Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085383 (hypocapnia)
1,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Superoxide production was measured as the superoxide dismutase (SOD)-inhibitable portion of nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT) reduction after cerebral ischemia-reperfusion in anesthetized cats equipped with cranial windows. Significant superoxide production was found in the early reperfusion period and continued for more than 1 h after ischemia. Superoxide was not detected in control animals not subjected to ischemia, during ischemia, and at 120 min of reperfusion. After ischemia, the vasoconstrictor response to arterial hypocapnia was reduced. This effect was prevented by pretreatment with SOD plus catalase or by deferoxamine. The response to topical acetylcholine was converted to vasoconstriction after ischemia. The normal vasodilator response reappeared spontaneously at 120 min of reperfusion. The vasodilator response to acetylcholine was preserved in animals pretreated with SOD plus catalase. Blood-brain barrier permeability to labeled albumin and horseradish peroxidase was increased after ischemia. These effects were minimized by pretreatment with SOD and catalase. We conclude that superoxide generation occurs during reperfusion after cerebral ischemia for a fairly long period and that superoxide and its derivatives are responsible at least in part for the vasodilation and the abnormal reactivity as well as for the increase in blood-brain barrier permeability to macromolecules seen after ischemia. Furthermore, the findings suggest that the agent responsible for the vascular abnormalities is hydroxyl radical generated via the iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction.
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PMID:Oxygen radicals in cerebral ischemia. 133 9

Hypoproteinemia by itself produces a metabolic alkalosis. It is not clear whether a respiratory compensation (hypercapnia) develops with this alkalosis; patients with liver cirrhosis, most of them with hypoproteinemia, are known to hyperventilate. We studied 23 clinically stable patients with hypoproteinemia, with very low albumin-to-globulin ratios (range 0.4 to 1.1), who had either liver cirrhosis (n = 12) or other medical conditions (n = 11). In both groups, there was marked hypocapnia, accompanied by alkalemia (PaCO2 values (mean +/- SD) 31 +/- 2 and 32 +/- 3 torr; pH (mean +/- SD) 7.45 +/- 0.03 and 7.47 +/- 0.03, for the patients with cirrhosis and those without, respectively). Hypoxemia was not the stimulus provoking hyperventilation. The lowering of PaCO2 was proportional to the reduction of serum albumin and total protein concentrations; no detectable difference was seen between the patients with cirrhosis and those without cirrhosis in this apparent dependence of PaCO2 on the concentration of serum proteins. Many of these clinically stable patients with hypoproteinemia, with or without liver cirrhosis, had appreciable concentrations of unidentified anions in plasma (inappropriately high anion gap). Whatever the nonrespiratory acid-base status of the patients with hypoproteinemia, their pulmonary ventilation (hypocapnia) appeared excessive when compared with subjects (presumably) without proteinemia who had similar nonrespiratory acid-base states. The mechanism responsible for the hyperventilation in hypoproteinemia and the nature of the unidentified anions in this condition are obscure.
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PMID:Hyperventilation with hypoproteinemia. 318 88

The purpose of this study was to examine regional autoregulation of blood flow in the brain during acute hypertension. In anesthetized cats severe hypertension increased blood flow more in cerebrum (159%) and cerebellum (106%) than brain stem (58%). In contrast to the heterogeneous autoregulatory response, hypocapnia produced uniform vasoconstriction in the brain. We also compared vasodilatation during severe hypertension with vasodilatation during hypercapnia. During hypercapnia, blood flow increased as much in brain stem, as in cerebrum and cerebellum. Thus regional differences in autoregulation appear to be specific for autoregulatory stimulus and are not secondary to nonspecific differences in vasoconstrictor or vasodilator capacity. To determine whether the blood-brain barrier is more susceptible to hypertensive disruption in regions with less effective autoregulation, permeability of the barrier was quantitated with 125I-albumin. Severe hypertension produced disruption of the barrier in cerebrum but not in brain stem. Thus there are parallel differences in effectiveness of autoregulation and susceptibility to disruption of the blood-brain barrier in different regions of the brain.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of brain blood flow and permeability during acute hypertension. 392 26

1 Because they affect isolated cerebral arteries, some calcium antagonists have been studied on the intact cerebral circulation of the rat.2 Global cerebral blood flow ((133)Xe clearance technique) was measured in anaesthetized rats. Neither perhexiline (0.1 mug/kg to 1.0 mg/kg, i.v.) nor diltiazem (0.06-0.6 mg/kg, i.v.) had any significant effect on resting cerebral blood flow when measured 5 min after each dose. A high dose of nifedipine (1.0 mg/kg, i.v.) was administered during induced hypocapnia. Nifedipine failed to modify the hypocapnic vasoconstriction of the cerebral vasculature when compared to vehicle-treated rats.3 The possibility of discrete changes in regional cerebral blood flow was investigated. Local cerebral blood flow was measured in a number of brain regions by the [(14)C]-ethanol technique 15 min after the administration of nifedipine (20 or 100 mug/kg, i.v.). Nifedipine had no apparent effect on regional blood flow in the rat brain.4 Acute arterial hypertension increases protein leakage into the brain, a phenomenon susceptible to drugs that act on endothelial pinocytosis which is known to be calcium-dependent. The increase in protein extravasation, induced by the intravenous administration of either angiotensin II or adrenaline, was unchanged in rats previously treated with either nimodipine (20 mug/kg, i.v.) or nifedipine (50 mug/kg, i.v.) when dissolved in ethanol alone. However, nifedipine (20 mug/kg, i.v.) when dissolved in a solution of polyethylene glycol and ethanol further enhanced the hypertension-induced increase in brain albumin permeability.5 In conclusion, we have been unable to demonstrate any apparent effects of various calcium antagonists on the intact cerebral circulation of the rat, despite the number of different experimental models used.
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PMID:Calcium antagonists: effects on cerebral blood flow and blood-brain barrier permeability in the rat. 687 38

Acidosis has often been reported in inflamed tissues, and changes in strong relevant ions at the site of inflammation may provoke alterations in blood acid-base status. We measured changes in blood acid-base variables during carrageenan-induced inflammation in rats. We found a mixed acid-base disorder in rat blood during acute inflammation (12, 24, and 48 h). A metabolic acid contribution was found during the first 12 h and maintained further, as revealed by a decrease in plasma strong ion concentration difference ([SID]) and an increase in plasma weak acid concentration due to a rise in inorganic phosphate ([ATOT]P(i)). Plasma [SID] and [ATOT]P(i) changes were probably due to exchange of Na+ and P(i) between the inflammatory exudate and rat blood. A secondary respiratory compensation for the metabolic acid changes occurred in the blood of inflamed rats, resulting in significant hypocapnia. Furthermore, a progressive decrease in the total weak acid buffer concentration due to a decrease in plasma albumin ([ATOT]Alb) also counteracted the impact of changes in [SID] and P(i) to increase blood acidity. Therefore, despite the metabolic acid-base disorders induced by inflammatory processes, hydrogen ion (H+) homeostasis was maintained, and blood pH remained essentially unchanged in the inflamed rats.
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PMID:Blood acid-base changes during acute experimental inflammation in rats. 877 12

The serum anion gap is decreased in hyperchloremic (HCl) acidosis and increased in diuretic-induced alkalosis. These anion gap changes have been largely attributed to titration-induced variations in the net negative charge of the serum proteins, which are the predominant non-HCO3 buffers of serum. It has recently been shown, however, that albumin has all of the net protein charge, and titration-induced changes in charge are smaller than have been widely believed. Because the non-HCO3 buffers are also titrated in acute hypocapnia and hypercapnia, these disorders were induced in 16 anesthetized dogs for 10 min in order to assess the effect of acute changes in pH on the anion gap. Although the mean arterial pH varied from 7.04 to 7.65, the calculated mean albumin charge only varied from 6.8 to 9.0 mEq/L. When the anion gap was computed with HCO3 (AGHCO3 = Na + K - Cl - HCO3), the change in AGHCO3 per 0.1 change in pH (delta AGHCO3/ delta pH) was only 0.15 mEq/L per 0.1 pH. When the anion gap was computed with total CO2 content (AGTCO2 = Na + K - Cl - TCO2), delta AGTCO2/delta pH was larger (0.51 mEq/L per 0.1 pH) because of the effect of variable PCO2 levels on TCO2. In a review of 22 previous studies in humans and dogs, similar estimates of delta AG/delta pH were obtained (after adjusting for the lower albumin level in dogs). These results show that simple titration processes that occur within 10 min of a change in pH cause minimal changes in the anion gap. Titration of the known non-HCO3 buffers of serum does not explain the much larger anion gap changes of HCl acidosis and diuretic alkalosis.
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PMID:Effect of acute pH change on serum anion gap. 878 9

The effect of transfusing a nonextravasating, zero-link polymer of cell-free hemoglobin on pial arteriolar diameter, cerebral blood flow (CBF), and O2 transport (CBF x arterial O2 content) was compared with that of transfusing an albumin solution at equivalent reductions in hematocrit (approximately 19%) in anesthetized cats. The influence of viscosity was assessed by coinfusion of a high-viscosity solution of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), which increased plasma viscosity two- to threefold. Exchange transfusion of a 5% albumin solution resulted in pial arteriolar dilation, increased CBF, and unchanged O2 transport, whereas there were no significant changes over time in a control group. Exchange transfusion of a 12% polymeric hemoglobin solution resulted in pial arteriolar constriction and unchanged CBF and O2 transport. Coinfusion of PVP with albumin produced pial arteriolar dilation that was similar to that obtained with transfusion of albumin alone. In contrast, coinfusion of PVP with hemoglobin converted the constrictor response to a dilator response that prevented a decrease in CBF. Pial arteriolar dilation to hypercapnia was unimpaired in groups transfused with albumin or hemoglobin alone but was attenuated in the largest vessels in albumin and hemoglobin groups coinfused with PVP. Unexpectedly, hypocapnic vasoconstriction was blunted in all groups after transfusion of albumin or hemoglobin alone or with PVP. We conclude that 1) the increase in arteriolar diameter after albumin transfusion represents a compensatory response that prevents decreased O2 transport at reduced O2-carrying capacity, 2) the decrease in diameter associated with near-normal O2-carrying capacity after cell-free polymeric hemoglobin transfusion represents a compensatory mechanism that prevents increased O2 transport at reduced blood viscosity, 3) pial arterioles are capable of dilating to an increase in plasma viscosity when hemoglobin is present in the plasma, 4) decreasing hematocrit does not impair pial arteriolar dilation to hypercapnia unless plasma viscosity is increased, and 5) pial arteriolar constriction to hypocapnia is impaired at reduced hematocrit independently of O2-carrying capacity.
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PMID:Cerebrovascular response to decreased hematocrit: effect of cell-free hemoglobin, plasma viscosity, and CO2. 1281 46

Modified Hb solutions have been developed as O(2) carrier transfusion fluids, but of concern is the possibility that increased scavenging of nitric oxide (NO) within the plasma will alter vascular reactivity even if the Hb does not readily extravasate. The effect of decreasing hematocrit from approximately 30% to 18% by an exchange transfusion of a 6% sebacyl cross-linked tetrameric Hb solution on the diameter of pial arterioles possessing tight endothelial junctions was examined through a cranial window in anesthetized cats with and without a NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor. Superfusion of a NOS inhibitor decreased diameter, and subsequent Hb transfusion produced additional constriction that was not different from Hb transfusion alone but was different from the dilation observed by exchange transfusion of an albumin solution after NOS inhibition. In contrast, abluminal application of the cross-linked Hb produced constriction that was attenuated by the NOS inhibitor. Neither abluminal nor intraluminal cross-linked Hb interfered with pial arteriolar dilation to cromakalim, an activator of ATP-sensitive potassium channels. Pial vascular reactivity to hypocapnia and hypercapnia was unaffected by Hb transfusion. Microsphere-determined regional blood flow indicated selective decreases in perfusion after Hb transfusion in the kidney, small intestine, and neurohypophysis, which does not have tight endothelial junctions. Administration of a NOS inhibitor to reduce the basal level of NO available for scavenging before Hb transfusion prevented further decreases in blood flow to these regions compared with NOS inhibition alone. In contrast, blood flow to skeletal and left ventricular muscle increased, and cerebral blood flow was unchanged after Hb transfusion. This cross-linked Hb tetramer is known to appear in renal lymph but not in urine. We conclude that cell-free tetrameric Hb does not scavenge sufficient NO in the plasma space to significantly affect baseline tone in vascular beds with tight endothelial junctions but does produce substantial constriction in beds with porous endothelium. The data support increasing the molecular size of Hb by polymerization or conjugation to limit extravasation in all vascular beds to preserve normal vascular reactivity.
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PMID:Role of nitric oxide scavenging in vascular response to cell-free hemoglobin transfusion. 1589 76

This study examined the role of pregnancy-induced changes in wakefulness (or non-chemoreflex) and central chemoreflex drives to breathe, acid-base balance and female sex hormones in the hyperventilation of human pregnancy. Thirty-five healthy women were studied in the third trimester (TM(3); 36.3+/-1.0 weeks gestation; mean+/-S.D.) and again 20.2+/-7.8 weeks post-partum (PP). An iso-oxic hyperoxic rebreathing procedure was used to evaluate wakefulness and central chemoreflex drives to breathe. At rest, arterialized venous blood was obtained for the estimation of arterial PCO(2) (PaCO(2)) and [H(+)]. Blood for the determination of plasma strong ion difference ([SID]), albumin ([Alb]), as well as serum progesterone ([P(4)]) and 17beta-estradiol ([E(2)]) concentrations was also obtained at rest. Wakefulness and central chemoreflex drives to breathe, [P(4)] and [E(2)], ventilation and V CO(2) increased, whereas PaCO(2) and the central chemoreflex ventilatory recruitment threshold for PCO(2) (VRTCO(2)) decreased from PP to TM(3) (all p<0.01). The reductions in PaCO(2) were not related to the increases in [P(4)] and [E(2)]. The alkalinizing effects of reductions in PaCO(2) and [Alb] were partly offset by the acidifying effects of a reduced [SID], such that arterial [H(+)] was still reduced in TM(3) vs. PP (all p<0.001). A mathematical model of ventilatory control demonstrated that pregnancy-induced changes in wakefulness and central chemoreflex drives to breathe, acid-base balance, V CO(2) and cerebral blood flow account for the reductions in PaCO(2), [H(+)] and VRTCO(2). This is the first study to demonstrate that the hyperventilation and attendant hypocapnia/alkalosis of human pregnancy results from a complex interaction of pregnancy-induced changes in wakefulness and central chemoreflex drives to breathe, acid-base balance, metabolic rate and cerebral blood flow.
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PMID:Physiological mechanisms of hyperventilation during human pregnancy. 1828 46