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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (immaturity)
4,335 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The birth and fate of 818 lambs born to 571 ewes on a low-ground farm in the Scottish Borders with a history of substantial perinatal mortality were monitored with a range of physiological, biochemical and pathological measurements. In lambs which survived, the rectal temperature, birthweight and plasma concentrations of fructose, insulin, thyroxine and the third component of complement at birth, and the weight at four months of age, decreased with litter size. One hundred and thirty-seven lambs were stillborn or died within four days and seven others died later. The mothers of 77 per cent of these lambs had low condition scores, but the lamb deaths did not correlate significantly with the condition scores. From data relating to birthweight, temperature, packed cell volume and plasma composition it was deduced that placental insufficiency was involved in 24 per cent of these deaths; acute hypoxaemia at birth accounted for 35 per cent, inadequate thermogenesis for 12 per cent and starvation for 13 per cent. The remaining 16 per cent of dead lambs could not be assigned to any of these categories. Using only clinicopathological criteria, 37 per cent of the lamb deaths were attributed to antenatal influences which included immaturity, developmental anomalies, and degenerative or inflammatory changes. Thirty-three per cent of the deaths were due to post natal factors which included, in declining order of frequency, starvation, enteritis, misadventure, pneumonia, navel infections and septicaemia. No conclusions could be drawn from the pathological examinations alone in the remaining 30 per cent, although almost half of these had low rectal temperatures after birth, death being attributed to hypothermia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical, biochemical and pathological study of perinatal lambs in a commercial flock. 359 May 87

Prenatal starvation causes pulmonary hypoplasia in newborn guinea pigs, and is associated with postnatal cyanosis, hypothermia, and respiratory failure. To determine the effects of such starvation on ventilation, neonates from litters either fed ad libitum throughout gestation (control) or given 50% rations in the last trimester of pregnancy (starved) were studied at 29 degrees C by plethysmography in 21, 11, and 5% O2. After 15 min (steady-state) in 11% and then 5% O2, 13 of 14 controls (mean = 95 g) sustained increases in weight-specific minute ventilation of 46 and 75% compared to values in air (p less than 0.01), due to increases in respiratory frequency. Seven of 11 starved neonates (mean = 76 g) also sustained increases in respiratory frequency and weight-specific minute ventilation in 11 and 5% O2 similar in magnitude to those of the normal controls, although at higher weight-specific tidal volumes. One abnormal control (85 g) and four starved neonates (mean = 70 g) hyperventilated in air, did not respond to 11% O2, and then hypoventilated in 5% O2 due to a reduced weight-specific tidal volume. Neonates with normal ventilatory patterns did not alter weight-specific minute ventilation in 100% O2 and did not show a biphasic response in acute (1-5 min) exposures to moderate hypoxia, as noted for newborn of other species. Thus, hypoxia identified those starved neonates in which pulmonary immaturity or other starvation-induced pathologies necessitated a maximal ventilatory effect in air. The sustainable hyperventilation among normal guinea pigs during hypoxia emphasizes the precocial development in this species at birth, which may be compromised by intrauterine starvation.
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PMID:Prenatal starvation retards development of the ventilatory response to hypoxia in newborn guinea pigs. 377 4

Initiation is the contact-independent phase of sexual conjugation which occurs when mature cells of Tetrahymena thermophila are shifted from growth medium to a low-salt starvation buffer. Immaturity, like high-salt starvation, restricts the ability of cells to conjugate; immature cells do not conjugate in either low- or high-salt buffers. Comparisons between sexually mature cells starved in initiation-restrictive and initiation-permissive buffers, and between immature and mature cells starved in an initiation-permissive buffer permitted the analysis of membrane protein expression correlated with mating competence. No polypeptides identified by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodination were found to be specific to mating-competent cells; however, several polypeptides not present in initiated cells were found to be common to the cell surfaces of immature and non-initiated cells which suggests that (1) initiation involves the removal of specific proteins from the cell surface, and (2) immaturity may be due to an inability to initiate.
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PMID:Membrane protein differences correlated with the development of mating competence in Tetrahymena thermophila. 673 14

The causes of hypothermia in 89 lambs were identified on the basis of history and clinical biochemistry. Excessive heat loss accounted for 24 per cent of the cases, and depressed heat production because of either severe hypoxia during birth, immaturity or starvation accounted for 72 per cent. Exhaustion of energy reserves and hypoglycaemia were marked characteristics of lambs which became hypothermic after 12 hours of age. Most of the lambs were either twins or triplets. The implications of the findings for both the treatment and prevention of hypothermia in newborn lambs are discussed.
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PMID:Causes of hypothermia in 89 lambs. 689 65

Many studies have pointed to vulnerability to stress and stress-related pathologies at different timepoints during an individual's life span. These sensitive windows are usually during periods of neural development, such as embryogenesis, infancy, and adolescence. It is critical to understand how neural circuitry may change as an individual ages in ways that could affect susceptibility to stress. Here we compare two stages in Drosophila melanogaster: sexual immaturity and sexual maturity. We used the genetic resources available in Drosophila to manipulate pre- and postsynaptic dopamine signaling in sexually immature and mature animals that were then assayed for heart rate and locomotor behavior in response to starvation and oxidative stress. Our results show significant differences in the stress response for sexually immature and mature animals for heart rate, periods of high mobility, mean velocity, and several other parameters of locomotor behavior. Our data show that dopamine neurons are differentially recruited into the stress response circuitry for sexually immature and mature individuals. By observing behaviors that have been previously shown in mammalian models to be affected by stress and altered in models of affective disorders, we provide a genetically tractable model for development and maintenance of the stress response circuitry during sexual maturation.
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PMID:Temporally dimorphic recruitment of dopamine neurons into stress response circuitry in Drosophila. 2389 60

The study is carried out the 1st-, 3rd-, 5th-, 7th, and 10th-day old free moving or loosely fixed rat pups (P1-10). In satiated and submitted to the 24-h starvation rat pups, parameters of spontaneous periodical motor activity (SPMA) and the blood glucose content were studied. The total glucose level in hungry rat pups was, on average, 1.5-2.5 times lower than in satiated animals. Administration of glucose to hungry rat pups increased 6-11 times its concentration in blood as compared with the animals not obtaining glucose. The glucose administration to the satiated rat pups led to a rise of its level in blood from 2 to 5 times as compared with intact animals, which was 2-3 times less than in the case of hungry animals. Analysis of pattern of motor activity recorded under conditions of the glucose deficit caused by the 24-h starvation of rat pups did not reveal significant changes of ratio of rhythmical components. Introduction of glucose to hungry and to the lesser degree to satiated rat pups led to potentiation of the minute rhythm of activity in all age groups. An exception was the first day after birth when the glucose administration to satiated rat pups promoted an enhancement of the decasecond rhythm and a decrease of the total level of motor activity. Comparison of ontogenetic dynamics of the SPMA parameters and the glucose content in blood of hungry rat pups revealed the clearly expressed regularity absent in the satiated animals: the glucose level in blood was higher during activity than in the state of rest. The performed study has shown that intensity, duration, and, to a degree, pattern of SPMA in the newborn rat pups depend on the level of satiety, and can be significantly changed in the artificially produced hypo- or hyperglycemia. The existing ontogenetic fluctuations in the character of reaction at performance of the glucose tolerance test can be connected both with morphofunctional maturation of the motor system and with immaturity of various chains of carbohydrate metabolism.
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PMID:[Interrelation between parameters of motor activity and blood glucose concentration in newborn rats at starvation and under glucose load conditions]. 2577 64