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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (
hyperoxia
)
5,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prolonged exposure of C57B16 mice to pure O2 at 1
ATA
induced pulmonary edema associated with involution of lymphoid system and depressed immunity. The consequences of these toxic events were evaluated by 1) mortality rate, 2) determination of pulmonary water, 3) thymic and splenic cellularity, and 4) humoral (primary antibodies) and cellular (mitogenic) immune responses. Pretreatment of mice with 125 mg kg-1 of diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC) several days before exposure to O2 resulted in 1) an increase in animal survival (92-100% vs. 59% O2 controls), 2) a reduction in pulmonary edema, 3) partial stabilization of thymus and spleen lymphocyte populations, and 4) restoration of the humoral response (specific antibodies appeared earlier than in O2 control animals) and improvement of the mitogenic proliferative response of the spleen cells after
hyperoxia
. None of these effects were observed when DDC treatment coincided with the beginning of exposure. Our results indicated that DDC protects mice from both pulmonary and lymphoid hyperoxic injury, but only in a partial manner. It is suggested that the mechanism of this antioxidative property is indirect.
...
PMID:Diethyldithiocarbamate provides partial protection against pulmonary and lymphoid oxygen toxicity. 300 45
To evaluate the relative contributions of three possible mechanisms that can be advanced to explain the observation that
hyperoxia
decreases serotonin uptake by endothelial cells, we examined the effect of high O2 tensions on Na+-K+-ATPase activity, ATP content, and plasma membrane fluidity in cultured endothelial cells. Confluent monolayers of pulmonary artery and aortic endothelial cells were exposed to 95% O2 (
hyperoxia
) or 20% O2 (controls) in 5% CO2 at 1
ATA
for 4-42 h. Exposure to high O2 tensions had no effect on Na+-K+-ATPase activity or ATP content in pulmonary artery or aortic endothelial cells in culture. However,
hyperoxia
decreased the fluidity of the plasma membrane of pulmonary artery and aortic endothelial cells in culture, and the time course for the decrease in fluidity parallels that of the hyperoxic inhibition of serotonin transport. These results indicate that
hyperoxia
decreases fluidity in the hydrophobic core of the plasma membranes of cultured endothelial cells. Such decreases in plasma membrane fluidity may be responsible for
hyperoxia
-induced alterations in membrane function including decreases in transmembrane transport of amines.
...
PMID:Hyperoxia reduces plasma membrane fluidity: a mechanism for endothelial cell dysfunction. 300 28
To explore the role of the glutathione oxidation-reduction cycle in altering the sensitivity of rats to the effects of hyperbaric
hyperoxia
, we administered N,N-bis(2-chloroethyl)-N-nitrosourea (BCNU) to decrease tissue glutathione reductase activity. We then exposed these animals and their matched vehicle-treated controls to 100% O2 at 4
ATA
. Animals that received BCNU and were immediately exposed to hyperbaric O2 showed enhanced toxicity by seizing earlier in the exposure than controls. Animals that received BCNU 18 h before the hyperbaric O2 exposure were paradoxically protected from the effects of the exposure with a prolongation of their time to initial seizure and a marked increase in their survival time during the exposure. Tissue glutathione concentrations were also measured in the various groups and the hyperbaric O2 exposure produced marked decreases in hepatic glutathione levels in all control animals. In animals treated with BCNU 18 h before exposure, hepatic glutathione concentrations also decreased, but the concentrations had significantly increased during the 18-h waiting period, allowing these animals to maintain hepatic levels in the normal range even during their hyperbaric exposures. We conclude that treatment of rats with BCNU 18 h before exposure to hyperbaric
hyperoxia
results in enhanced protection of the animals during the exposure.
...
PMID:BCNU-induced protection from hyperbaric hyperoxia: role of glutathione metabolism. 321 53
Free radicals and oxidant gases, such as oxygen (O2) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), are injurious to mammalian lung cells. One of the postulated mechanisms for the cellular injury associated with these gases and free radicals involves peroxidative cleavage of membrane lipids. We have hypothesized that oxidant-related alterations in membrane lipids may result in disordering of the plasma membrane lipid bilayer, leading to derangements in membrane-dependent functions. To test this hypothesis, we examined the effect of exposure to high partial pressures of O2 or NO2 on the physical state and function of pulmonary endothelial cell plasma membranes. Both
hyperoxia
(95% O2 at 1
ATA
) and NO2 exposure (5 ppm) caused early and significant decreases in fluidity in the hydrophobic interior of the plasma membrane lipid bilayer and subsequent depressions in plasma membrane-dependent transport of 5-hydroxytryptamine. Lipid domains at the surface of pulmonary endothelial cell plasma membranes are more susceptible to NO2-induced injury than to hyperoxic injury. Alterations in the fluidity of these more superficial domains are associated with derangements in surface dependent functions, such as receptor-ligand interaction. These results support our hypothesis and advance our understanding of how the chemical events of free radical injury associated with high O2 and NO2 tensions are translated into functional manifestations of O2 and NO2-induced cellular injury.
...
PMID:The effect of oxidant gases on membrane fluidity and function in pulmonary endothelial cells. 326 16
Exposure of rats to high concentrations of oxygen (greater than 95%) at 1
ATA
pressure (101 kPa) is lethal within three days. Rats treated with a small dose of endotoxin are protected against these lethal effects of
hyperoxia
. Recently, we found that the lysine salt of acetylsalicylic acid antagonises this protective action of endotoxin. This suggests that prostaglandin metabolism plays an important role in the protective action of endotoxin against pulmonary oxygen toxicity. Therefore, we measured the plasma levels of 6KPGF1 alpha, a stable degradation product of prostacyclin (PGI2), PGE2 and thromboxane B2, the stable degradation product of thromboxane A2, in rats exposed to air or greater than 95% oxygen for 48 hours. We compared these with the plasma levels of rats treated with endotoxin (Salmonella typhimurium lipopolysaccharide 1 mg/kg) and exposed to air or greater than 95% oxygen for 48 hours. We found that exposure of rats to greater than 95% oxygen for 48 hours leads to a significant rise in the 6KPGF1 alpha levels. Rats exposed to greater than 95% oxygen for 48 hours and treated with endotoxin had significantly higher PGE2 and significantly lower 6KPGF1 alpha plasma levels than saline-treated rats exposed to greater than 95% oxygen for 48 hours.
...
PMID:Endotoxin protection against pulmonary oxygen toxicity and plasma prostaglandin levels in the rat. 347 92
The present study is one component of a comprehensive investigation of oxygen tolerance of tissues and organs in normal human subjects. The focus of this study was the acylation of membrane phospholipid in situ by erythrocytes. Activation of exogenous [9,10-3H]oleic acid to acyl thioester and transesterification of the acyl thioester into phospholipid by intact human erythrocytes incubated in vitro decreased 30% after exposure of 10 human subjects to hyperbaric
hyperoxia
(100% O2, 3
ATA
, 3.5 h). Partial recovery of activity could be detected when additional cells were obtained from these subjects and assayed in vitro 24 h after cessation of exposure. No significant change in membrane phospholipid fatty acid composition was detected under these conditions. The reduced glutathione content of intact erythrocytes increased by 15% after hyperbaric
hyperoxia
and remained elevated 24 h after exposure. In isolated membranes prepared from the same cells activation of [9,10-3H]oleic acid to acyl thioester and its transesterification into phospholipid did not change after
hyperoxia
. Since the ability of intact cells to replace oxidized fatty acids in membrane phospholipids via deacylation and reacylation in situ may be necessary for the maintenance of membrane integrity during exposure to oxidative stress, the decrease in [9,10-3H]oleic acid incorporation by human erythrocytes detected in vitro after hyperbaric
hyperoxia
in vivo may reflect an early event in the pathogenesis of oxygen-induced cellular injury and may be a useful index for assessment of the tolerance of tissues to
hyperoxia
.
...
PMID:Hyperbaric hyperoxia reversibly inhibits erythrocyte phospholipid fatty acid turnover. 355 13
Hyperoxia
and hyperbaric
hyperoxia
increased the rate of cerebral hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production in unanesthetized rats in vivo, as measured by the H2O2-mediated inactivation of endogenous catalase activity following injection of 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Brain catalase activity in rats breathing air (0.2
ATA
O2) decreased to 75, 61, and 40% of controls due to endogenous H2O2 production at 30, 60, and 120 min, respectively, after intraperitoneal injection of 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. The rate of catalase inactivation increased linearly in rats exposed to 0.6
ATA
O2 (3
ATA
air), 1.0
ATA
O2 (normobaric 100% O2) and 3.0
ATA
O2 (3
ATA
100% O2) compared with 0.2
ATA
O2 (room air). Catalase inactivation was prevented by pretreatment of rats with ethanol (4 g/kg), a competitive substrate for the reactive catalase-H2O2 intermediate, compound I. This confirmed that catalase inactivation by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole was due to formation of the catalase-H2O2 intermediate, compound I. The linear rate of catalase inactivation allows estimates of the average steady-state H2O2 concentration within brain peroxisomes to be calculated from the formula: [H2O2] = 6.6 pM + 5.6
ATA
-1 X pM X [O2], where [O2] is the concentration of oxygen in
ATA
that the rats are breathing. Thus the H2O2 concentration in brains of rats exposed to room air is calculated to be about 7.7 pM, rises 60% when O2 tension is increased to 100% O2, and increases 300% at 3
ATA
100% O2, where symptoms of central nervous system toxicity first become apparent. These studies support the concept that H2O2 is an important mediator of O2-induced injury to the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Hyperoxia increases H2O2 production by brain in vivo. 362 37
The maximal contractile force (peak torque) of the quadriceps femoris was studied during 60 repeated unilateral dynamic knee extensions in nine subjects under three different conditions, viz., during air breathing at normal (1
ATA
) and raised (6
ATA
) ambient pressures and during O2 breathing at 1.3
ATA
. In six subjects the electromyographic (EMG) activity of the working muscle was recorded. Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis before, immediately after, and 1 min after exercise. Tissue specimens were subsequently assayed for various muscle metabolites. Peak torque, as an average of the 60 knee extensions, was higher (P less than 0.05) at 1.3
ATA
than at 6 or 1
ATA
. Peak torque of the exercising muscle declined more rapidly at 1
ATA
than at 1.3
ATA
, differing in the final 24 contractions by 14%. At 6
ATA
peak torque of the initial 12 contractions was 6% lower (P less than 0.05) than at 1
ATA
but equaled 1-
ATA
values in the latter third of the exercise bout. Although the EMG activity at 1
ATA
increased relative to that at 6
ATA
as exercise proceeded, the rate of force decline was greater at 1
ATA
. Despite greater total work produced at 1.3
ATA
than at 1
ATA
, the metabolic response to exercise was not substantially altered at increased O2 pressure. However, the restitution rate of energy-rich phosphagens and the elimination of lactate during recovery were greater (P less than 0.05) at 1.3
ATA
. These results suggest that
hyperoxia
may enhance the rate of energy release, whereas high N2 pressure and/or high hydrostatic pressure seem to interfere with neuromuscular activity.
...
PMID:Human skeletal muscle function and metabolism during intense exercise at high O2 and N2 pressures. 365 15
Endotoxin (500 micrograms/kg)-treated rats are very tolerant to
hyperoxia
(greater than 95% O2, 1
ATA
). We have now attempted to determine if dexamethasone given to rats 1 h before a usually lethal dose of endotoxin would diminish endotoxin's lethality without substantially abrogating its capacity to confer tolerance to
hyperoxia
. Endotoxin (20 mg/kg) given alone killed 70-80% of air- or O2-breathing rats within 24 h; dexamethasone (0.6 mg) given 1 h before endotoxin decreased mortality at 24 h to 10-15%. About 90% of the rats that were alive 24 h after receiving dexamethasone plus endotoxin (20 mg/kg) survived 72 h of
hyperoxia
. Dexamethasone plus endotoxin (10 mg/kg) provided as much protection against pulmonary edema resulting from 72 h of
hyperoxia
as did 500 micrograms/kg endotoxin alone. Tolerance to
hyperoxia
produced by dexamethasone plus high-dose endotoxin was accompanied by a rise in the activity in the lung of antioxidant enzymes. We conclude that dexamethasone protects rats against the lethal effects of high doses of endotoxin without interfering with endotoxin's capacity to engender tolerance to
hyperoxia
.
...
PMID:Dexamethasone protects against high-dose endotoxin without loss of tolerance to oxygen. 370 Mar 5
We designed experiments using isolated rabbit lungs to determine the effect of
hyperoxia
on the pulmonary vasoconstriction caused by the infusion of the lipid peroxide tert-butyl hydroperoxide (t-bu-OOH), which produces vasoconstriction by stimulating the pulmonary synthesis of thromboxane. Exposure to 48-60 h of 100% O2 at 1
ATA
markedly reduced the increase in pulmonary artery pressure caused by t-bu-OOH infusion. We also investigated whether the mechanism for the attenuated vasoconstriction was due to altered production of arachidonate mediators or oxidant-induced damage to the contractile mechanism. In addition to infusing t-bu-OOH, which selectively stimulates thromboxane production, we also infused Intralipid, an esterified fatty acid emulsion that stimulates production of both thromboxane and prostacyclin. These experiments were done to study the effect of
hyperoxia
on prostacyclin synthesis. To determine if antioxidant therapy would prevent the changes in mediator production and vascular reactivity caused by
hyperoxia
, we pretreated animals with the antioxidants butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) or vitamin E. The lack of vascular reactivity to t-bu-OOH was not due to a decrease in thromboxane synthesis or an increase in prostacyclin synthesis.
Hyperoxia
did not affect thromboxane synthesis during basal conditions or after stimulation of synthesis by t-bu-OOH. 100% O2 also did not effect the basal synthesis of prostacyclin by the lung.
Hyperoxia
did, however, markedly reduce prostacyclin synthesis when it was stimulated by Intralipid infusion. Antioxidant pretreatment did not reverse the inhibition of prostacyclin synthesis but did prevent the loss of vascular reactivity caused by
hyperoxia
. Thus
hyperoxia
causes vascular paralysis through oxidant-induced injury to the pulmonary vasculature.
...
PMID:Mechanism of hyperoxia-induced pulmonary vascular paralysis: effect of antioxidant pretreatment. 405 81
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