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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
SEM
)
47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fluoride concentrations in root surfaces of human teeth after a single topical application with a 2% acidulated
sodium
fluoride solution in vivo were investigated. Increased residual fluoride concentrations in the root surfaces and precipitations on the peritubular dentin, as revealed by
SEM
micrographs, may be factors in reducing hypersensitivity.
...
PMID:Residual fluoride concentrations and scanning electron microscopic examination of root surfaces of human teeth after topical application of fluoride in vivo. 105 75
In experiments in which blood was cross-circulating in rats, the blood pressure of the recipient dropped while that of the donor rose, following the increase of the circulating blood volume, produced by infusion either of saline or blood. The phenomenon was almost imperceptible when binephrectomized animals were used. In experiments in which the blood-bathed organ technique was used, prostaglandin-like substances were detected, released during the rise of the blood pressure, produced by the same stimulus (the expansion), in anaesthetized rats. A significant difference was found between the prostaglandin-like substances detected using the blood-bathed organ technique, in normal rats (5.387 ng per ml of blood plus or minus 0.288 =
SEM
) and those detected in binephrectomized rats (3.202 ng per ml of blood plus or minus 0.330, p smaller than 0.025). The biologically active substances detected in 25 ml of blood collected during expansion, while the assay organs showed a prostaglandin-like activity, were found to have the chromatographic behaviour and the bioassay properties of PGA, PGE and PGF series. A great quantity of the biologically active substances, having the chromatographic behaviour and the bioassay properties of PGA, PGS and PGF was detected in the rat renal medulla. Sufficient quantities of the released prostaglandin-like substances could escape the pulmonary vascular bed in this species of animal. It was concluded that a great quantity of the released prostaglandin-like substances came from the kidney and their release by this particular mechanism suggested that they play an important homeostatic role on the blood pressure, blood volume, and
sodium
and water balance regulation.
...
PMID:[Origin, nature, role and fate of prostaglandins liberated during the expansion of intravascular space in the anesthetized rat]. 109 32
To study limb vascular responses in man to elevations in plasma calcium concentrations, we infused test isosmolar solutions of CaCl2 (0.115, 0.230, and 0.460 meq calcium/min) and NaCl and control isosmolar solutions of NaCl into the brachial arteries of 10 normotensive men and eight men with essential hypertension of mild to moderate severity. Limb blood pressures were monitored, limb blood flow was measured by indicator-dilution, and limb vascular resistance was calculated as mm Hg/ml flow/min/100 cm3 limb volume. Measured concentration of calcium in limb venous plasma during infusion of 0.460 meq calcium/min was 11.5 +/- 0.8 meq/liter (mean +/-
SEM
) with individual values ranging up to 20 meq/liter. Changes in limb venous serum
sodium
, potassium, magnesium, and osmolality were similar during control and CaCl2 infusions. Decreases in limb venous blood hematocrit during CaCl2 infusions were the same or greater than those during control infusions. The infusions did not significantly change systemic blood calcium concentration or blood pressures. Limb blood flow decreased and resistance increased in response to CaCl2. Increments averaging as little as 2.2 meq/liter elevated limb resistance by about 45%. Log dose-response curves were linear. Responses did not differ in normotensives and hypertensives (P greater than 0.8). We conclude that the vascular response to acute elevation of plasma calcium concentrations up to 20 meq/liter in the limb oman is an impressive vasoconstriction. We found no evidence for abnormal vascular responses to calcium in essential hypertensive men.
...
PMID:Similar vasoconstrictor responses to calcium in normotensive and esssential hypertensive men. 109 55
The effects of insulin on the renal handling of
sodium
, potassium, calcium, and phosphate were studied in man while maintaining the blood glucose concentration at the fasting level by negative feedback servocontrol of a variable glucose infusion. In studies on six water-loaded normal subjects in a steady state of water diuresis, insulin was administered i.v. to raise the plasma insulin concentration to between 98 and 193 muU/ml and infused at a constant rate of 2 mU/kg body weight per min over a total period of 120 min. The blood glucose concentration was not significantly altered, and there was no change in the filtered load of glucose; glomerular filtration rate (CIN) and renal plasma flow (CPAH) were unchanged. Urinary
sodium
excretion (UNaV) decreased from 401 plus or minus 46 (
SEM
) to 213 plus or minus 18 mueq/min during insulin administration, the change becoming significant (P smaller than 0.02) within the 30-60 min collection period. Free water clearance (CH2O) increased from 10.6 plus or minus 0.6 to 13 plus or minus 0.5 ml/min (P smaller than 0.025); osmolar clearance decreased and urine flow was unchanged. There was no change in plasma aldosterone concentration, which was low throughout the studies, and a slight reduction was observed in plasma glucagon concentration. Urinary potassium (UKV) and phosphate (UPV) excretion were also both decreased during insulin administration; UKV decreased from 66 plus or minus 9 to 21 plus or minus 1 mueq/min (P smaller than 0.005), and tupv decreased from 504 plus or minus 93 to 230 plus or minus 43 mug/min (P smaller than 0.01). The change in UKV was associated with a significant reduction in plasma potassium concentration. There was also a statistically significant but small reduction in plasma phosphate concentration which was not considered sufficient alone to account for the large reduction in UPV. Urinary calcium excretion (UCaV) increased from 126 plus or minus 24 to 200 plus or minus 17 mug/min (P smaller than 0.01). These studies demonstrate a reduction in UNaV associated with insulin administration that occurs in the absence of changes in the filtered load of glucose, glomerular filtration rate, renal blood flow, and plasma aldosterone concentration. The effect of insulin on CH2O suggests that insulin's effect on
sodium
excretion is due to enhancement of
sodium
reabsorption in the diluting segment of the distal nephron.
...
PMID:The effect of insulin on renal handling of sodium, potassium, calcium, and phosphate in man. 112 Jul 86
Ethacrynic acid infused i.v. in anesthetized dogs after inhibiting sympathetic mechanisms of renin release increased renal blood flow rate (RBF) by 54% and practically abolished autoregulation of RBF; renin release increased from 0.8 +/- 0.9 (mean +/-
SEM
) to 16.4 +/- 3.7 mug/min (P less than 0.05). Without infusion of ethacrynic acid; constriction of the renal artery to a pressure below the range of autoregulation reduced renovascular resistance markedly and renin release rose to 27.2 +/- 5.5 mug/min (P less than 0.05). During arterial constriction, ethacrynic acid had no additional effect on renovascular resistance or renin release averaging 28.4 +/- 6.7 mug/min. Infusion of ethacrynic acid and saline at control pressure increased
sodium
excretion to about one-half of the filtrate and reduced rein release which did not, however, return to control. Infusion of hypertonic saline during autoregulated vasodilatation induced by arterial constriction had a similar effect, but again renin release continued to exceed control. We propose that ethacrynic acid increases renin release through a hemodynamic mechanism triggered by afferent arteriolar dilation and inhibits renin release by greatly increasing the delivery of
sodium
to the distal convoluted tubules.
...
PMID:Influence of ethacrynic acid on intrarenal renin release mechanisms. 117 75
We studied salt and water absorption in isolated rabbit superficial proximal straight tubules perfused and bathed with solutions providing oppositely directed transepithelial anion gradients similar to those which might obtain in vivo. The perfusing solution contained 138.6 mM Cl- 3.8 mM HCO-3 (pH 6.6) while the bathing solution contained 113.6 mM Cl- and 25 mM HCO-3 (pH 7.4); the system was bubbled with 95% O2-5% CO2. At 37 degrees C, net volume absorption (Jv nl min-1 mm-1) was 0.32 +/- 0.03 (
SEM
); Ve, the transepithelial voltage (millivolts; lumen to bath), was +3.1 +/- 0.2. At 21 degrees C, Ve rose to +3.7 +/- 0.1 and Jv fell to 0.13 +/- 0.01 (significantly different from zero at P less than 0.001); in the presence of 10(-4)M ouabain at 37 degrees C, Ve rose to +3.8 +/- 0.1 and Jv fell to 0.16 +/- 0.01 (P less than 0.001 with respect to zero). In paired experiments, the ouabain- and temperature-insensitive moieties of Jv and Ve became zero when transepithelial anion concentration gradients were abolished. Titrametric determinations net chloride flux at 21 degrees C or at 37 degrees C with 10(-4) M ouabain showed that chloride was the sole anion in an isotonic absorbate. And, combined electrical and tracer flux data indicated that the tubular epithelium was approximately 18 times more permeable to Cl- than to HCO-3. We interpret these results to indicate that, in these tubules, NaCl absorption depends in part on transepithelial anion concentration gradients similar to those generated in vivo and in vitro by active
Na+
absorption associated with absorption to anions other than chloride. A quantitative analysis of passive solute and solvent flows in lateral intercellular spaces indicated that fluid absorption occurred across junctional complexes when the osmolality of the lateral intercellular spaces was equal to or slightly less than that of the perfusing and bathing solutions; the driving force for volume flow under these conditions depended on the fact that sigmaHCO3 exceeded sigmaCl.
...
PMID:A component of fluid absorption linked to passive ion flows in the superficial pars recta. 118 77
It has been confirmed in numerous studies that the hypoglycemic effect of sulfonyl-ureas is mainly owing to its insulinogenic action. Intravenous administrations of the drugs have been adopted in many of these studies. But the oral administrations of the drugs in a few studies lead to conflicting results concerning its insulinogenic action. In this study, the concentrations of blood glucose, serum immunoreactive insulin (IRI), serum free fatty acid (FFA) and serum tolbutamide were measured following the oral administration of single dose of tolbutamide in six normal and eleven maturity onset mild diabetic subjects. The same parameters were measured after the oral administration of tolbutamide plus
sodium
bicarbonate in six normal subjects. The changes of these parameters were compared with the changes following the intravenous administration of
sodium
tolbutamide in six normal subjects. The oral administration of three grams of tolbutamide alone caused a gradual but significant decrease of blood glucose level. Serum FFA response showed an initial decrease, followed by a rebound elevation. In spite of 21 per cent reduction of blood glucose level, serum IRI level did not show any significant change throughout the observation for five hours. Serum tolbutamide concentration rose gradually and reached to 24.4+/-3.9 mg per 100 ml (Mean+/-
SEM
) at the end of the observation. Almost identical results were obtained in diabetic subjects. Three grams of tolbutamide plus the same dose of
sodium
bicarbonate were administered orally to the normal subjects. A profound decrease of blood glucose level with a nadir (35 per cent reduction) at 45 minutes and a significant increase of serum IRI level with a peak (273 per cent increase) at 20 minutes were obtained, and associated with a comparatively rapid elevation of serum tolbutamide concentration reached to 31.9+/-3.3 mg per 100 ml after three hours. From these results, it is suggested that slow rise of serum tolbutamide concentration after the oral administration of tolbutamide alone might lead to moderate secretion of insulin and sooner rise might evoke larger secretion into the pancreatic vein, and that an existence of moderate hyperinsulinism in the pancreatic venous blood after the oral administration of tolbutamide alone might cause a decrease of gluconeogenesis in the liver. And the failure of serum IRI response in the peripheral blood in spite of hyperinsulinism in the pancreatic vein might be due to hepatic trapping of the secreted insulin.
...
PMID:[Serum immunoreactive insulin after the oral administration of single dose of tolbutamide. I. Peripheral vein immunoreactive insulin in normal subjects and mild diabetics (author's transl)]. 123 21
The efflux of 22Na from vesicles formed by axolemma fragments isolated from lobster nerves was studied in the presence and in the absence of drugs having well-known action on the
sodium
channels. The vesicles were equilibrated 12-14 h at 4 degrees C with 22Na in lobster solution containing 1 mM ouabain. Afterwards the suspension was divided: one portion was used as control and the others were treated with veratrine (0.025-0.50 mg/ml), tetrodotoxin (1-2,000 nM) in the presence of veratrine, or tetrodotoxin alone. After 3 h at 20-22 degrees C, the suspensions were diluted into nonradioactive solutions and the 22Na efflux followed by a rapid filtration technique. The results revealed that veratrine increases the efflux rate and the additional application of tetrodotoxin abolishes it, e.g., 0.50 mg of veratrine/ml increases the rate, expressed in 10(-2) min(-1), from 0.59 +/- 0.04 (mean +/-
SEM
; n = 13) to 0.86 +/- 0.05 (n = 13), and the addition of 100 nM tetrodotoxin diminishes it to 0.48 +/- 0.07 (n = 4). This increase and diminution are statistically significant (P less than 0.005), but this is not the case between the control and the veratrine plus tetrodotoxin values (P greater than 0.05). 50% of the diminution is produced by 11.9 +/- 2.4 nM tetrodotoxin. Tetrodotoxin alone produces a slight diminution of the 22Na efflux. Batrachotoxin (0.50 muM) has an action similar to veratrine's. These findings are considered evidence of the presence of functioning
sodium
channels in the isolated axolemma fragments.
...
PMID:Sodium flux through the sodium channels of axon membrane fragments isolated from lobster nerves. 124 36
Thirteen patients undergoing cardiac surgery were studied to examine whether beta-adrenergic desensitization occurs in the perioperative period surrounding cardiac surgery, using peripheral blood lymphocytes as a model. Lymphocytes were isolated before induction of anesthesia (PRE) and on the morning of the first postoperative day (POST). Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) production from the lymphocytes was assayed in the untreated (BASAL) state, and after treatment with 5 microM isoproterenol, 10 microM prostaglandin E1, or 20 mM
sodium
fluoride with 10 microM AlCl3 (NaF). All cAMP values are reported as picomoles per 10(6) cells, mean +/-
SEM
. BASAL cAMP production did not change significantly between the PRE and POST samples (PRE, 1.2 +/- 0.1; POST, 1.0 +/- 0.1). Isoproterenol-stimulated cAMP was significantly lower postoperatively (PRE, 8.36 +/- 0.9; POST, 5.1 +/- 0.5; P less than 0.005). Prostaglandin E1-stimulated cAMP did not change (PRE, 21.7 +/- 2.4; POST, 25.3 +/- 2.5), and NaF-stimulated cAMP was increased postoperatively (PRE, 8.8 +/- 1.6; POST, 14.3 +/- 2.0; P less than 0.05). These findings suggest that cardiac surgery and/or cardiopulmonary bypass results in significant desensitization of the beta-adrenergic receptor/adenylate cyclase system of lymphocytes, which may parallel changes in the adrenergic response of other organ systems.
...
PMID:Cardiac surgery causes desensitization of the beta-adrenergic receptor system of human lymphocytes. 130 62
1. This study in conscious dogs examined the quantitative effects of a reduction in the renal arterial pressure on the renal homeostatic responses to an acute extracellular fluid volume expansion. 2. Seven female beagle dogs were chronically instrumented with two aortic catheters, one central venous catheter and a suprarenal aortic cuff, and were kept under standardized conditions on a constant high dietary
sodium
intake (14.5 mmol of
Na+
day-1 kg-1 body weight). 3. After a 60 min control period, 0.9% (w/v) NaCl was infused at a rate of 1 ml min-1 kg-1 body weight for 60 min (infusion period). Two different protocols were applied during the infusion period: renal arterial pressure was maintained at 102 +/- 1 mmHg by means of a servo-feedback control circuit (RAP-sc, 14 experiments) or was left free (RAP-f, 14 experiments). 4. During the infusion period, in the RAP-sc protocol as well as in the RAP-f protocol, the mean arterial pressure increased by 10 mmHg, the heart rate increased by 20 beats/min, the central venous pressure increased by 4 cmH2O and the glomerular filtration rate (control 5.1 +/- 0.3 ml min-1 kg-1 body weight, mean +/-
SEM
) increased by 1 ml min-1 kg-1. 5. Plasma renin activity [control 0.85 +/- 0.15 (RAP-f) and 1.08 +/- 0.23 (RAP-sc) pmol of angiotensin I h-1 ml-1] decreased similarly in both protocols.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Role of renal arterial pressure in the regulation of extracellular volume in conscious dogs. 131 8
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