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In a longitudinal study including measurement of the pressure in the amniotic cavity, amniotomy, and planimetric evaluation of the size of the amniotic sac, we investigated the development of the "strait jacket" syndrome in White Leghorn chicken embryos injected intraamniotically (ia) or paraamniotically on the fourth day of incubation with histone or embryotoxic serum, with the following results. Hyperlordosis and eventration developed as an outcome of tonic contraction of the amnion, which was observed only three hours after ia administration. Contraction of the amnion caused elevation of the intraamniotic pressure, which, 12 hours after ia injection, attained a mean value of 22.4 Pa (2.3 mm H2O). This value was not only significantly higher than the mean for control embryos (3.9 Pa), but it was critically close to the mean fluid pressure in the brain vesicles. Loss of the latter overpressure caused the vesicles to collapse, and the walls shriveled and exencephaly developed. Paraamniotic injection was not followed by either contraction of the amnion, or significant increase in intraamniotic pressure. This did not prevent heart malformations and cranioschisis of various extent. The majority of cardiovascular malformations were probably the hemodynamic consequence of overfilling of the intraembryonic vascular bed, which was one of the early signs of the effect question. Cranial-vault defects can be causally associated with the formation of amnionic adhesion and fusion with the epidermal ectoderm. This observation stresses the significance of the embryonic membranes and the fluid pressures within them for the development of certain congenital deformities and concentrates attention on teratological study of substances that induce protracted contraction of smooth muscle.
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PMID:The "stright-jacket" syndrome in chicks. II. Mechanism of development. 99 80

Various fatty acids of branched nature possess fungistatic and bacteriostatic properties. Some of these, particularly those of iso-configuration, strongly enhance the effect of conventional antimicrobial agents that act inside the cell membrane. A relation between this biological effect and the collapse properties of the corresponding monomolecular surface film on water has been observed. In this work, a series of fatty acids with a slightly smaller end group than iso-propyl, the omega-cyclopropane fatty acids, as well as one possessing a somewhat larger end group, the neo-branched fatty acids, have been examined. The omega-cyclopropane fatty acids were found to be more fungistatic than the iso-acids studied earlier. Furthermore, both cyclopropane and neo-fatty acids of short chain lengths exhibited synergistic effects in combination with tetramethylthiuramdisulfide.
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PMID:Antimicrobial effect of simple lipids with different branches at the methyl end group. 110 82

The first phase of accidental drowning begins with asphyxia, due to either laryngospasm (10-15 percent of cases) or water aspiration. The second phase is characterized by water and electrolyte changes in the blood. The physiopathological modifications caused by drowning in fresh water differ from those of drowning in sea water. The hypotonic fresh water quickly diffuses in the bloodstream. The consequences are, in many cases, hypervolemia with pulmonary edema, hemolysis, hyperkalemia with risk of ventricular fibrillation, diminution of hemoglobin, and a relative decrease in plasma concentration of Na, Cl, Ca, and albumin. Further, inactivation and washing out of the anti-atelectasis factor from the alveoli by fresh water facilitate the formation of atelectasis. In cases of accidental drowing in sea water the osmotic gradient is in inverse: the electrolytes of aspirated salt water diffuse in the circulation, whereas the blood serum and the plasma albumin pass into the alveoli. Acute pulmonary edema often follows these pathological changes. Hypovolemia with circulatory collapse, hemoconcentration with rise in hemoglobin, hematocrit, sodium, potassium and albumin, and, finally, an elevated risk of thromboembolism due to increased blood viscosity, represent further complications. On the other hand, ventricular fibrillation is rare, hemolysis is absent and atelectasis usually does not occur.
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PMID:[Physiopathology of accidental drowning]. 112 62

The self-organization of helical regions of myoglobin into a compact tertiary structure is considered on the basis of the hypothesis on the step-wise mechanism of self-organization of protein molecules. It is assumed that the self-organization begins with the formation of "centers of crystallization" and proceeds with the growth of on such center or by a sequential collapse of two or more grown centers. Different pathways of self-organization of myoglobin are considered; the most favourable structures corresponding to the greatest number of dehydrated bulky hydrophobic groups and to all the strongly hydrophilic groups exposed to water are selected at every stage of the given pathway and the others are neglected. One of the two most favourable structures obtained in such a way coincides in rough resolution with the native tertiary structure of protein.
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PMID:A model of myoglobin self-organization. 112 92

The carcass of a subadult female Delphinus was placed in a hyperbaric chamber and subjected to two simulated dives each equivalent to 69.7 m. In one dive the thorax was in its natural state, and in the other 100 ml of water had been injected into each pleural cavity. Various morphometric measurements of the thorax were taken before, during, and after each dive. Results indicate that if fluid is located in the same position as the retia thoracica, the shape of the thorax is affected when submitted to diving, but not surface, pressures. The overall collapse of the chest is greater during partial infusion of the pleura, exhibiting exceptional compression in the ventral area. The engorged thoracic rete apparently affects the degree and pattern of thoracic collapse and thereby reduces the amount of displacement stress exerted upon the abdominal organs when the animal is subjected to the high ambient hydrostatic pressures encountered during normal diving.
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PMID:Thoracic collapse as affected by the retia thoracica in the dolphin. 117 53

The action of propranolol, a Beta-blocking adrenergic agent, on mitochondrial proton fluxes in nonenergized and energized conditions has been studied. 1. The drug inhibited the actions of valinomycin, higericin and FCCP on the inner mitochondrial membrane. 2. It decreased the rate and extent of active energized proton expulsion and passive collapse of the proton gradient so formed. 3. Propranolol was able to increase the permeation of chloride ion through the inner mitochondrial membrane in nonenergized and energized conditions. 4. The drug inhibited mitochondrial contraction but stimulated swelling in various conditions. It is suggested that propranolol is is able to change the proton and chloride permeabilities of mitochondria by perturbing the structure of inner membrane phospholipids, thus enlarging the water-lipid interface.
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PMID:Action of propranolol on mitochondrial proton fluxes. 121 23

Twenty-four dogs underwent in vivo left pulmonary hilar occlusion with the lung continuously expanded at 10 centimeters or 25 centimeters of water pressure to determine the period of pulmonary ischemia that may be tolerated before consistent pulmonary edema and congestion develop after lung revascularization. Consistent and prolonged pulmonary edema and congestion that caused death of the dog occurred in at least one-half of the dogs when the period of hilar occlusion was extended beyond six hours. Elevation of the left pulmonary artery pressure was only a rough measurement of the severity of the anoxic pulmonary injury. Expansion of the lung at 10 centimeters of water continuous pressure was more beneficial than was expansion at 25 centimeters of pressure. Cyclic ventilation with slight negative-expiratory pressure provided less support to the lung than did continuous expansion at either pressure tested. Intial decreases in both ventilation and perfusion isotope uptake and the percentage of the total volume of oxygen uptake per minute by the ischemic lung returned to near normal levels in three weeks in dogs that survived. Lung expansion during periods of ischemia appears to prevent alveolar collapse and to facilitate oxygenation.
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PMID:Evaluation of pulmonary function in the ischemic expanded canine lung. 125 71

Psychiatric evaluation teams used observations of family interaction and psychoanalytically oriented individual interviews to study the psychological aftereffects of the 1972 Buffalo Creek disaster, a tidal wave of sludge and black water released by the collapse of a slag waste dam. Traumatic neurotic reactions were found in 80% of the survivors. Underlying the clinical picture were unresolved grief, survivor shame, and feelings of impotent rage and hopelessness. These clinical findings had persisted for the two years since the flood, and a definite symptom complex labeled the "Buffalo Creek syndrome" was pervasive. The methods used by the survivors to cope with the overwhelming impact of the disaster--first-order defenses, undoing, psychological conservatism, and dehumanization--actually preserved their symptoms and caused disabling character changes.
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PMID:Disaster at Buffalo Creek. Family and character change at Buffalo Creek. 125 39

A controlled exchange of calcium between the extracellular space (mM Ca2+) and the neuroplasm (microM Ca2+) is considered to be an essential prerequisite for almost every stage of neuronal activity. Our research interest is focused on those compounds, which due to their physico-chemical properties and localization within the synaptic membrane might fulfill the task as neuromodulators for functional synaptic proteins. Because of this specific binding properties towards calcium and their peculiar interactions with calcium in model systems gangliosides (amphiphilic sialic acid containing glycosphingolipids) are favorite candidates for a functional involvement in synaptic transmission of information. In this study we used monolayers to investigate the molecular packing and surface potential at the air/water interface, the interaction of gangliosides with the depsipeptide valinomycin (= monovalent ion carrier), and its influenceability by calcium. Furthermore we looked at calcium effects on the single channel conductance and mean channel life-time of the monovalent ion channel gramicidin A in mixed PC/ganglioside bilayers. In pure ganglioside monolayers the addition of 0.01 mM Ca2+ induces monolayer condensation, a rise in collapse pressure (= higher film stability), a shift of phase transition (= change of conformation), and a more negative head group potential (change of electric properties). In mixed ganglioside-valinomycin monolayers the addition of Ca2+ causes phase separation and/or aggregate formation between the ganglioside and the peptide. Single channel conductance fluctuations as well as mean channel life-time were analyzed for gramicidin A incorporated into binary mixed black lipid membranes of negatively charged gangliosides (GM1, GD1a, GT1b, GMix) and neutral lecithin (DOPC) in different molar ratios. At monovalent electrolyte concentrations up to < 250 mM CsCl the single channel conductance was significantly larger in the negatively charged mixed DOPC/ganglioside membranes than in the neutral DOPC membrane. Additionally, in the presence of gangliosides the mean channel life-time is increased. The addition of calcium (0.05 mM) induced a reduction of single channel conductance of gramicidin A in DOPC- and mixed DOPC/ganglioside membranes. These physico-chemical data in connection with new electromicroscopical evidences for a precise localization of calcium, a calcium pump (Ca(2+)-ATPase), a clustered arrangement of gangliosides in synaptic terminals, and biochemical results with regard to activatory nature of exogenous gangliosides for neuronal protein phosphorylation and ATPases, support the hypothesis of a modulatory function of gangliosides in synaptic transmission.
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PMID:Calcium-ganglioside interactions and synaptic plasticity: effect of calcium on specific ganglioside/peptide (valinomycin, gramicidin A)-complexes in mixed mono- and bilayers. 128 79

A 13-week oral repeated dose toxicity study of suplatast tosilate (IPD-1151T), a new anti-allergic agent, as well as a 5-week recovery study were carried out at dose levels of 0 (control), 50, 150, 450 and 1350 mg/kg/day using male and female beagle dogs. The results were as follows: 1. In general conditions, soft feces and diarrhea with specific smell were dose-dependently observed in males and females given 450 mg/kg/day or more. Both sexes given 1350 mg/kg/day, revealed reeling with dropped head, abnormal gait, dysstasia, lying at lateral or prone position, sedation, and tremor, and one male and one female in this group died after showing respiratory depression, collapse and cyanosis. 2. There were no significant or remarkable changes in body weight, food consumption, water consumption, ophthalmology, electrocardiogram, urinalysis, hematology, biochemistry, fecal occult blood test, and absolute and relative organ weights. 3. Pathological examination in dead animals revealed hemorrhagic change in the heart and slight vacuolar changes in hepatocytes. In survived animals, there were no pathological changes attributable to the IPD-1151T. 4. In electron microscopic examination, there were no abnormalities in the liver and kidney attributable to the IPD-1151T. 5. After 5-week recovery period, above-mentioned changes disappeared. 6. From the above results, the non-effective dose level and the toxic dose level were estimated to be 150 mg/kg/day and 1350 mg/kg/day, respectively, and no sex differences were found.
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PMID:[A thirteen-week oral repeated dose toxicity study of suplatast tosilate (IPD-1151T) in dogs]. 132 Dec 64


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