less pronounced when the cat was fed a low-protein diet. Anemia, hypoglycemia, low total CO2 content, and hyperammonemia were detected. The cat was euthanatized. Urine obtained immediately before euthanasia contained a large amount of methylmalonic acid. Total serum cobalamin concentration was low. Hepatic methylmalonic-CoA mutase activity, with and without the addition of coenzyme adenosylcobalamin, was consistent with a cobalamin deficiency. Methylmalonic acidemia secondary to a putative defect in cobalamin absorption was diagnosed.
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PMID:Cobalamin deficiency associated with methylmalonic acidemia in a cat. 150 Mar 7

In order to minimize heat loss cold stress induces peripheral vasoconstriction via the sympathetic nervous system. This effect is most pronounced in the extremities. Vasoconstriction does not appear in the head-neck region--a fact of great importance in emergency situations. In order to compensate for heat loss shivering is an early event, where involuntary muscle contractions increase metabolic rate 2-6 fold. Early tachycardia and elevated blood-pressure, followed by progressive bradycardia and lowered pressure are common cardiovascular effects of hypothermia. Death due to ventricular fibrillation or asystole occurs between 28 degrees-25 degrees C. Cold stress causes an osmolal diuresis with sodium and chloride as the main constituents. The natriuresis is of tubular origin and could be due to impaired autoregulation in the kidney and/or depend on the natriuretic polypeptide. The augmented urine flow decreases blood volume, lowers physical working capacity and increases blood viscosity--all negative events in a hazardous situation. Sudden immersion initiates hyperventilation for 1-2 minutes with an increasing risk of drowning. Thereafter ventilation decreases to rates consistent with metabolic requirements. In severe hypothermia carbon dioxide retention causes respiratory and metabolic acidosis. Hypothermia induces progressive depression of mental functions starting with apathy and bizarre behaviour and ending in lethargy and coma often between 30 degrees-28 degrees C. The paradoxal feeling of heat with undressing in agony could depend on cerebral receptor disturbances.
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PMID:Human physiology under cold exposure. 181 74

Beta-adrenoceptor antagonists (beta blockers) are a well-established first-line treatment for hypertension, but they have been associated with unwanted symptoms including cold extremities, lethargy, and nightmares. Ketanserin is a serotonin S2-receptor antagonist that has previously been shown to reduce blood pressure in hypertensive patients by reducing systemic vascular resistance. Hypertensive patients whose sitting diastolic blood pressure was greater than or equal to 95 mmHg, despite at least 4 weeks therapy with an optimal dose of beta blocker, were selected for the study. The beta-blocker dose remained constant throughout the study, but patients were randomly allocated to receive ketanserin 20 mg twice daily, ketanserin 40 mg twice daily, or bendrofluazide 5 mg each morning plus placebo at night in addition to the beta-blocker therapy. One hundred and forty two patients completed the symptom questionnaire at randomization and after 12 weeks treatment. The treatment groups were well matched for age, sex, weight, and blood pressure. Blood pressure was reduced significantly by all treatments, and there were no between-group differences. Bendrofluazide adversely affected alertness (p less than 0.05) and concentration (p less than 0.01) whereas ketanserin had no significant effect and the ketanserin 20 mg twice daily group had better concentration than the bendrofluazide group (p less than 0.05). Ketanserin treatment reduced the incidence of nightmares (p less than 0.05 for 20 mg twice daily and 40 mg twice daily) and was an improvement over bendrofluazide treatment in this respect (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Serotonin antagonism reduces the adverse symptoms of beta blockade. 198 Oct 22

This review deals with the comparative observations of brown fat tissue in the bat, a hibernator, and in man, a nonhibernator. In both mammals, the brown fat is distributed in restricted portions of the body and brought into a thermogenetic activity by an acute drop in ambient temperature. Light microscopic examination was performed on the interscapular brown fat of bats captured monthly throughout one year; electron microscopic observations were made using a bat captured in April and another in September. Human perirenal brown fat was investigated light-microscopically on tissues derived from 215 fresh necropsy cases (Japanese) of both sexes aged from one month to 93 years. Brown adipose tissue was recognized only in 162 (75%) of the 215 samples, because brown fat cells were reduced by transformation into white fat cells. Human brown fat cells were classified into six types according to the morphological features of their lipid droplets. These reflect different functional states of intracellular heat production. The Type 1 (D) cell is a fat-depleted brown fat cell with a darkly stained cytoplasm; it is specific to humans. Human perirenal brown fat cells begin to show a transformation into white fat cells already at the infantile stage. This change occurs from the peripheral toward the central portion of the lobule, so that various functioning cell types remain only in the central area of the lobules. In contrast to humans, bat interscapular brown fat cells exhibit regular seasonal changes in size and lipid droplet content, so that the cells could not be classified as in humans into definite types according to the features of their lipid droplets. The most conspicuous difference between brown fat tissue in the nonhibernator and hibernator is that in the latter, white fat cells never occur within the brown fat tissue. In the hibernator, thermogenesis in the brown fat is necessary for both the arousal from hibernation and the maintenance of hibernation as well as rutting. In human perirenal brown fat tissue, darkly stained fat-depleted cells (D) occupy, with other cell types (CR, CR'), an important part in the reversible heat production cycle of the brown fat tissue. The "hypothermic" or "cold syndrome (cold injury)" is a disorder affecting inadequately protected infants in severely cold seasons, accompanied by lethargy, hypothermia and lactation refusal and revealing hemorrhagic pneumonia in necropsy. The brown fat tissue in such infants is composed exclusively of fat-depleted brown fat cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Morphological studies on brown adipose tissue in the bat and in humans of various ages. 203 57

As an example of spontaneous cooling in homeothermic organisms, hibernation of mammals is described. Based on the fact that all hibernators, at their regulated minimal body temperature, display a uniform turnover rate, related to body weight, the hypothesis is developed that cold tolerance of mammals is generally limited by a common specific minimal metabolic rate, which larger organisms, because of their lower basal metabolism, already attain in less profound hypothermia. The observation that there is, in natural lethargic states, a certain independence between metabolic rate and body temperature, subsequently leads to considerations on the presumable modulating influence exerted by the acid-base balance. Finally, referring to the time limitations of such adaptation strategies, the cold-induced disintegration of metabolic processes with differing temperature dependence is illustrated which, however, will be more pronounced in the intermediate temperature range than in lower cooling. Thus, despite a limited cold tolerance, an extremely profound hypothermia of short duration seems not altogether impossible even for large homeotherms, provided some adequate conditions of rewarming are observed.
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PMID:Metabolic reduction in hypothermia: pathophysiological problems and natural examples--Part 2. 223 81

A large hypertensive population of patients in general practice was used to assess the tolerability of nifedipine in previously untreated patients and was compared with other antihypertensive drugs in previously treated patients. A total of 3972 patients with a sitting diastolic blood pressure between 95 and 115 mmHg were treated with 20 mg nifedipine twice daily for 1 month. In non-responders the dose was increased to 40 mg twice daily for a second month; responders continued to take 20 mg twice daily. A total of 2772 patients had been previously untreated for hypertension, whereas 857 had previously been treated with beta-blockers alone or in combination and 346 had received diuretics alone or in combination. Adverse events were recorded for 28 days prior to treatment being initiated with or changed to nifedipine and for two 28-day nifedipine treatment periods. Flushing and headache, which diminished with time, occurred during nifedipine treatment. Ankle oedema did not diminish with time. Reductions were seen in occurrences of dyspnoea, impotence, lethargy and cold extremities.
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PMID:General practice data derived tolerability assessment of antihypertensive drugs. 280 16

The authors present the case report of a child with abdominal epilepsy who had suffered from abdominal pain for several months under the label of psychogenic pain. The important historical clues were pallor and cold sweating during the paroxysm, followed by lethargy and prolonged sleep. An abnormal electroencephalogram and a remarkable response to anticovulsants confirmed the diagnosis. This condition must be considered in a child with undiagnosed recurrent abdominal pain.
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PMID:Abdominal epilepsy misdiagnosed as psychogenic pain. 318 70

Pancreatic A cell response to arginine was measured in hedgehogs during the periods of lethargy and arousal and then during activity. Spontaneous plasma glucagon concentrations were lower during lethargy than during activity, and they increased during arousal. Arginine administration induced a slight, but significant delayed increase in plasma glucagon concentration in the lethargic hedgehog (body temperature: 6 degrees). During arousal, in vitro glucagon secretion was temperature dependent suggesting that body rewarming might, in itself, be an important stimulating factor of the A cells. In the presence of arginine, the glucagon output of the pancreas of lethargic hedgehogs was high at low temperatures. It decreased to a nadir at 19 degrees and increased up to 37 degrees. However, the basal or arginine-stimulated glucagon secretion of animals in lethargy was higher than that of animals in activity. These characteristics suggested the presence of a particular pool of cold-adapted enzymes in the A cells of lethargic hedgehogs.
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PMID:Pancreatic A cell response to arginine in the hibernating hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus). 635 39

Cold insolubility of a serum IgA cryoimmunoglobulin was found to be inhibited by the addition of 1.5 mM sodium decanedicarboxylate in vitro. The patient with the cryoglobulin had advanced multiple myeloma complicated by severe hyperviscosity that caused lethargy and episodic loss of consciousness. Decanedicarboxylic acid administered orally resulted in transient relief of symptoms and the loss of cryoprecipitability of the paraprotein. Further in vitro studies revealed that sodium salts of long-chain monocarboxylic acids with a minimum of eight carbons, and dicarboxylic acids with a minimum of 12 carbons inhibited cryoprecipitation. Salts of short-chain carboxylic acids, by contrast, enhanced cryoprecipitation. Sodium phenolate and sodium salts of benzoic acid, 2,4-DNP, phenylpropionic acid, and salicylic acid were also inhibitory. These latter compounds, which have a ring structure, did not cause precipitation at any concentration. It was demonstrated that the presence of a free carboxylic group was required for these activities; conversion of carboxylic acid to amide resulted in the loss of both the inhibitory and cryoprecipitation-enhancing effects. Normal plasma, or plasma from five other patients who had IgG, IgM, or mixed-type cryoglobulinemia, were not affected by any of these compounds. It is suggested that in selected cases of hyperviscosity syndrome associated with cryoglobulinemia, some of these compounds, especially monocarboxylic acids with appropriate chain lengths, or those with a ring structure, may have therapeutic applications.
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PMID:Inhibition of cold insolubility of an IgA cryoglobulin by decanedicarboxylic acid and related compounds. 663 13


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