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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cardiac performance was studied in 14 obese but otherwise healthy young subjects during rest and submaximal ergometric exercise by means of Swan Ganz catheters. Cardiac output and
stroke
volume determined by the thermal dilution method were normal or slightly increased during rest rising on exercise in the usual range. However, mean pulmonary artery and pulmonary wedge pressures were increased above normal values in 50% of the patients during exercise indicating depressed left ventricular function. Patients with normal and abnormal hemodynamic response to exercise could not be separated by clinical findings. Repetition of studies in 11 patients following therapeutic
starvation
of 2-3 weeks duration revealed a statistically significant fall of pressures in the right atrium, the pulmonary artery and in the pulmonary wedge position during rest and exercise. In the majority of patients a moderate reduction in cardiac output and
stroke
volume suggested a decrease in preload due to loss of intravascular volume, but in a few instances with unaltered or increased cardiac output improvement of cardiac function had to be considered.
...
PMID:[Does obesity have an effect on heart function?]. 122 63
The central question to be addressed in this review can be stated as "How does hypoglycemia kill neurons?" Initial research on hypoglycemic brain damage in the 1930s was aimed at demonstrating the existence of any brain damage whatsoever due to insulin. Recent results indicate that uncomplicated hypoglycemia is capable of killing neurons in the brain. However, the mechanism does not appear to be simply glucose
starvation
of the neuron resulting in neuronal breakdown. Rather than such an "internal catabolic death" current evidence suggests that in hypoglycemia, neurons are killed from without, i.e. from the extracellular space. Around the time the EEG becomes isoelectric, an endogenous neurotoxin is produced, and is released by the brain into tissue and cerebrospinal fluid. The distribution of necrotic neurons is unlike that in ischemia, being related to white matter and cerebrospinal fluid pathways. The toxin acts by first disrupting dendritic trees, sparing intermediate axons, indicating it to be an excitotoxin. Exact mechanisms of excitotoxic neuronal necrosis are not yet clear, but neuronal death involves hyperexcitation, and culminates in cell membrane rupture. Endogenous excitotoxins produced during hypoglycemia may explain the tendency toward seizure activity often seen clinically. The recent research results on which these findings are based are reviewed, and clinical implications are discussed.
Stroke
PMID:Progress review: hypoglycemic brain damage. 352 46
Obesity, a well-known phenomenon in Western society, is frequently associated with cardiovascular and endocrine disease.
Strokes
, myocardial infarction, diabetes and hyperlipidemia are classical reasons for the high mortality and morbidity of overweight people. For this reason, intensive weight-reduction programs have been proposed: low-calorie diets, total
starvation
, drugs and even surgery. Total
starvation
and some low-calorie diets are, however, also associated with sudden death, most probably of cardiac origin. Experimental data from our laboratory show that total
starvation
is accompanied by a severe depletion of magnesium in myocardial tissue. Protein-sparing modified low-calorie diets, however, can protect against this mineral loss even if magnesium supplementation alone cannot obtain this goal. Applying these principles in overweight man show weight reduction without mineral loss or cardiac disturbance. Surgery with 'ileal bypass' procedures gives rise to severe hypomagnesemia and hypocalcemia with tetany and spasmophilia. New procedures, derived from experimental surgery, are 'gastric bypass' and 'gastroplasty'. These methods, only applied in very obese patients (body mass index greater than 40, normal 23-27) show no change in mineral concentrations of calcium and magnesium and no clinical symptoms suggestive for mineral loss. A good, controlled weight-reduction program under strict medical surveillance can, in this way, offer new perspectives in the treatment of one of our most frequent 'culture-induced' diseases.
...
PMID:Magnesium and obesity: effects of treatment on magnesium and other parameters. 382 Nov 74
In conscious goats, starved for 48 hr, in mid-pregnancy (70 days) cardiac output and blood volume decreased; total peripheral resistance increased; heart rate,
stroke
volume, blood pressure, mammary blood flow and mammary resistance were not significantly affected. In late pregnancy (132 days) cardiac output, heart rate, blood volume and mammary blood flow fell; peripheral resistance increased;
stroke
volume and blood pressure were not significantly affected. In mid-pregnancy, water consumption fell and the animal entered a stage of negative sensible water balance which persisted for both days of
starvation
. A similar change was obtained on the first day in late-pregnant goats, but on the second day water consumption increased and positive water balance was restored. Cardiac output, heart rate, blood volume and mammary blood flow was higher in fed late-pregnant than in fed mid-pregnant goats, total peripheral resistance was lower while there were no significant changes in
stroke
volume or blood pressure. Indications of correlations between litter size and cardiac function were obtained. The results are compared with previous studies on the effects of
starvation
in lactating animals and are discussed in relation to the control of cardiac function and mammary blood flow in pregnancy and lactation.
...
PMID:Effects of starvation on cardiovascular function (including the mammary circulation) and water balance in pregnant goats. 690 68
The ischemic myocardium utilizes glycogen as metabolic substrate. The effects of oral nutrition on the levels of glycogen in the myocardium and of myocardial glycogen content on myocardial tolerance to ischemia were studied. Rats were divided into groups and fed (a) rat chow, (b) rat chow plus 5% dextrose, and elemental diets (c) Flexical (Mead Johnson) or (d) Vital (Ross Laboratories). Another group was starved. All fed groups gained weight normally while the starved rats lost 23% of their body weight. Compared with the effect on rat chow, myocardial glycogen levels were elevated in the Flexical and
starvation
groups, while Vital depressed the level (P less than 0.01). Thus, both caloric intake and diet affected myocardial glycogen content. Elevation of myocardial glycogen content after
starvation
contrasted with glycogen disappearance from the liver. The level of myocardial glycogen and left ventricular function after global ischemia were correlated in dogs under cardiopulmonary bypass conditions. During 30 minutes of normothermic aortic cross-clamping, hearts with a preischemic myocardial glycogen content greater than 0.4 g% had less asystole or ventricular fibrillation. Their left ventricular function (
stroke
work index, myocardial contractility) upon reperfusion was substantially better than those with a myocardial glycogen level of less than 0.4 g%. Dietary manipulation and the nutritional status can thus affect the myocardial glycogen content and may be useful in protecting the myocardium from ischemia.
...
PMID:Protection of ischemic myocardium: the roles of nutrition and myocardial glycogen. 711 54
During
starvation
in the lactating goat, cardiac output,
stroke
volume, mammary blood flow, blood volume and the rate of milk secretion decreased markedly; total peripheral resistance and haematocrit increased while arterial blood pressure and plasma osmolality remained unchanged. Water consumption decreased markedly and the animals went into negative water balance even though water was available throughout.
...
PMID:Effects of starvation on the cardiovascular system, water balance and milk secretion in lactating goats. 741 81
The transient lubricating film thickness in knee prostheses using compliant layers has been predicted under simulated walking conditions based upon the elastohydrodynamic lubrication theory. Qualitative agreement has been found between the present theoretical predictions and the experimental measurements using an electric resistance technique reported earlier. It has been shown that the contact geometry plays an important role in the generation of fluid film lubrication in knee prostheses using compliant layers. The maximum lubricating film thickness is predicted for the maximized contact area of a transverse conjunction where the semi-minor contact radius lies in the direction of entraining. The additional advantage of the transverse contact conjunction is that the possibility of lubricant
starvation
due to small
stroke
length can be minimized. All these factors, together with the kinematic requirements in the natural knee joint, should be taken into consideration when designing artificial knee joint replacements.
...
PMID:Prediction of transient lubricating film thickness in knee prostheses with compliant layers. 969 34
Brain oedema is a major factor contributing to the poor outcome of subjects with acute ischaemic
stroke
but the use of mannitol and other hyperosmolar agents in this setting is controversial and hardly debated. Recent data have demonstrated that mannitol at concentrations which may be achieved in clinical conditions and hyperosmotic stress itself can activate the process of apoptotic cell death. This could have important clinical implications as apoptosis is involved in the more gradual loss of neurons in the penumbra zone surrounding the core of ischaemic
stroke
where neurons die immediately from oxygen
starvation
. Mannitol has the potential to activate inflammatory mediators, induce oxidant stress and produce rebound cell swelling and, through these mechanisms, can further aggravate the neuronal injury due to ischaemia. Furthermore, apoptosis in ischaemic areas closely parallels the timing of brain oedema and this suggests that a cause-effect relationship links the two phenomena rather than simply a temporal correlation. On this basis, it is crucial that emergency-physicians critically rethink the management strategy of brain oedema associated with ischaemic
stroke
.
...
PMID:The puzzle of neuronal death and life: is mannitol the right drug for the treatment of brain oedema associated with ischaemic stroke? 1064 27
The Superior Court of New Jersey ordered the appointment of a guardian to consent to implantation of a feeding tube for a 90-year-old patient who had suffered a severely disabling
stroke
, though her son had not agreed to the proposed procedure. The court reasoned that a patient who becomes incompetent does not lose the right to accept or refuse medical treatment; instead, a substitute or surrogate decision maker exercises the patient's right of consent. Without the surgical implantation of a feeding tube in the patient's stomach, she would have suffered death from dehydration and
starvation
.
...
PMID:In re Visbeck. 1164 51
Increased Apolipoprotein D (ApoD) expression has been reported in various neurological disorders, including Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, and
stroke
, and in the aging brain . However, whether ApoD is toxic or a defense is unknown. In a screen to identify genes that protect Drosophila against acute oxidative stress, we isolated a fly homolog of ApoD, Glial Lazarillo (GLaz). In independent transgenic lines, overexpression of GLaz resulted in increased resistance to hyperoxia (100% O(2)) as well as a 29% extension of lifespan under normoxia. These flies also displayed marked improvements in climbing and walking ability after sublethal exposure to hyperoxia. Overexpression of Glaz also increased resistance to
starvation
without altering lipid or protein content. To determine whether GLaz might be important in protection against reperfusion injury, we subjected the flies to hypoxia, followed by recovery under normoxia. Overexpression of GLaz was protective against behavioral deficits caused in normal flies by this ischemia/reperfusion paradigm. This and the accompanying paper by Sanchez et al. (in this issue of Current Biology) are the first to manipulate the levels of an ApoD homolog in a model organism. Our data suggest that human ApoD may play a protective role and thus may constitute a therapeutic target to counteract certain neurological diseases.
...
PMID:Overexpression of a Drosophila homolog of apolipoprotein D leads to increased stress resistance and extended lifespan. 1658 12
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