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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (
collapse
)
28,634
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chlorobutanol (1,1,1-trichlor-2-methyl-2-propanol) decreases the duration of the latent period of Limulus ventral eye receptor potentials. This effect is both concentration and intensity dependent. Between 0.05 and 1 mM chlorobutanol in sea
water
the extent of latency shortening effect of chlorobutanol linear function of the logarithm of the chlorobutanol concentration. The latency shortening effect of chlorobutanol diminishes with decreasing intensity of stimulation and virtually disappears at intensities just exceeding threshold. These results are explained by postulating that the latent period is composed of two processes only one of which is sensitive to chlorobutanol and, further, that the duration of the chlorobutanol-sensitive process is not appreciably affected by the stimulating intensity. This model of a two component latent period may be tested experimentally. In several experiments prolonged exposure of ventral photoreceptor cells to chlorobutanol coupled with a short exposure to calcium deficient sea
water
produced a
collapse
of the receptor potential followed by a slow recovery after returning to perfusion with normal sea
water
. During the recovery a slow, low amplitude positive wave exists which has been tentatively called a prepotential.
...
PMID:Effect of chlorobutanol on Limulus ventral photoreceptor latency: a model of a two component latent period. 52 61
1. In goldfish intestine (perfused unstripped segments and mucosal strips) the serosal addition of ouabain (10(-4) M) resulted in a vanishment of the transepithelial potential difference and in a continuous increase in transepithelial resistance. 2. Incubation of mucosal strips with ouabain resulted in an increase in sodium content which was greater than the decrease in potassium content. The resulting increase in cation content was accompanied by an increase in chloride content and an increase in
water
content. 3. Histological examination showed that exposure to ouabain resulted in a swelling of the epithelial layer as compared to the control situation. 4. The ouabain induced resistance increase is greater in the presence of glucose, 3-OMG or fructose than in the presence of mannitol. Phlorizin (10(-4) M) inhibits the extra resistance increase induced by mucosal glucose but is without effect on the fructose induced extra resistance increase. The initial velocity and the magnitude of the glucose induced extra resistance increase depends on the glucose concentration. 5. The results suggest that in goldfish intestine ouabain induces cellular swelling with a concomitant
collapse
of the lateral intercellular spaces, which is the cause of the increased transepithelial resistance. The additional changes in resistance induced by sugars suggest that the cell membrane is more permeable to glucose, 3-OMG and fructose than to mannitol. The resulting changes in osmotically active material within the epithelial cell influence the cross-sectional area and consequently the conductivity of the paracellular shunt pathway. The hypothesis that these sugars do not induce a resistance change in the absence of ouabain is discussed.
...
PMID:Effects of glucose and ouabain on transepithelial electrical resistance and cell volume in stripped and unstripped goldfish intestine. 57 48
Reexpansion pulmonary edema following pneumothorax is clinically uncommon but occasionally life threatening. This study documents the functional and anatomical abnormalities that occur when a collapsed lung is reexpanded. Right pneumothorax was created through open tube thoracostomy in 30 goats. The animals were divided into six groups by duration of pneumothorax (24, 48, or 72 hours) and technique of reexpansion (waterseal vs 10 cm
H2O
suction). Arterial blood gases and alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference (A-aDO2) were analyzed before pneumothorax and after reexpansion. Each lung was reexpanded for 2 hours, chest roentgenograms were obtained, and both lungs were removed. The left lung served as the control. Both lungs were checked for surfactant activity and pulmonary extravascular
water
volume (PEWY). Light and electron microscopy were also performed. Anatomical and functional changes were present in the reexpanded lung after relief of pneumothorax. Both increased time of
collapse
and suction reexpansion tended to correlate with increased PEWV, decreased surfactant and arterial PO2, and increased A-aDO2.
...
PMID:Experimental evaluation of reexpansion pulmonary edema. 58 Aug 62
Stability of pulmonary alveoli at end expiration requires a very low air-
water
surface tension (e.g., less than 10 mN.m-1). Another important requirement is that the surface film maintain this low surface tension for a sufficiently long time at fixed lung volume. We measured monolayer
collapse
rates at 37 degrees C of lung surface-active material (SAM) and certain lipids found in this material and compared them with alveolar monolayer
collapse
rates calculated from published lung compliance changes. We found
collapse
rates for purified SAM or a mixture of dipalmitoyl lecithin (DPPC):monoenoic lecithin (PC):cholesterol (CHOL) (3.03:1.65:1 molar ratios) to be much greater than
collapse
rates of alveolar films estimated from indirect measurements. Monolayers of pure DPPC or DPPC with 10 mol% monoenoic PC and/or CHOL had
collapse
rates equal to or less than those estimated from lungs. We conclude that the alveolar monolayer is enriched in DPPC to the extent of 90 mol% or greater. Enrichment may exclude more mobile components from the monolayer during expiration when surface tension reaches verry low values.
...
PMID:Pulmonary surface film stability and composition. 58 82
1. The surface behaviour of six different gangliosides and eight chemically related glycosphingolipids was investigated in monolayers at the air-
water
interface. 2. Mono-, di-, tri and tetra-hexosylceramides had force-area isotherms showing similar limiting molecular areas on 145 mM-NaCl, pH 5.6. The increasing number of negatively charged sialosyl residues in mono-, di- and tri-sialogangliosides induced a progressive increase in the liquid-expanded character of the films and in the limiting area occupied per molecule, owing to electrostatic repulsions. When the ganglioside monolayers were spread on subphases at pH 1.2, the limiting area per molecule was similar to that found for neutral glycosphingolipids. 3. The monolayer
collapse
pressure at pH 5.6 increased with the number of uncharged carbohydrate units up to when the polar head group contained 3-4 residues. For gangliosides the
collapse
pressures were lower and decreased from mono- to tri-sialogangliosides. Ganglioside monolayers on subphases at pH 1.2 showed increases in their
collapse
pressure. 4. The glycosphingolipid monolayers studied had various surface in their
collapse
pressure. 4. The glycosphingolipid monolayers studied had various surface potentials according to the complexity of the polar head group of the lipid. Attempts to calculate the dipolar contributions to the surface potential from each carbohydrate residue suggest that the second and third sialosyl residues in di- and tri-sialogangliosides contributed with a vertical dipole moment opposite to that of the first sialosyl residue.
...
PMID:Surface behaviour of gangliosides and related glycosphingolipids. 66 27
This paper emphasizes our approach to control increased ventricular fluid volume and pressure; it utilizes an improved device based upon hydrostatic pressure principles. Intracranial pressure may be maintained at any preselected value, usually 25 cm
H2O
. Pressure increases beyond this value will result in a venting of fluid into a calibrated reservoir. The hydrostatic column will act to cushion the surrounding ventricular mass, helping to prevent ventricular
collapse
. The method overcomes the hazards of techniques, using intermittent withdrawal of fluid which requires human judgment. Ventricular pressure response curves performed on a number of patients showed a marked stability with a response less than 2 mm Hg/ml. This indicates a favorable influence on the intracranial compliance. The system is completely closed and its use in 52 neurosurgical patients in over 400 patient days has not been associated with any infection problem.
...
PMID:Automatic intracranial pressure regulation. 72 99
The surface properties of fatty acid and fatty acid-alcohol mixtures were examined at 22-24 degrees C. At pH 12, sodium stearate forms a rigid surface film that generates an equilibrium spreading pressure of 16.5 dynes/cm. At pH 12, stearate-alkaline earth cation films
collapse
at the air-
water
interface and do not generate significant equilibrium spreading pressures. The rate of film
collapse
depends on the counterion decreasing in the sequence Ba2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ca2+. Stearate-stearyl alcohol mixtures form solid (condensed) films that are relatively stable and behave initially as homogeneous surfaces in their selectivities for counterions. Stearate-oleyl alcohol mixtures form fluid (expanded) films that are unstable. Lateral phase separations occur rapidly in fluid films and the stearate-alkaline earth cation phase collapses. The rate of film
collapse
in the fluid mixtures also depends on the counterion decreasing in the sequence Ba2+ greater than Ca2+. These surface properties suggest how a lipid anion may function as an ionophore in the translocation of alkaline earth cations.
...
PMID:Surface phase separation and collapse of the stearate anion--alkaline earth cation complex. 83 1
Total starvation is effective for acute weight reduction in obesity. However, in 200 patients, most of whom also had internal diseases, 8% exhibited sometimes severe complications, i.e. reversible cerebral ischemia in 3 hypertensive patients when the blood pressure was lowered to the normal range by natriuresis of fasting; breakdown of
water
and electrolyte homeostasis with circulatory
collapse
, vomiting and vertigo; acute crises of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and porphyria respectively and increase of transaminases up to 200 mu/ml, or cardiac arrhythmias. Relative (?) contraindications for total fasting appear to be clinical sings of arteriosclerosis such as vascular bruits, angina pectoris and intermittent claudication. In case of doubt, the method should only be used in hospital.
...
PMID:[Complications in null-diet]. 91 86
Closing volumes (CV), along with residual volume (RV), vital capacity (VC), along with residual volume (RV), vital capacity (VC), and expiratory reserve volume (ERV) were determined in 10 subjects in the dry and while immersed to the neck in
water
. Closing volumes during immersion increased 41.3% (P less than 0.001) over dry values while RV decreased 9.35% (P less than 0.001) and VC decreased 9.94% (P less than 0.001). The large decrease of 71.3% (P less than 0.001) in ERV resulted in the impingement of closing capacity (CV + RV) on the tidal volume in 9 out of 10 subjects. We interpret this to mean that airway closure occurs during tidal ventilation in immersed subjects and may result in impaired gas exchange. When tourniquets were applied to all four limbs during immersion closing volumes increased only 32.1%, but increased to 64.3% when they were removed. If engorgement of peribronchial vessels predisposes airways to
collapse
, a reduction of plasma volume during an extended period of immersion might lessen this possibility. In a series of long term (2.5-h) immersion experiments where moderate reductions (-10 to -7%y in plasma volume were observed, we found, however, no correlative changes in closing volume.
...
PMID:Closing volumes in man immersed to the neck in water. 93 2
Lung volumes and quasi-static deflation volume-pressure relationships were measured in male golden hamsters anesthetized with pentobarbital. Volume was measured with a pressure plethysmograph, and pleural pressure was estimated by the use of a
water
-filled esophageal catheter. Mean body weight +/- SE was 122.3 +/-3.0 g, mean lung weight was 0.74 +/- 0.2 g or about 0.6% of body weight. Mean lung volume at 25 cmH2O transpulmonary pressure (TLC25) was 7.2 +/- 0.14 ml, 9.78 +/- 0.17 ml/g lung weight or 5.92 +/- 0.06 ml/100 g body weight. Mean functional residual capacity was 2.4 +/- 0.06 ml or 33.3% of TLC25. Mean vital capacity was 5.2 +/- 0.13 ml. Mean quasi-static compliance of lung was 0.63 +/- 0.03 ml/cmH2O. Chord compliance of chest wall between lung volumes of 1 and 4 ml above RV was 3.39 +/- 0.53 ml/cmH2O. At FRC, the chest wall recoiled inward, so that pleural pressure was positive (1.4 +/- 0.13 cmH2O) and the lung was resisting further
collapse
. The slope of the lung's deflation volume-pressure curve changed at FRC, ERV was small (0.36 +/- 0.03 ml), and RV was determined by complete airway closure. Thus the mechanisms determining FRC are unusual and include an influence of airway closure.
...
PMID:Respiratory mechanics in normal hamsters. 93 34
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