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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (collapse)
28,634 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The blood flow to the left lower lobe (QL), and total (QT) pulmonary blood flow, were measured in 10 open-chest dogs using electromagnetic flowmeters. Ventilation of the left lower lobe with 7% oxygen in nitrogen produced a greater reduction in QL/QT (41%) than lobar ventilation with 7% oxygen in nitrous oxide (33%). Lobar collapse reduced QL/QT by 65%, but there was no change in QL/QT when 50% nitrous oxide was administered to the right lung. The i.v. infusion of lignocaine hydrochloride during ventilation of the lobe with 7% oxygen in nitrogen produced no change in QL/QT. However, lignocaine infusion during lobar ventilation with 7% oxygen in nitrous oxide produced a further reduction in QL/QT to a value which was not significantly different from that observed during ventilation with 7% oxygen in nitrogen. Lignocaine had no effect on QL/QT during lobar collapse whether the right lung was ventilated with 50% oxygen in nitrogen or 50% oxygen in nitrous oxide. It is concluded that lignocaine reverses the depression of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction produced by lobar ventilation with nitrous oxide.
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PMID:Reversal of nitrous oxide-induced depression of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction by lignocaine hydrochloride during collapse and ventilation hypoxia of the left lower lobe. 395 25

Arterial blood nitrogen tensions of free-diving Weddell seals (Leptonychotes weddelli) were measured by attaching a microprocessor-controlled blood pump and drawing samples at depth to determine how these marine mammals dive to great depths and ascend rapidly without developing decompression sickness. Forty-seven samples of arterial blood were obtained from four Weddell seals during free dives lasting up to 23 minutes to depths of 230 meters beneath the sea ice of McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Peak arterial blood nitrogen tensions of between 2000 and 2500 millimeters of mercury were recorded at depths of 40 to 80 meters during descent, indicating that the seal's lung collapses by 25 to 50 meters. Then arterial blood nitrogen tensions slowly decreased to about 1500 millimeters of mercury at the surface. In a single dive, alveolar collapse and redistribution of blood nitrogen allow the seal to avoid nitrogen narcosis and decompression sickness.
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PMID:Seal lungs collapse during free diving: evidence from arterial nitrogen tensions. 402

To reproduce the syndrome of overwhelming Escherichia coli bacteremia and shock after pelvic instrumentation, a model was developed by feeding E. coli via drinking water to coliform-free rabbits, injecting nitrogen mustard intravenously, and inserting a temperature probe into the rectum. The temperature probe was inserted to mimic pelvic instrumentation of patients and to detect fever. Rabbits fed invasive serotypes of E. coli all suffered overwhelming bacteremia with high fever and fatal vascular collapse secondary to invasion of pelvic veins as the granulocyte count approached zero. In the absence of granulocytopenia, the rectal temperature probe produced an intensive inflammation with numerous polymorphonuclears and bacteremia did not develop. In the absence of rectal probing, granulocytopenic rabbits developed high fever without bacteremia. This model resembles human bacteremic shock with respect to the endogenous source of the bacteria, the high frequency of bacteremia due to E. coli and other enteric bacilli, the importance of pelvic instrumentation, and the associated immune disturbances such as granulocytopenia.
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PMID:Experimental production of lethal Escherichia coli bacteremia of pelvic origin. 489 86

The authors make a retrospective analysis of 95 cases of acute pancreatitis hospitalized between 1975 and 1979. In 3,8% of all the cases the acute pancreatitis was associated with hyperlipoproteinemia. The study of the 4 patients involved revealed the primary origin of hyperlipoproteinemia as a result of alimentary abuse in 3 of the cases. In a fourth case the increased serum lipoproteins were due to prolonged use of contraceptives. From the clinical viewpoint, pancreatitis associated with hyperlipoproteinemia was more severe, with signs of shock and collapse, respiratory failure, high serum nitrogen an hyperglycemia. The blood and the serum had a lactescent aspect, with a thick layer of chylomicrons. The serum and blood values for lipids were higher than 4000 mg%. The increase in the amount of lipids was especially due to high triglycerides values. From the anatomopathologic viewpoint the 4 patients presented as acute cases of cholecysto-pancreatitis with major and extensive haemorrhagic necrosis which involved almost the entire pancreas. The evolution of the four patients was difficult. Two of the patients recovered after a long hospitalization, and had definitive sequels - insulin-dependent diabetes. The other two patients died following septic complications (bronchopneumonia and visceral gangrene), and hypovolemia due to upper digestive haemorrhage.
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PMID:[Hyperlipoproteinemia, a factor of severity in acute pancreatitis]. 646 Feb 73

The key preparation steps in the Tokuyasu thawed frozen section technique for immunocytochemistry, namely freezing, sectioning, thawing, and drying, were studied. A spherical tissue culture cell was used as a model system. The frozen hydrated section technique indicated that glutaraldehyde-fixed, 2.1 M sucrose-infused pellets of cells were routinely vitrified by immersion in liquid nitrogen but water was crystallized when lower sucrose concentrations (0.6-1 M) were used. Quantitative mass measurements showed that the fixed cells are freely permeable to sucrose. The frozen hydrated sections were severely compressed but cell profiles regained their circular appearance upon thawing. The average section thickness of our frozen-hydrated sections was 110 nm: this was reduced to 30-50 nm upon thawing, washing, and air-drying. This change was accompanied by severe drying artifacts. By using the methyl cellulose drying technique, this collapse upon air-drying could be significantly reduced, but not completely prevented, giving an average thickness of 70 nm.
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PMID:On the preparation of cryosections for immunocytochemistry. 654 82

A variety of polymerizable lipids derived from hexacosa-10,12-diynoic acid and hexacosa-10,12-diyne-1-ol have been synthesized and spread at the gas/water interface. The measured surface pressure/area isotherms indicate that head group charge and bulkiness have strong influences on the area occupied per molecule. In the case of zwitterionic phospholipids additional area changes are brought about by alkaline and acidic subphases, which is probably due to an alteration of head group conformation. Condensed state diacetylenic lipid monolayers in a nitrogen atmosphere are polymerizable by UV irradiation. The polymerization reaction was monitored at the gas/water interface by the area change at constant surface pressure and the change of optical density in the visible region. As already observed for vesicle polymerization, single chain amphiphiles exhibit a different absorption behavior than asymmetric double chain amphiphiles of the phosphoglycerol type. The polymerized monolayers were more densely packed and more stable than their monomeric counterparts as indicated by the smaller areas and higher pressures reached before the collapse points.
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PMID:Spreading and polymerization behavior of diacetylenic phospholipids at the gas-water interface. 664 Aug 13

The effects of regional lung differences in alveolar mechanics on the transpulmonary pressure-volume (Ptp-V) relationship and the single-breath washout (SBW) of nitrogen were investigated by mathematical modeling and postmorten human lung experiments. Regional nonuniformity in alveolar collapse and re-opening were associated with differences in gravitational stress or elasticity. Model simulations predict that neither type of regional nonuniformity qualitatively affects the shape of the Ptp-V curve, but does affect the terminal (or small-volume) portion of the SBW. Comparisons of characteristics of the Ptp-V and SBW curves indicate that regional nonuniformity in alveolar collapse is an important mechanism associated with ventilation inhomogeneity.
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PMID:Ventilation inhomogeneity: alveolar mechanics and gas distribution. 667 90

"Vacuum" phenomena relate to the accumulation of gas, principally nitrogen, in crevices within the intervertebral disk or vertebra. Their appearance does not uniformly indicate "degenerative" disk disease (primary intervertebral osteochondrosis), as gaseous collections may accompany other processes (vertebral osteomyelitis, Schmorl node formation, spondylosis deformans, vertebral collapse with osteonecrosis) affecting the disk and adjacent vertebral bodies. The location and appearance of the "vacuum" phenomena are helpful indicators as to the precise nature of the spinal disorder.
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PMID:Spinal vacuum phenomena: anatomical study and review. 722 Aug 78

Pulmonary collapse is a common problem after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG). If absorption atelectasis during anaesthesia is an important mechanism in the genesis of pulmonary collapse after CABG, the addition of nitrogen to the inspired gas during anaesthesia should reduce the amount of postoperative collapse. We studied 30 patients who were allocated randomly and prospectively to receive either 100% oxygen or an oxygen-air mixture as the inspired gas during anaesthesia for CABG. Lung volumes, PaO2, and an x-ray atelectasis score were measured before and after surgery to assess the degree of atelectasis. There were no significant differences between the two treatment groups in any of these measurements.
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PMID:Influence of inspired nitrogen concentration during anaesthesia for coronary artery bypass grafting on postoperative atelectasis. 748 81

The acidic nitrosation of hexetidine and hexedine, common antimicrobial agents and drug constituents, leads to a mixture of nitrosamines. The major nitrosamine product, "HEXNO", forms rapidly in yields as high as 60% over the pH range 1-4.8 at incubation times of 1 h at 37 degrees C with 40 mM NO2- and 10 mM hexetidine. On the basis of extensive spectroscopic characterization and independent synthesis HEXNO has been assigned the structure of 1-(2-ethylhexyl)-3-nitroso-4-methyl-4-[[N-(2-ethylhexyl)-N- nitrosoamino]methyl]imidazolidine (7). The synthesis of HEXNO involves the novel interception by potassium nitrite in ether/18-crown-6 of an imminium ion produced from the reaction of hexedine with benzyl chloroformate. Collapse of the alpha-amino nitrous ester produced by this reaction yields the nitrosamine containing carbamate 8, which yields HEXNO after removal of the carbamate with trimethylsilyl iodide and subsequent nitrosation. The rapid formation of HEXNO from hexetidine and hexedine supports the hypothesis that tertiary geminal diamines will produce nitrosamines rapidly by a mechanism which involves the cleavage of a nitrosammonium ion with the assistance of the neighboring nitrogen atom. This process is deemed to be of possible importance in the endogenous production of potentially carcinogenic nitrosamines because of its low nitrite requirement and high nitrosation rate. The available data suggest the probable formation of HEXNO and other nitrosamines from hexetidine under conditions of its use.
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PMID:The nitrosation of hexetidine and hexedine: characterization of the major nitrosamine from common antimicrobial agents. 769 45


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