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)

Bright-field and dark-field illumination techniques for in vivo measurements of reduced pyridine nucleotide fluorescence were compared in 15 rats during periods of normocapnia, hypocapnia, hypercapnia, and anoxia. Parameters investigated included fluorescence, cortical reflectance, cortical blood flow, and electroencephalograms. In normal brain, with preserved autoregulation, reduced pyridine nucleotide fluorescence was constant through a wide range in Pa(CO2), cortical blood flow, and cerebral blood volume in animals studied using vertical illumination (bright-field) techniques. There was a marked increase in reduced pyridine nucleotide fluorescence at death from anoxia. Artifacts were reduced by monochromators for excitation, emission, and reflected light; low-intensity vertical excitation energy and high-sensitivity recording instrumentation; and a small avascular (123 microns) field. Potential sources of error include photodecomposition, hemoglobin interference from absorption and reflectance, and light scattering. Vertical excitation techniques using a small field appeared to give more reliable and reproducible results than circumferential techniques using a larger field of observation.
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PMID:Comparison of dark-field and bright-field incident illumination for in vivo measurements of reduced pyridine nucleotides. 976 36