Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (collapse)
28,634 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of unilateral lung collapse on compensatory lung growth was studied in 3-wk-old (young) and 10-wk-old (adult) male Long-Evans rats. Under light halothane anesthesia, left lung collapse was produced by injection of dental plastic through a thracheostomy cannula. The rats were killed either 5 days or 4 wk later. At 5 days postcollapse, the 3-wk-old rats had an increase in DNA over sham controls (21%) (P less than 0.05), with no significant change in the protein/DNA ratio. At 4 wk postcollapse, increases in DNA over shamoperated controls were observed in both the 3-wk-old (58%) and the 10-wk-old (28%) rats, whereas the protein/DNA ratio at both ages was significantly less than that of sham controls (P less than 0.05). Thus, unilateral lung collapse stimulates growth of the contralateral lung by cellular hyperplasia, not hypertrophy, both in the young and adult rat. The hyperplasia begins within 5 days after collapse and is greater by 4 wk. The extent of hyperplasia is greater in the young than in the adult rat.
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PMID:Effect of lung collapse on compensatory lung growth. 89 62

During a 10-year period (1978-1988), 565 patients, aged greater than or equal to 70 years, who sustained a fresh pertrochanteric fracture, were treated in the Department of Traumatology at the University Hospitals of Leuven, Belgium. Three hundred eighty-eight fractures were complex and unstable, according to the Evans-Jensen system and the AO system. Special attention was given to the 324 cases of type IC and ID in Evans' system, type A2 in the AO system. The method of treatment changed greatly during the period of study. All patients were followed prospectively during 1 year. Our study showed that for these unstable fractures, fixation with an angled plate or Ender nails should be forsaken. The overall results of the compression hip screw treatment were good (reoperation rate 2%, good functional results in 64%), but as this treatment has a risk for serious collapse and pain in about 80% of all type ID fractures, one could suggest treating these complex multifragment fractures primarily with an endoprosthesis. This treatment need no longer be considered severe intervention, as the danger of mechanical complications is minimal (less than 1%).
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PMID:Pertrochanteric fractures in the elderly: are there indications for primary prosthetic replacement? 176 6

During a ten year period (1978-1988) 565 patients, aged 70 years and over, suffering a fresh pertrochanteric fracture have been treated in the Department of Traumatology at the University Hospitals of Leuven, Belgium. According to the system of Evans and Jensen, 388 fractures were classified as unstable. Special attention was given to the 324 cases of type I C and I D fractures. The method of treating greatly changed during the period of study. All patients were followed up prospectively during one year. Our study showed that for these unstable fractures, fixation with an angled plate or Ender nails should be forsaken. The overall results of the dynamic hip screw treatment were good (reoperation rate 2%, good functional results in 64%), but as this treatment has a risk for serious collapse and pain in about 80% of all type I D fractures, one could suggest to treat these complex multifragment fractures primarily with an endoprosthesis. This treatment needs no longer to be considered as a severe intervention, as the danger of mechanical complications being very minimal (less than 1%).
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PMID:Pertrochanteric fractures in the elderly. Is the Belgian VDP prosthesis the best treatment for unstable fractures with severe comminution? 195 Mar 12

In order to identify sensitive and specific biochemical indicators of pulmonary damages caused by industrial contaminants, male Long-Evans rats were exposed to a cadmium chloride (CdCl2) aerosol (5 mg Cd/m3; MMAD = 1.4 microns; SDg = 1.8) for 1 hr. The rats were sacrificed at 1, 4, 8, and 16 days after treatment. The response of the pulmonary surfactant (SF) system, which prevents alveolar collapse during expiration by lowering the surface tension at the air-liquid interface, was of particular interest. The effect of CdCl2 inhalation on the SF system was monitored by assaying the alkaline phosphatase (AKP) activity and phospholipid (PL) content in an enriched surface active SF fraction purified from bronchoalveolar lavages. The AKP activity of the SF fraction was markedly decreased (99%) on Day 1, indicating an inhibition of AKP by Cd. The PL content remained at control level while the total protein content was significantly increased (199%). On day 4, the high recovery of PL (207%) and AKP activities (639%) may reflect an increased secretion caused by Type II cell hyperplasia. By Day 8 these parameters returned to baseline levels. On Day 16 both the AKP activity and the PL content of the SF fraction were decreased significantly. Concurrently, the activities of the acid phosphatase and the B-N-acetylglucosaminidase followed, but to a lesser extent, the response of the AKP activity on Days 1 and 4. They differed from AKP, however, in that their activities remained significantly elevated on Day 8 and in that they returned to baseline levels on Day 16.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The response of the pulmonary surfactant-associated alkaline phosphatase following acute cadmium chloride inhalation. 275 63

This work reports a study of the effects of elliptinium on heart rate, arterial blood pressure and capillary permeability in guinea-pigs. The variations in capillary permeability are determined by spectrophotometric assay of skin Evans blue. Elliptinium induces dose-independent tachycardia and dose-related hypotension. For the highest dose (6 mg/kg), elliptinium induces lethal collapse . Elliptinium increases capillary permeability and this effect, particularly marked at 1 mg, i.d., is partially antagonized by mepyramine-cimetidine association. These results are discussed in comparison with those obtained with elliptinium on other parameters, with histamine and with different antitumoral agents. The increase in capillary permeability raises the question of its relevance to the anticancer activity of elliptinium.
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PMID:Cardiac and vascular effects of elliptinium in guinea pigs. Involvement of a histaminergic mechanism. 405 Jun 12

A prospective randomized study was set up, comparing a compression hip screw with the Vandeputte (VDP) endoprosthesis treatment for fresh, unstable peritrochanteric fractures, according to the Evans-Jensen and AO systems. Ninety patients, ages > or = 70 years, 47 of whom were treated with a compression hip screw and 43 with a VDP endoprosthesis, were included. All patients were being followed for 3 months. No difference between the two groups was found for operating time, wound complications, and mortality rate, but there was a higher transfusion need in VDP treatment. Severe fracture redisplacement or total collapse of the fracture occurred in 11 (26%) compression hip screw patients, two of whom had revision surgery. Only one patient needed reintervention after VDP treatment. Functional capacity of preoperative independent patients at hospital discharge did not differ for the two groups. In conclusion, the compression hip screw seemed to be an appropriate implant for most of the peritrochanteric fractures, but for very old patients with advanced osteoporosis, with a complex, unstable peritrochanteric fracture, and who are eligible for early mobilization, primary cemented endoprosthesis might be the best treatment.
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PMID:Treatment of unstable peritrochanteric fractures in elderly patients with a compression hip screw or with the Vandeputte (VDP) endoprosthesis: a prospective randomized study. 889 57

Vasodilation of rabbit carotid arteries induced by a pulsed-eye laser was studied in vitro to clarify the underlying mechanism. Artery segments were double cannulated in a pressure-perfusion apparatus which, under physiological conditions, allows for differential application of various solutions, pharmacological agents, and pulsed-dye laser light. Vasoconstriction was activated using both pharmacological and nonpharmacological agonists. Laser energy at a wavelength of either 480 or 575 nm was applied intraluminally in 1-microseconds pulses, which caused dilation of the arteries if hemoglobin was present in the lumen at sufficient concentration. Induced vasodilation did not specifically require the presence of hemoglobin; the same phenomenon could be repeated using an inert dye such as Evans blue as an optical absorber of laser energy. The optical density of the absorber, the number of applied laser pulses, and total amount of applied energy directly influenced the vasodilatory response. Laser-induced vasodilation was possible in both normal vessels and vessels denuded of endothelium. Pulsed-dye laser-induced vasodilation is therefore not a phenomenon mediated through chemical processes, but is rather a purely physical process initiated by the optical absorption of laser energy by the intraluminal medium, which probably induces cavitation bubble formation and collapse, resulting in the vasodilatory response of the vessel.
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PMID:Basic mechanism of in vitro pulsed-dye laser-induced vasodilation. 781 54

The stability properties of line solitary wave solutions of the (2+1)-dimensional Boussinesq equation with respect to transverse perturbations and their consequences are considered. A geometric condition arising from a multisymplectic formulation of this equation gives an explicit relation between the parameters for transverse instability when the transverse wave number is small. The Evans function is then computed explicitly, giving the eigenvalues for the transverse instability for all transverse wave numbers. To determine the nonlinear and long-time implications of the transverse instability, numerical simulations are performed using pseudospectral discretization. The numerics confirm the analytic results, and in all cases studied, the transverse instability leads to collapse.
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PMID:Transverse instability and its long-term development for solitary waves of the (2+1)-dimensional Boussinesq equation. 1278 15

Using a conditional life or death screen in yeast, we have isolated a tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) gene encoding a phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (LePHGPx). The protein displayed reduced glutathione-dependent phospholipid hydroperoxide peroxidase activity, but differs from counterpart mammalian enzymes that instead contain an active seleno-Cys. LePHGPx functioned as a cytoprotector in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), preventing Bax, hydrogen peroxide, and heat stress induced cell death, while also delaying yeast senescence. When tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaves were exposed to lethal levels of salt and heat stress, features associated with mammalian apoptosis were observed. Importantly, transient expression of LePHGPx protected tobacco leaves from salt and heat stress and suppressed the apoptotic-like features. As has been reported, conditional expression of Bax was lethal in tobacco, resulting in tissue collapse and membrane permeability to Evans blue. When LePHGPx was coexpressed with Bax, little cell death and no vital staining were observed. Moreover, stable expression of LePHGPx in tobacco conferred protection against the fungal phytopathogen Botrytis cinerea. Taken together, our data indicated that LePHGPx can protect plant tissue from a variety of stresses. Moreover, functional screens in yeast are a viable tool for the identification of plant genes that regulate cell death.
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PMID:Tomato phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase inhibits cell death induced by Bax and oxidative stresses in yeast and plants. 1523 16

The in vivo and in vitro pharmacological effects of leptoxin, one of the most lethal protein toxins known at present date (LD(50) 0.5+/-0.03 microg/kg i.v., mice) isolated from Leptodactylus pentadactylus skin secretion, were studied. In rats, leptoxin (1.0 microg/kg, i.v.) induced cardiorespiratory collapse with abundant tracheal secretion followed by sudden death. The cardiovascular shock, pulmonary edema and mortality were not prevented by pretreating the animals with effective doses of pharmacological blockers, i.e., atropine with or without bilateral vagotomy, phentolamine, propranolol, hexamethonium, captopril, dexamethasone, indomethacin, L-NAME, promethazine, Ginkgolide BN-52021 or tezosentan. Pulmonary macroscopic examination revealed increased tracheobronchial secretion, hemorrhagic areas and edema. Microscopic examination showed intense vascular congestion, alveolar and septal interstitial hemorrhage and alveolar edema, without infiltrated inflammatory cells. Leptoxin increased pulmonary index (0.67+/-0.09 vs. 1.55+/-0.24; p<0.05) and the Evans blue concentration in the bronchoalveolar fluid (1.24+/-0.17 vs. 4.17+/-1.47 microg/microL; p<0.01) and in the lung parenchyma (40.73+/-3.27 vs. 65.33+/-4.51 microg/microL; p<0.03). Leptoxin increased the pulmonary perfusion pressure from 13.7+/-5.3 to 54.0+/-6.3 mmHg. It also induced a vasoconstrictor effect in the perfused mesenteric vascular bed that could be explained by a hyperreactivity to phenylephrine. Thus, the results suggest that leptoxin-induced death occurs by acute pulmonary edema due to increased microvascular pulmonary pressure evoked by direct vasoconstriction. Despite its strong toxicity, the role of leptoxin in L. pentadactylus skin remains unknown.
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PMID:Isolation and pharmacological effects of leptoxin, a novel proteic toxin from Leptodactylus pentadactylus skin secretion. 1950 92


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