Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Conditions influencing the survival of Campylobacter jejuni in the natural aquatic environment have been determined. Release of Campylobacter spp. into natural waters by animal hosts is postulated to play a key role in the maintenance of viability and transmission of the organism in the environment. Laboratory flask microcosms containing filter-sterilized stream water were used to test C. jejuni for the ability to remain viable in simulated natural systems. The microcosms were compared with the biphasic and shaking broth procedures used routinely for growth of Campylobacter spp. in the research laboratory. The stream-water microcosms were analyzed to determine effects of temperature and aeration on the survival of a well-characterized C. jejuni strain isolated originally from a human campylobacteriosis patient. Morphological characteristics were evaluated by phase-contrast microscopy and scanning or transmission electron microscopy. Survival curves were quantified on the basis of plate counts, epifluorescent microscopy, optical density measurements, and direct viable counts associated with protein synthesis in the absence of DNA replication. A significant difference was observed between results of direct enumeration, i.e., direct viable counts or acridine orange direct counts, and those from spread plate cultures. In all cases, increasing temperature of cultivation resulted in decreased recoverability on laboratory media, due possibly to an increased metabolic rate, as analyzed by CO2 evolution in the presence of radiolabeled glutamate. Stream water held at low temperature (4 degrees C) sustained significant numbers of campylobacters for greater than 4 months. Microcosms, aerated with shaking, exhibited logarithmic decline in recoverable C. jejuni, while stationary systems underwent a more moderate rate of decrease to the nonculturable state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Viable but nonculturable stage of Campylobacter jejuni and its role in survival in the natural aquatic environment. 376 58

Local cerebral blood flow (LCBF) and local tissue:blood partition, coefficient (L lambda) values were measured during CT scanning while patients with different types of Parkinson's syndrome (N = 14) inhaled a contrast mixture of 35-37 per cent stable xenon gas in oxygen. Single-compartment analysis fitted to infinity was used to calculate L lambda and LCBF values. Results were compared with results from normal age-matched volunteers (N = 24). Mean hemispheric (p less than 0.05) and subcortical (p less than 0.05) gray matter LCBF values were reduced in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (N = 11), compared to values from age-matched normals. Regionally, LCBF reductions included frontal (p less than 0.001), parietal cortex (p less than 0.05), caudate (p less than 0.05), lentiform nuclei (p less than 0.001) and thalamus (p less than 0.05) reductions. L lambda values were normal. Unilateral tremor and/or rigidity correlated directly with reduced LCBF in contralateral lentiform (p less than 0.01) and caudate (p less than 0.01) nuclei. In postencephalitic Parkinsonism (N = 1) LCBF reductions were diffuse, with normal L lambda values. In the akinetic form of Parkinsonism (N = 1) associated with lacunar infarcts, LCBF and L lambda reductions were patchy. In Parkinsonism following carbon monoxide poisoning (N = 1), LCBF values of gray and white matter were diffusely reduced and L lambda values were reduced in both pallidal regions. When dementia was present together with Parkinsonism (N = 3), LCBF reductions were more diffuse and severe. Dopaminergic deficiency correlated directly with reduced LCBF values, reflecting the severity of Parkinsonism.
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PMID:Xenon contrast CT-CBF measurements in parkinsonism and normal aging. 399 51

Protoheme is essential for the growth of some strains of Bacteroides melaninogenicus. At low concentrations in the growth medium, protoheme determines the doubling time, total cell yield, and amount of cytochrome per bacterium. At high protoheme concentrations, the doubling time, total cell yield, and amount of enzymatically reducible cytochrome appear to remain nearly constant, and protoheme is accumulated by the cell. The accumulated protoheme can support the growth of the bacterium for at least eight generations in a protoheme-free medium. When growth and cytochrome content are proportional during growth at low protoheme concentrations, the bacteria incorporate 10 to 20% of the total available protoheme into a membrane-bound respiratory system. This respiratory system includes cytochrome c, a carbon monoxide-binding pigment, and possibly flavoproteins. The pigments can be reversibly reduced by reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide or endogenous metabolism and can be oxidized anaerobically by fumarate or by shaking in air. Electron transport is inhibited by 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxy-quinoline-N-oxide.
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PMID:Electron transport system of the protoheme-requiring anaerobe Bacteroides melaninogenicus. 430 26

Maximum growth of Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni, strain C-61, occurred when the cultures were incubated with shaking in atmospheres containing approximately 30% hydrogen, 5% oxygen, and 10% CO2. Suspensions of cells grown under these conditions consumed oxygen with formate as the substrate in the presence of 0.33 mM cyanide, which completely inhibited respiration with ascorbate-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine and with lactate. Spectroscopic evidence with intact cells suggested that a form of cytochrome c, reducible with formate but not with lactate or ascorbate-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, can be reoxidized by a cyanide-insensitive system. Analysis of membranes from the cells showed high- and low-potential forms of cytochrome c, cytochrome b, and various enzymes, including hydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase, and fumarate reductase. The predominant carbon monoxide-binding pigment appeared to be a form of cytochrome c, but the spectra also showed evidence of cytochrome o. The membrane cytochromes were reduced by hydrogen in the presence of 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide at concentrations which prevented the reduction of cytochrome c with succinate as the electron donor. Reoxidation of the substrate-reduced cytochromes by oxygen was apparently mediated by cyanide-sensitive and cyanide-insensitive systems. The membranes also had hydrogen-fumarate oxidoreductase activity mediated by cytochrome b. We conclude that C. fetus jejuni has high- and low-potential forms of cytochrome which are associated with a complex terminal oxidase system.
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PMID:Aerobic and anaerobic respiratory systems in Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni grown in atmospheres containing hydrogen. 628 61

The present study was carried out to characterize the spontaneous release of LH and FSH from the pituitary gland of infant rats in an in vitro system. In addition, the responsiveness of their pituitary glands to synthetic LHRH in vitro was examined. Wistar-Imamichi male and female rats, aged between 1 and 21 days and androgenized female rats at 7 and 21 days of age were used. One-day-old female rats were androgenized by a subcutaneous injection of 1 mg of testosterone propionate. Animals were killed by decapitation, trunk blood was collected, and the pituitary gland was dissected free and weighed. Pituitaries were placed in 9 ml-test tube with 2 ml Krebs-Henseleit solution and incubation was carried out in a shaking incubator for 6 hours at 37 degrees C under the gassing of 5% CO2 and 95% O2. After preincubation for 15 min, medium was replaced with 2 ml fresh medium and LH and FSH concentrations released during the first 3 hr-incubation period were assessed as for the spontaneous release and the second 3 hr-incubation period assessed for the response to LHRH (10(-6)M) stimulation. In an experiment, time course changes of the spontaneous release of LH and FSH were studied using 7-day-old rat pituitaries. An aliquot of 0.5 ml of medium was taken at 30, 60, 120 and 180 min during the incubation. Gonadotropin contents in the pituitaries were determined by adding the residue in the pituitary gland and the amounts released into medium. Spontaneous release of LH and FSH increased with age in both male and female rats, and the released amounts of LH as well as FSH in female rats tended to be higher than those in males at 1, 3, 7 and 21 days of age examined. But significant sex differences in the spontaneous release of LH and FSH were only seen at 21-day-old; Spontaneous release of LH in female rats was 7 times higher than that in age-matched males. Serum LH and FSH concentrations in female rats were significantly higher than those in males at all ages examined, except the LH level at 1-day-old. In contrast to LH, age and sex differences in the magnitude of the spontaneous release of FSH from the pituitary paralleled with the age and sex differences in serum FSH concentrations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Sex and age differences in the spontaneous release of gonadotropins from immature rat pituitary glands in vitro]. 642 31

Thermal stress was induced experimentally in the hybrid pigs LW X L, weighing 45 to 52 kg. The trials were repeated in boxes heated to the temperature of 43 to 47 degrees C. The pigs were examined for the values of tremor, pH, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2), base excess (BE), buffer base (BB), standard and actual bicarbonate (SB and AB), total carbon dioxide (tCO2) and partial oxygen pressure in blood (pO2). Thermal stress caused marked tachycardia, polypnoea, higher body temperature, increased blood pH, reduction of partial carbon dioxide pressure. Respiratory alkalosis was accompanied by cardiovascular weakness, general excitation followed by apathy, cyanosis and dyspnoea.
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PMID:[The effect of heat stress on acid-base homeostasis in pigs]. 643 33

Thirty-four chemicals-diverse in structure, postulated mechanisms of action, and primary target organs--were tested for cytotoxic response in isolated hepatocyte suspensions from young male Sprague-Dawley rats. Hepatocytes were incubated in the presence and absence of the test chemicals in closed vessels fitted with side arms for serial sampling for up to 5 h at 37 degrees C with gentle shaking under an O2:CO2 (95:5) atmosphere. The parameters evaluated were glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase and lactate dehydrogenase release from the cells, Trypan blue exclusion, cell count, urea synthesis capability, and steady-state ATP levels. All chemicals cytotoxic in animals following single or short-term repeated exposures caused statistically significant changes in one or more of these parameters in the 0.01-10-mM concentration range. Dimethylnitrosamine and thioacetamide were not as potent in the isolated cell system as expected from their in vivo hepatotoxicity, and the quantitative changes produced with thioacetamide in the hepatocytes were marginal, even at 10 mM. The solvents tested--ethanol, acetone, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), and propylene glycol--were without effect. These results indicate that isolated hepatocyte suspensions are useful for the identification of cytotoxins in general and hepatotoxins in particular, but that their capability for yielding a quantitative index of cytotoxic potential for diverse chemical species remains to be demonstrated.
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PMID:Response of isolated hepatocytes to organic and inorganic cytotoxins. 662 Mar 99

Responses of rumen microbes to fatty acids were evaluated by production of total volatile fatty acid and ratio of acetate to propionate. Fermentations were under carbon dioxide for 20 h in 50-ml Erlenmeyer flasks in a Dubnoff metabolic shaking incubator. Flasks contained 20 ml medium, 1 ml reducing solution, 750 mg substrate (450 mg hay plus 300 mg grain), and varying amounts of long-chain fatty acids supplied as free acids, as calcium salts, or as triglycerides. They were inoculated with 5 ml rumen fluid obtained from a cow fed 3.6 kg grass hay, 2.3 kg grain, and .2 kg tallow daily. Volatile fatty acid production was decreased by long-chain fatty acids that contained less than 18 carbon atoms and by unsaturated long-chain fatty acids with 18 carbon atoms. Lauric acid decreased volatile fatty acid production by 69% and induced unusual acetate/propionate ratio (40:1). Stearic acid, however, did not affect volatile fatty acid production or acetate/propionate ratio. Within two series of long chain fatty acids (myristic, palmitic, stearic, arachidic; stearic, oleic, linolenic), melting point accounted for 93 to 95% of the variation of volatile fatty acid production and acetate/propionate. As calcium salts, long chain fatty acids caused small changes of fermentation. Our data support the proposition that hard fats and calcium salts of long-chain fatty acids do not interfere with ruminal fermentation.
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PMID:Rumen fermentation in vitro as influenced by long chain fatty acids. 674 49

Provocation tests such as head shaking and positional tests, as well as hyperventilation, have been used routinely by many laboratories to elicit nystagmus during an electronystagmogram. We added oxygen testing to this routine battery and compared the results with hyperventilation and other forms of provocative testing. Hyperventilation and oxygen testing are unique in that they probably affect the vestibular system by changing the levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide supplied. Hyperventilation in theory would decrease available oxygen, while oxygen testing would cause an increase. In a study of two groups totaling over 700 patients, we found that oxygen testing is only occasionally positive (2.5%) and is of little practical value. Hyperventilation testing is positive 8% of the time but rarely alone, and has no localizing value. When hyperventilation and oxygen tests are both positive, the nystagmus may be in opposite directions. In 6 of 18 patients with acoustic neurinomas, hyperventilation produced transitory direction-changing nystagmus.
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PMID:Study of ventilation testing with electronystagmography. 678 96

Slices of rabbit lung tissue (approximately 150 mg; 0.5 mm) were incubated in 5 ml of Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer, in the presence of 0.25 mM [14C]chlorphentermine (CP) with shaking at 37 degrees C and under an atmosphere of an O2/CO2 mixture (95 : 5). Incubation medium (M) and tissue (T) were analyzed for radioactivity. Uptake of CP reached a plateau after 30 min at a T/M ratio of 20. Upon varying the concentration of [14C]CP from 0.125 mM to 2 mM, the concentration-response curve was seen to saturate and the T/M ratio decreased with increasing concentration. Substituting LiCl for NaCl or increasing the K+ content in the medium decreased CP uptake. Incubation of slices with Na+-pump inhibitors, harmaline and iodoacetate, significantly decreased CP uptake. Chloroamphetamine, desimipramine, imipramine, morphine, chlorpromazine, dieldrin, methadone, amphetamine (each at 1 mM) and incubation at 10 degrees C inhibited CP uptake. Imipramine and amphetamine were both effective in displacing previously accumulated CP from the tissue slices. Efflux of CP from the lung slices was biphasic and was not affected by removal of Na+ from the medium. Binding of CP to lung homogenate was unaffected by substituting LiCl for NaCl or by the presence of 1 mM iodoacetate. However, 1 mM harmaline or 1 mM imipramine decreased CP binding. These studies offer evidence for a partially Na+-dependent, active uptake process for pulmonary sequestration of CP compatible with earlier findings obtained with perfused intact lung preparations.
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PMID:Chlorphentermine uptake by rabbit lung slices. 741 14


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