Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (hyperoxia)
5,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A series of 217 patients with chronic coronary heart disease at an early stage of heart failure were examined. A comprehensive examination of the cardiovascular system and tissue metabolism makes it possible to diagnose cardiac failure at an early stage. Additional diagnostic signs of an early stage of heart failure were shown to include arteriolar hypoxemia, venous hyperoxia, a reduction in the arteriovenous difference with relation to oxygen and in tissue oxygen utilization which increased following a hydrostatic test, as well as an excessive accumulation of blood lactate and manifestations of disordered acid-base balance.
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PMID:[Status of several types of tissue metabolism at rest and during functional tests in patients in the initial stage of heart failure]. 672 2

Fifty five patients with coronary heart disease were examined. Of them 10 patients underwent multiple aortocoronary bypass surgery using intrathoracic or radial arteries under natural circulation, 45 had the same surgery under extracorporeal circulation (ECC). In the patients operated on without ECC, increases in active oxygen forms were rather moderate and practically always occurred with enhancement of antioxidative protective enzymes, the oxygen balance of arterial blood was in the normal range during and after surgery. The ECC patients displayed a considerable creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) with a lower antioxidative protection coefficient particularly when ECC was changed to natural circulation and when the lung was involved in circulation. In the postoperative period, the oxygenation index decreased from 1.7 to 1.3 in virtually all patients, the functional shunt rising from 15 to 30%. In 55% of the patients, varying arterial hypoxemia preserved in the early postoperative period. The damaging factors of ECC (hyperoxia, reperfusion syndrome, etc.) that impair the permeability of lung membranes have been shown to contribute to the activation of CPK, which causes early postoperative' arterial hypoxemia in patients operated on for coronary heart diseases.
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PMID:[Effects of free oxygen radicals on impaired lung oxygenating function at aortocoronary bypass surgery]. 1218 35

Low birthweight is associated with increased rates of coronary heart disease, stroke, hypertension and non-insulin-dependent diabetes during adult life. This is thought to be the consequence of a 'programming', whereby a stimulus or insult at a critical, sensitive period of early life has permanent effects on structure, physiology and metabolism. Programming of the fetus may, hence, result from adaptations to a condition where placental nutrient supply fails to match fetal demand. Recently, compensatory feto-placental up-regulation of the nitric oxide system during fetal growth restriction (FGR) was shown. Particularly, restricted hypoxic fetuses present an elevation of nitrites and a reduction of asymmetric dimethylarginine. S-nitrosohemoglobin is consumed under hypoxic conditions. These events are followed by nitric oxide pathway down-regulation postnatally, increasing susceptibility to cardiovascular disorders later in life. The relative hyperoxia would favor any such occurrence through depletion of tetrahydrobiopterin secondary to oxygen radical formation. This concept may lead to new therapeutic strategies, based on tetrahydrobiopterin supplementation, free-radical scavenging, L-arginine administration and/or inhaled NO therapy in FGR hypoxic newborns, to improve their postnatal adaptation and to reduce the risk of metabolic pathologies in adult age.
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PMID:Feto-placental vascular dysfunction as a prenatal determinant of adult cardiovascular disease. 2346 93