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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
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47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We measured the influence of changing the end-expiratory lung volume (EELV) on collateral resistance (Rcoll) in 6 normal volunteers (5 male, 1 female, aged 23-45 years). With subjects lying supine in an iron lung, a 5.3 mm fibroscope was introduced under local anesthesia and wedged into a sub-segmental bronchus of the right lower lobe. A truncated 5f Swan-Ganz catheter was tightly fitted into the suction port of the fibroscope. One lumen of the catheter served to deliver a constant flow (200 ml/min) of 5%
CO2
in air. The pressure in the wedged segment (Ps) was measured by the other channel. Airway pressure (used as alveolar pressure (Palv)) was determined with a low bias flow catheter taped to the side of the bronchoscope, its tip positioned 20 cm from the end of the bronchoscope. Rcoll was obtained by the formula: Rcoll = (Ps-Palv)/flow. EELV was passively changed by applying a constant extrathoracic pressure in the iron lung at 5 cm H2O steps from 0 to +15 and from 0 to -20 cm H2O. The changes obtained in Rcoll (% baseline, mean +/-
SEM
) at each extrathoracic pressure (ETP) were: -5 cm H2O, 73 +/- 4%; -10, 56 +/- 7%; -15, 56 +/- 9%; -20, 35 +/- 10%; +5, 118 +/- 6%; +10, 129 +/- 7%; +15, 118 +/- 11%. Rcoll progressively decreased with increasing EELV (negative ETP) and increased slightly as EELV was reduced (positive ETP). The relationship between the log Rcoll and delta EELV was linear; the slope of this line was 9.8%.
...
PMID:Influence of lung volume on collateral resistance in normal man. 206 15
Interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) levels were measured by radioimmunoassay in samples of conditioned medium from mononuclear cells taken from 20 normal subjects (14 adults ranging in age from 20 to 45 years and 6 children ranging in age from 3 to 11 years) and from 49 children with growth delay. Cultures were performed with 10(6) cells/ml in medium containing 1% normal human serum and 4.8 g/l phytohemagglutinin M. The incubation was performed for 48 h in an atmosphere containing 5%
CO2
. In normal subjects, the production of IL-1 alpha was 38.5 +/- 9.8 fmol/ml of conditioned medium (mean +/-
SEM
) in 14 adults and 41.6 +/- 3.0 fmol/ml in 6 children. The production of IL-2 was 46.9 +/- 6.5 and 57.3 +/- 10.5 fmol/ml, respectively. In the 16 patients with growth hormone (GH) deficiency studied before treatment, the production of ILs was significantly decreased in relation to the degree of deficiency. We observed a positive correlation between the production of IL-1 alpha and the values of insulin-like growth factor I but not with serum GH values. IL-1 alpha production was normalized after 15 days of substitutive GH therapy and IL-2 was normalized after 3 months of therapy. In 10 other patients with GH deficiency (4 with total and 6 with partial isolated GH deficiency) studied after long-term GH treatment (5 months or more), the mean of IL production was not significantly different from that of GH-deficient children treated for 3 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Production of interleukin-1 alpha and interleukin-2 by mononuclear cells from children with growth delay in relation to the degree of growth hormone deficiency: effects of substitutive treatment. 210 Feb 77
The role of respiratory oscillations of PaCO2 (
CO2
oscillations) in the regulation of expiratory duration (TE) was examined in eight anesthetized dogs by measuring instantaneous changes of arterial pH during the respiratory cycle with a catheter-tip ISFET (ion-sensitive field effect transistor) pH electrode. Steady-state changes in arterial pH oscillation were induced by vagotomy, which increased the amplitude of pH oscillation from 0.014 +/- 0.002 (mean +/-
SEM
) to 0.058 +/- 0.006 units (P less than 0.001), and prolonged TE from 5.12 +/- 0.56 to 9.99 +/- 1.11 sec (P less than 0.005) with little change in average pH (0.021 +/- 0.011 units, P = 0.12). Vagotomy also reversed the phase relationship between arterial pH oscillation at the carotid bodies and tidal ventilation, such that pH rose during early expiration, rather than falling as occurred in the intact state. When the within-breath oscillation of arterial pH was transiently reduced by having the vagotomized dogs inspire a single breath of
CO2
enriched air, TE of the same breath was shortened in proportion to the reduction in amplitude of pH oscillation (r = 0.72, P less than 0.001), rather than in proportion to changes in the average pH of the test breath (r = 0.44). The results indicate that the profile of within-breath oscillation of PaCO2 (phase relationship and amplitude) can exert an important influence on TE, and may in part account for the prolongation of TE following vagotomy.
...
PMID:Control of expiratory duration by arterial CO2 oscillations in vagotomized dogs. 210 17
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of interruption of the descending supraspinal sympathetic outflow on heart rate control during exposures to chemical stimuli. We investigated the heart rate responses to progressive isocapnic hypoxia and hyperoxic hypercapnia using the rebreathing technique and quantified the relationship between heart rate (HR), oxygen saturation (SaO2), alveolar PCO2 (PACO2), and minute ventilation (VE) in 16 chronic tetraplegic subjects with low cervical spinal cord transection. The HR responses were determined from the linear slopes of HR on SaO2 and HR on PACO2. We found that mean resting heart rate was within normal range; 66 +/- 3 (
SEM
) beats min-1. HR increased as oxygenation fell or
CO2
tension rose. The mean tetraplegic delta HR/delta SaO2 was 0.83 +/- 0.14 beats min-1 per 1% fall in SaO2 and that of delta HR/delta PACO2 was 0.30 +/- 0.13 beats min-1 per mmHG rise in PACO2. The HR and VE responses to either hypoxia or hypercapnia were related in the tetraplegic subjects. We conclude that the stimulatory HR responses to chemical stimuli are not suppressed by cervical spinal cord transection. Thus, the descending sympathetic activity does not underlie the HR acceleration by chemical stimuli.
...
PMID:Cardiac responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia in spinal man. 211 43
Gap junctional conductance (gj) between cardiac ventricular myocyte pairs is rapidly, substantially, and reversibly reduced by sarcoplasmic acidification with
CO2
when extracellular calcium activity is near physiological levels (1.0 mM CaCl2 added; 470 microM Ca++). Intracellular calcium concentration (Cai), measured by fura-2 fluorescence in cell suspensions, was 148 +/- 39 nM (+/-
SEM
, n = 6) and intracellular pH (pHi), measured with intracellular ion-selective microelectrodes, was 7.05 +/- 0.02 (n = 5) in cell pair preparations bathed in medium equilibrated with air. Cai increased to 515 +/- 12 nM (n = 6) and pHi decreased to 5.9-6.0 in medium equilibrated with 100%
CO2
. In air-equilibrated low-calcium medium (no added CaCl2; 2-5 microM Ca++), Cai was 61 +/- 9 nM (n = 13) at pHi 7.1. Cai increased to only 243 +/- 42 nM (n = 9) at pHi 6.0 in
CO2
-equilibrated low-calcium medium. Junctional conductance, in most cell pairs, was not substantially reduced by acidification to pHi 5.9-6.0 in low-calcium medium. Cell pairs could still be electrically uncoupled reversibly by the addition of 100 microM octanol, an agent which does not significantly affect Cai. In low-calcium low-sodium medium (choline substitution for all but 13 mM sodium), acidification with
CO2
increased Cai to 425 +/- 35 nM (n = 11) at pHi 5.9-6.0 and gj was reduced to near zero. Junctional conductance could also be reduced to near zero at pHi 6.0 in low-calcium medium containing the calcium ionophore, A23187. The addition of the calcium ionophore did not uncouple cell pairs in the absence of acidification. In contrast, acidification did not substantially reduce gj when intracellular calcium was low. Increasing intracellular calcium did not appreciably reduce gj at pHi 7.0. These results suggest that, although other factors may play a role, H+ and Ca++ act synergistically to decrease gj.
...
PMID:Gap junctional conductance between pairs of ventricular myocytes is modulated synergistically by H+ and Ca++. 211 74
The authors compared PaCO2 with end-tidal
CO2
(ETCO2) sampled at multiple sites along the endotracheal tube (ETT) in seven anesthetized rabbits (weight, 2.7-3.6 kg) to determine the most convenient, yet accurate, sampling location. Comparisons were made during spontaneous and controlled ventilation with fresh gas flows (FGF) of two and ten times the minute ventilation using a Mapleson D circuit. An Engstrom Eliza analyzer with a continuous sampling rate of 100 ml/min was used to measure ETCO2. A 0.75-mm ID polyethylene tube inserted in the side of the ETT sampled ETCO2 at the distal tip and at the 6-, 12-, and 15-cm marks on the ETT. ETCO2 was also measured at the standard proximal connector. The differences (P less than 0.05) between PaCO2 and ETCO2 at the distal, 6-, 12-, and 15-cm marks were 2.9 +/- 0.4, 3.1 +/- 0.4, 3.6 +/- 0.4, and 4.6 +/- 0.5 mmHg (mean +/-
SEM
), respectively, and did not change with FGF or mode of ventilation. The difference between PaCO2 and ETCO2 measured at the proximal connector was always large but significantly (P less than 0.05) greater during spontaneous than controlled ventilation (24.2 +/- 1.5 versus 15.0 +/- 1.4 mmHg) and at higher FGF (19.4 +/- 1.3 versus 16.8 +/- 1.6 mmHg). The differences (P less than 0.05) between ETCO2 at the distal tip and ETCO2 at the 6-, 12-, and 15-cm marks were 0.24 +/- 0.07, 0.73 +/- 0.11, and, 1.77 +/- 0.20 mmHg, respectively. This demonstrates that the change in ETCO2 between the distal tip and the 12-cm mark on the ETT is less than 1 mmHg, and that this clinically insignificant difference is independent of FGF and mode of ventilation. The 12 cm-mark is outside of the mouth on a newborn, and sampling ETCO2 at that point, which may be accomplished simply by inserting a small needle in the side of the ETT, may be the most appropriate sampling location.
...
PMID:Is distal sampling of end-tidal CO2 necessary in small subjects? 211 44
Accurate measurement of expiratory gas leak from uncuffed infant endotracheal tubes is an important requirement for evaluating the rates of metabolic gas exchange by indirect calorimetry in neonates receiving mechanical ventilation. The present study reports a new, noninvasive technique for the efficient collection and analysis of expiratory gases leaked from a closed-circuit metabolic monitoring system recently described. A loose-fitting face mask is placed over the infant's endotracheal appliance and air is entrained from the mask cavity at 100 mL/min for
CO2
analysis by infrared capnometry. In vitro calibration of this apparatus demonstrates a relative error of less than 5% of simulated endotracheal tube leak. In vivo application to metabolic rate assessment (using the MGM Jr. metabolic cart) in 12 intubated, ventilated infants ranging from 1.56 to 4.07 kg study weight demonstrated endotracheal tube leaks from 0.49 to 7.40% of net
CO2
production, which ranged 10.67 to 70.91 mL/min (or mean 8.22 +/- 0.93
SEM
mL/kg/min). The magnitude of tube leakage of mixed expiratory gases could not be predicted from endotracheal tube diameter, ventilator settings, or infant activity or posture. As new instrumentation becomes available to measure the rates of metabolic gas exchange in intubated infants, systematic evaluation of uncuffed endotracheal tube gas leaks becomes critical.
...
PMID:Accurate, noninvasive quantitation of expiratory gas leak from uncuffed infant endotracheal tubes. 211 39
In the isolated, perfused lung lobe of the ferret we evaluated the bronchoconstrictor response of its airways to methacholine and histamine, pharmacologic agents associated with the asthmatic state. The bronchus of excised lobes was cannulated and needle scarifications were made on the pleural surface to allow perfusate to exit. Lung airways were perfused at constant flow with equilibrated 95% O2/5%
CO2
, warmed Krebs-Ringers solution. Perfusion pressure was measured as a gauge of airway resistance. A concentration-dependent smooth muscle contraction of the ferret lung lobes was observed to methacholine and histamine. The ED50's of methacholine and histamine were 6.41 x 10(-6) M +/- 1.38 x 10(-6) (
SEM
) and 6.41 x 10(-6) M +/- 1.38 x 10(-6) (
SEM
) and 2.39 x 10(-6) M +/- 0.53 x 10(-6) (
SEM
), respectively. The maximum level of bronchoconstriction developed in the ferret (2.42 mmHg/ml/min +/- 0.28
SEM
(resistance units] in response to methacholine, was six times greater than that found for histamine (0.42 mmHg/ml/min +/- 0.05
SEM
). Responses to both agonists were less pronounced in the ferret lung preparation than those in a similar lung preparation of guinea pig. Compliance changes in both animals were also evaluated. The ferret did not demonstrate a compliance change in response to histamine as was seen for methacholine, suggesting that resistance changes precede compliance changes, or that the ferret airways are particularly resistant to histamine. Despite a lesser contractile response, the ferret has the advantage of a relatively large lung and long trachea that allow study in several preparations obtained from a single animal. It should prove a useful animal model for study of pulmonary pharmacology.
...
PMID:Large and small airway responses to bronchoconstrictors in the guinea pig and ferret. 212 32
CO2
single breaths have been performed in 7 men and 7 women in conditions of normoxia (FICO2 congruent to 0.13; FIO2 congruent to 0.21; FIN2 congruent to 0.66) and of hyperoxia (FICO2 congruent to 0.13; FIO2 congruent to 0.87). Ventilatory responses of the subjects and modifications of breathing pattern in the course of the
CO2
tests were also explored in the two conditions. The results (mean +/-
SEM
) show that, whatever the oxygenation, men and women exhibit the same ventilatory response during a
CO2
test from a qualitative point of view but with a smaller intensity in women (men: 0.37 +/- 0.088 LBTPS.min-1.Torr-1; women: 0.15 +/- 0.025 LBTPS.min-1.Torr-1; p less than 0.05). Considering men and women together,
CO2
tests induced an increase of minute volume VE (p less than 0.001), VT (p less than 0.01) and rate of breathing (NS) but this response is decreased in hyperoxic conditions (p less than 0.05) mainly in men (men: 0.19 +/- 0.043 LBTPS.min-1.Torr-1; women: 0.11 +/- 0.023 LBTPS.min-1.Torr-1). These results show that sensitivity to transient hypercapnia and its interaction with hyperoxia are weaker in women than in men.
...
PMID:CO2 chemoreflex drive of ventilation in man: effects of hyperoxia and sex differences. 212 2
We have studied the effect of acetazolamide 500 mg bd for three days on ventilatory response to
CO2
(HCVR) and hypoxia under both isocapnic and poikilocapnic conditions (isocapnic and poikilocapnic HVR) in five normal subjects. Although acetazolamide reduced calculated arterial pH (7.41 [
SEM
] 0.01 to 7.37 [
SEM
] 0.01: p less than 0.01) there was no significant change in either isocapnic HVR (with PetCO2 held at the post-drug resting level) or poikilocapnic HVR in terms of slope and ventilation at SaO2 = 80%. HCVR slope rose slightly (+1.82 [
SEM
] 0.43 to +2.2 [
SEM
] 0.29 l/min/mmHg: NS) and there was a significant increase in ventilation at Pet-
CO2
= 50 mmHg (9.42 [
SEM
] 3.3 to 31.4 [
SEM
] 6.31/min: p less than 0.01). These findings are consistent with the claim that acetazolamide stimulates central chemoreceptors and inhibits peripheral chemoreceptors. Increased sensitivity to
CO2
would reverse the suppressive effect of respiratory alkalosis on hypoxic ventilatory drive following rapid ascent to high altitude, and this probably accounts for the efficacy of acetazolamide in the prophylaxis of acute mountain sickness. However, inhibition of peripheral chemoreceptors may also result in symptomatic benefit by reducing sleep disturbance due to periodic breathing.
...
PMID:The effect of acetazolamide on hypercapnic and eucapnic/poikilocapnic hypoxic ventilatory responses in normal subjects. 213 18
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