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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A new technique is described for the autoradiographic determination of regional brain
glucose
metabolism employing 14C labeled
glucose
as substrate and measurement principles previously described for whole brain. Regional
glucose
values correlate closely with those reported for the 14C-deoxyglucose technique. The method has the advantages of 1) a much shorter experimental period, 2) a relatively simple mathematical treatment, and 3) the utilization of the actual, fully metabolizable substance itself,
glucose
, as the label. In addition to normal rats, regional values are reported for 20 individual brain areas of rats in bicuculline induced status epilepticus, rats intoxicated with ammonium and rats anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium or ketamine.
Stroke
PMID:Measurement of regional brain glucose utilization in vivo using [2(-14)C] glucose. 52 10
1. The chemical characteristics of the vascular connective tissue components were determined in
stroke
-prone (SP),
stroke
-resistant (SR) spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WK) rats. 2. The ratio of hydroxylysine to hydroxylsine plus lysine in the vascular collagen was increased in 6-month-old SP-SH rats and SR-SH rats as compared with WK rats. 3. An age-related increase in uronic acid and
hexose
content of the aorta was noted in SP-SH, SR-SH and WK rats. However, the increase was more prominent in SH rats, especially SP-SH rats at the stages examined (11 weeks and over 8 months of age). 4. The ratio of galactosyl-hydroxylysine to glucosyl-galactosyl-hydroxylysine in the aortic collagen was decreased in 6-month-old SH rats, especially SP-SH rats as compared with WK rats. 5. A relative increase in beta and gamma components in aortic collagen was noted in 6-month-old SP-SH rats when compared with SR-SH rats. 6. The increased content of uronic acid and
hexose
and the structural changes of vascular collagen as demonstrated in SP-SH rats might be related to the fragility of the arterial wall and/or to the pathogenesis of
stroke
-proneness.
...
PMID:Biochemical alterations of connective tissue metabolism in the arterial walls of stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 54 Apr 54
Cardiac performance and some parameters of glycolytic and oxidative metabolism were analyzed in isolated perfused guinea pig hearts performing pressure-volume work. Perfusion medium was an oxygenated Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer (pH 7.4) which contained
glucose
and physiological concentrations of pyruvate and insulin. The pressure-flow relationship in the coronary vascular bed indicated autoregulation of coronary flow. Left ventricular function was influenced by aortic pressure (Pa) and venous filling pressure (Pv) in accordance with the Frank-Starling principle, i.e.
stroke
work increased as a function of Pa or Pv to a certain maximum and then decreased. Myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2), on the other hand, was linearly correlated with Pa and Pv, respectively, over the entire pressure range. Efficiency of the left ventricle, therefore, increased to an optimum (16%) and decreased at higher pressures. Myocardial contents of glycogen, ATP and creatine phosphate were not markedly influenced by a change in Pa or Pv. L-Noradrenaline (0.08 micrometer, NA) stimulated
stroke
work and MVO2 at a all Pv tested; efficiencies reached physiologic values (21%) at high volume loads. The increased MVO2 was associated with an acceleration of pyruvate decarboxylation and lactate release up to 10- and 15-fold, respectively, at elevated but physiological NA concentrations (0.2 micrometer). Our results demonstrate that the isolated perfused working guinea pig heart compares favourably with the non-failing Starling heart-lung preparation and hearts in situ, as far as coronary function, left ventricular performance and oxidative metabolism are concerned.
...
PMID:Functional and metabolic features of an isolated perfused guinea pig heart performing pressure-volume work. 57 65
Twenty-seven patients undergoing open-heart surgery were divided into three groups, i.e., control, intermittent aortic crossclamping and coronary perfusion groups. Myocardial oxygen extraction, lactate extraction, arterial-coronary sinus hydrogen ion difference, potassium difference and
glucose
difference were determined during the operation, as well as, postoperative
stroke
and cardiac indices and comparisons were made. When the ascending aorta was not crossclamped, myocardial metabolism was well preserved during and after the perfusion at a flow rate of 2.0 L./min/m2. Intermittent aortic crossclamping for 15 minutes alternating with a period of perfusion for five minutes at 30 degrees C was sufficient to protect the myocardium from ischemia. Perfusion of the left coronary artery alone at a flow rate of six per cent of total body perfusion (150 to 200 ml per minute) at 30 degrees C was sufficient to protect the myocardium when the aorta was opened. Since intermittent perfusion of the left coronary artery may produce myocardial derangement, coronary perfusion should be continuous. Otherwise topical cardiac cooling or other means of myocardial protection should be used.
...
PMID:Myocardial protection during open-heart surgery: intermittent aortic crossclamping versus coronary perfusion. 60 90
A new method of determining the rate of
glucose
utilization in brain regions of individual rats has been used to measure the dose dependency of the reduction of the metabolic activity of the cerebral cortex by pentobarbital. Cerebral cortical
glucose
utilization is depressed to a basal level of 44% of the control rate when cerebral pentobarbital levels exceed 50 microgram per g of tissue. The major portion of this effect occurs between the cerebral pentobarbital range of 10--20 microgram per g, which can be achieved by 1/5 to 1/10 the normal anesthetic intraperitoneal dosage. If a depression of brain metabolism is responsible for the previously reported protection of the brain from ischemic damage, these data suggest a substantial reduction of brain metabolic rate is achieved in the rat at a barbiturate dosage which may be therapeutically relevant in the human after acute brain ischemia.
Stroke
PMID:Dose dependent reduction of glucose utilization by pentobarbital in rat brain. 62 38
The possible risk factors were evaluated in 249 patients with cerebral infarction and in the control group consisting of 190 subjects of the same age and sex distribution. The following factors were significantly associated with brain infarction: elevated blood pressure, cardiac abnormalities, elevated blood
glucose
content, abnormal
glucose
tolerance, elevated blood cholesterol and beta-lipoproteid content and hemoglobin level. It was concluded that at present the key to
stroke
prevention is the early detection and control of hypertension and cardiac activity impairment.
...
PMID:[Cerebral infarct risk factors]. 62 40
To evaluate the influence of
glucose
infusate administered with insulin and potassium on left ventricular function during 4 h of ischemia, as well as mechanism of action, four groups of intact anesthetized dogs were studied. Acute regional ischemia was induced with a balloon tip catheter in the left anterior descending artery and infusates were begun after 20 min of ischemia. A threefold increase of plasma
glucose
concentration was associated with improved left ventricular function during ischemia, compared to animals receiving isovolumic saline. There was a significant decline of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure associated with elevation of
stroke
volume and ejection fraction to control levels, as determined by indicator dilution. In a separate subgroup studied by cineangiography, shortening of the ischemic anterior wall, after an initial decline, was increased in response to
glucose
but there was no evidence of extension of injury. Ischemic tissue exhibited a smaller gain of water as well as Na+ per gram dry weight as compared to ischemic controls. On precordial electrocardiogram mapping there was a significant decrease in the sigmaST (sum of ST elevation) as well as NST (number of ST segment elevations), but the reduction of R wave amplitude was not different from controls. To further evaluate long-term effects, eight controls and six treated animals underwent myocardial ischemia and were sacrificed after 4 mo. Calculated area and weight of scar, as well as degree of wall thinning, were similar in both groups. The
glucose
-treated animals had a significant decrease of plasma FFA in contrast to controls which manifested a significant rise. To examine the postulate that the decrease in FFA was important to therapeutic action, a third group was infused with Intralipid (Cutter Laboratories, Inc., Berkeley, Calif.) and heparin, simultaneously with the
glucose
infusate, to effect an elevation of plasma FFA during ischemia. Changes in myocardial function and electrolyte composition, as well as precordial electrocardiogram mapping, were similar to that of animals receiving
glucose
alone. Because serum osmolality was increased approximately 40 mosmol during the
glucose
infusion, the potential role of hyperosmolality was assessed by infusion of 20% mannitol during acute ischemia in a fourth group. After a transient small increase, there was a moderate decline in function by 4 h, suggesting that the response to
glucose
is not dependent upon extracellular osmolality. Thus, it is concluded that during the initial hours after the onset of myocardial ischemia the
glucose
infusate improves ventricular performance without evidence of arrhythmia induction or intensification of ischemic injury. Evolution of irreversible necrosis appears to be delayed rather than prevented under the circumstances of this study.
...
PMID:Sustained effect of glucose-insulin-potassium on myocardial performance during regional ischemia. Role of free fatty acid and osmolality. 65 87
To evaluate the importance of time, temperature, and cardioplegia on the ability of the canine myocardium to maintain functional and ultrastructural integrity following induced arrest, we studied 220 dogs by varying myocardial temperature (34 degrees, 24 degrees, and 11 degrees C.), arrest time (0 to 120 minutes), and cardioplegic agents. Change in left ventricular function (LVF) was defined as the arithmetic difference in the center of mass between prearrest and postarrest LVF curves and was expressed as percent recovery of left ventricular
stroke
work. Left ventricular biopsies were obtained for semiquantitative electron microscopic analysis. After 90 minutes of cross-clamping, only hearts protected with combined hypothermia (H) and potassium-induced cardioplegia (K) significantly recovered prearrest function (24 degrees C.--80 percent, 11 degrees C.--99 percent). Hypothermia (H) alone for 90 minutes was less protective (24 degrees C.--49 percent, 11 degrees C.--59 percent). H preserved 84 percent of function after 60 minutes and 91 percent after 45 minutes. Normothermic arrest resulted in only 39 percent return of function at 45 minutes but could be extended with potassium-induced cardioplegia(K) to 78 percent at 60 minutes and 54 percent at 90 minutes. The addition of procaine plus HK improved protection over HK alone (95 percent versus 80 percent) but by itself was not effective. Neither hydrocortisone nor pretreatment with
glucose
-insulin-potassium, branched chain amino acids, or propranolol increased the protective effect of HK plus procaine. Inadequately protected groups (normothermia or H without K) showed more myocytic and capillary endothelial damage than the HK groups. No technique of myocardial protection studied completely preserved LVF, but the combination of HK plus procaine resulted in maximal recovery of LVF following cross-clamping for up to 120 minutes.
...
PMID:Effect of cross-clamp time, temperature, and cardioplegic agents on myocardial function after induced arrest. 70 64
In order to clarify the relationship between essential hypertension and
glucose
metabolism, and to approach the pathophysiology or the etiology of essential hypertension, we examined
glucose
tolerance test (GTT) using spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) as models. SHR, namely
stroke
-prone SHR (SHRSP) and
stroke
-resistant SHR (SHRSR) always had higher serum
glucose
levels at each GTT phase than normotensive control Wistar-Kyoto rats. They also tended to show higher levels in the young even at 5 weeks of age rather than in the adult. These results indicate that hyperglycemic tendency or lower
glucose
tolerance may be a characteristic of spontaneous hypertension and may be related to the mechanism of hypertension.
...
PMID:Glucose tolerance in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 71 23
In four experiments, immature Athens Randombred (ARB) chickens were maintained at a moderate temperature, (24 degrees C., 45% R.H.). In Exps. 1 and 2 reserpine was given intramuscularly (0.75 mg./kg.) 12 hours before the heating episode was begun; in Exp. 3, propranolol was given intravenously (4 mg./kg.) 2 hours before heating; and in Exp. 4, dihydroergotamine was given intramuscularly (4 mg./kg.) 6 hours before heating. Rserpine and propranolol elevated plasma corticosterone before the heating episode began, but dihydorergotamine did not. Reserpine also raised plasma
glucose
levels before heating, but propranolol and dihdroergotamine did not. During the heating episodes, plasma
glucose
and plasma corticosterone increased in non-drug-treated birds; the increases were then followed by significant declines. In birds treated with reserpine, propranolol, and dihydroergotamine, however, elevated plasma corticosterone was maintained throughout the period of heating. Propranolol and dihydroergotamine also stabilized plasma
glucose
at higher levels during heating, but reserpine permitted the late period decline similar to that of non-drug-treated birds. These results indicate an adrenal cortical insufficiency during heat
stroke
and death in young chickens.
...
PMID:Modification of corticosterone and glucose responses by sympatholytic agents in young chickens during acute heat exposure. 82 47
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