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Query: UMLS:C0599766 (functional recovery)
13,441 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adult normothermic rhesus monkeys were submitted to one hour's complete cerebral ischemia, followed by periods of blood recirculation varying from 45 min to 24 h. The functional impact of ischemia and the subsequent recovery was monitored by electrophysiological recording and a distinction was made between animals with signs of functional recovery and animals without recovery. Prior to ischemia the water content of the gray matter was 81.1 plus or minus 0.3% (mean plus or minus S.D.) and of the white matter 68.9 plus or minus 0.8%. The sodium-potassium ratio in the gray matter was 0.43 plus or minus 0.02 and in the white matter 0.62 plus or minus 0.06. During one hour's ischemia brain water did not change significantly, but the differences in the sodium-potassium ratio in white and gray matter were reduced. Blood recirculation of the brain after ischemia caused a considerable increase in brain water content and a shift in the sodium-potassium ratio up to 1.0. Calculated brain swelling was maximal after 45 min when it reached 11.1% of the total brain volume in an animal with recovery and 12.2% in another one without recovery. In animals with signs of functional recovery brain swelling rapidly diminished, followed by a more gradual normalization of brain electrolytes within 24 h. In animals without functional recovery electrolyte shifts were irreversible or even progressed further. It is concluded that brain swelling and electrolyte derangements following one hour's cerebral ischemia are fully reversible when signs of functional recovery appear and brain metabolism returns.
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PMID:Resuscitation of the monkey brain after one hour's complete ischemia. II. Brain water and electrolytes. 16 36

Canine kidneys (n = 17) were flushed with COLLINS (C2), SACKS II, LAMBOTTE (KMgS), ROSS (hypertonic citrate), or RINGER glucose-mannitol solution following a 30-min period of normothermic ischemia. After 24 h hypothermic preservation with retrograde oxygen persufflation (ROP) and autotransplantation, the immediate functional recovery was determined using inulin and PAH clearance methods and compared with the normal contralateral kidney. While a good functional recovery was found in the COLLINS group, significantly exceeding results from hypothermic ischemic storage preservation, in experiments using other flush solutions ROP preservation resulted in only a small immediate function. Thus the experiments indicate that COLLINS solution C2 is the optimal flush solution for ROP preservation.
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PMID:[Hypothermic storage under aerobic conditions--the effect of different flushing solutions on kidney functional recovery]. 37 90

Malperfusion due to increased coronary vascular resistance is presumably one of the factors responsible for incomplete functional recovery of the heart after aortic cross-clamping. Myocaridal blood flow (MBF, radioactive microspheres) was measured before and after 60 min of hypothermic ischemia in 16 dogs on cardiopulmonary bypass. After ischemia the hearts were reperfused for 30 min. MBF was measured in the empty beating heart and in the isovolumetrically contracting ventricle loaded with enddiastolic volumes (EDV) of 10, 20 and 30 ml (intraventricular latex balloon).
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PMID:Regional myocardial blood flow after hypothermic arrest and cardioplegia. 45 86

Contraction and relaxation of the canine myocardium were examined during normothermic ischemia in an isolated heart model. Decrease in the development of tension depends on the duration of ischemia. Deficient functional recovery was observed after ischemic periods extending beyond 30 minutes, in spite of reperfusion periods of over 1 hour. A decrease in compliance was observed during the anoxic period, but a persistent defect of relaxation occurred only after 60 minutes of ischemia. After this period there was also a disturbance in the autoregulative mechanisms of coronary perfusion and an uncoupling of O2-consumption and mechanical efficiency. A prolonged reperfusion period of the heart beating empty allowed ultrastructural recovery of the damaged myocardium. In contrast, functional recovery of the myocardium, as determined by several parameters of contraction and relaxation, did not correlate with ultrastructural recovery and was not improved by prolonged reperfusion.
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PMID:Recovery of the heart after normothermic ischemia. Part II: Myocardial function during postischemic reperfusion. 46 62

The extent of myocardial protection afforded by a procaine cardioplegic solution during cardiac ischemia has been evaluated and compared with the protection seen using a potassium cardioplegic solution. An isolated cat heart model was employed, and ventricular function parameters, intramyocardial gas tensions, and postischemic myocardial edema were measured and compared following 60 minutes of induced ischemia at 37 degrees C. and 27 degrees C. There was no significant improvement in recovery of postarrest ventricular function when procaine cardioplegia was used during normothermic ischemia. When used at 27 degrees C., however, both cardioplegic solutions were associated with significantly better recovery of postarrest ventricular function, although there was less myocardial edema formation in the potassium-treated hearts. Results of this study indicate that procaine-induced cardioplegia provides myocardial protection during anoxic cardiac arrest which is additive to that afforded by hypothermia alone. In addition, procaine cardioplegia results in postarrest functional recovery which is similar to that seen with potassium cardioplegia.
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PMID:Effects of procaine-induced cardioplegia on myocardial ischemia, myocardial edema, and postarrest ventricular function. A comparison with potassium-induced cardioplegia and hypothermia. 66 57

The effects of severe cerebral ischemia on postischemic brain perfusion were examined in a series of pentobarbital-anesthetized cats. Ischemia of 15 or 30 minutes' duration was produced by occlusion of both common carotid arteries and the basilar artery and was coupled with mild systemic hypotension. A 90-minute period of normotensive postischemic recirculation was permitted in some animals. In 9 of 10 animals studied at the end of the ischemic insult and not allowed to recover, blood flow in the cerebral hemispheres was greatly reduced, with minimal flow (0.01 to 0.11 ml gm-1 min-1) persisting only in scattered perisulcal regions in 4 animals. Following 15 minutes of ischemia, blood flow was restored uniformly during recirculation, though at subnormal levels (31 to 35% of control). In contrast, 30 minutes of prior ischemia led to marked heterogeneities of local cerebral perfusion during recirculation, with multiple zones of persistent severe ischemia. Thus, while recirculation was suboptimal following both 15 and 30 minutes of ischemia, the 30-minute insult led to focal postischemic perfusion abnormalities that were sufficiently severe to make the possibility of functional recovery appear unlikely.
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PMID:Diffuse cerebral ischemia in the cat: I. Local blood flow during severe ischemia and recirculation. 67 14

In this review the author's opinion regarding the etiology of most cases of perinatal and neonatal bowel ischemia has been stated. It is recognized that the changes brough about by hypoxia (splanchnic shutdown, bowel ischemia) represent the "soil" on which other "seeds" can prosper. In its simplest form following acute ischemia, the processes of repair take over, leading to functional recovery and a presumably normal bowel. In those patients with more extensive initial damage, degrees of stenosis and even atresia may be expected as a result of the healing of the bowel. Rapidly evolving ischemia may produce perforations; these may be restricted and involve only very small areas of bowel or may be part of a more generalized involvement, possibly even with multiple perforations. In other infants, alterations of bacterial flora could contribute to the clinical picture of "necrotizing enterocolitis," and gas may or may not be present in the bowel wall. If the process of ischemia has been relatively mild, or bacterial overgrowth not particularly marked, some of the more obscure functional syndromes may be noted. The persistence of these obscure syndromes may in turn be related to incomplete phases of regeneration of the bowel that fall short of producing stenosis but lead to a mucosa that is not optimally functional.
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PMID:The spectrum of ischemic bowel disease in the newborn. 78 16

In adult normothermic cats cerebral blood flow was interrupted for 1 hour by clamping the innominate and subclavian arteries. Following ischemia the brains were recirculated with blood, and the coagulation system was investigated by measuring coagulation times and blood content of fibrinogen and platelets. Ischemia induced progressive consumption coagulopathy with an increase in coagulation times and a decrease of platelets and fibrinogen by more than 40%. Coagulopathy was accompanied by a respiratory distress syndrome with a significant increase in the alveolar-arterial carbon dioxide gradient from --3.3 to --13.5 mm Hg. A correlation was found between plasma fibrinogen concentration, cerebral blood flow and electrophysiological function, indicating that a relationship exists between the severity of postischemic coagulopathy and functional recovery following prolonged cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Coagulopathy following experimental cerebral ischemia. 84 91

In 180 patients, cerebral blood flow was measured between one and six weeks after acute cerebrovascular ischemia. Patients were grouped according to their clinical deficits at the time of blood flow study. Statistical analysis revealed highly significant differences among the flow values of the groups. The patients were followed up for a period of up to 6 years (mean, 34 months) after the attack, and then regrouped. In these groups, the statistical significances of differences among the flow values was even higher. Patients also were grouped according to changes in neurologic status, and again the flow values differed significantly among the groups. The results show significant relationships among flow values after cerebrovascular ischemia and neurologic deficits, change in status, and the final functional state. Cerebral blood flow measurement together with other clinical signs permits an estimation of a patient's chance for functional recovery after a stroke.
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PMID:Long-term prognosis in stroke related to cerebral blood flow. 91 Dec 27

Cerebral blood flow, electrical activity, and neurological function were studied in rabbits subjected to either 15 minutes of oligemia (20 torr cerebral perfusion pressure) or complete cerebral ischemia produced by cisterna magna infusion. During oligemia, flow was reduced from 68.4 +/- 4.2 ml/100 gm/min to 26.3 +/- 4.4 (p less than .01), and during ischemia animals had no proven flow. By 5 minutes after oligemia or ischemia significant symmetrical hyperemia occurred and there was no evidence of the no-reflow phenomenon. The electroencephalogram became isoelectric significantly later and returned significantly sooner in oligemia than in ischemia. Oligemic animals had earlier and better return of neurological function than their ischemic counterparts, although postinsult hypocapnia improved functional recovery in both groups. These experiments do not support the concept that oligemia is a more severe insult than complete ischemia. In intracranial hypertension produced by this model, the no-reflow phenomenon does not occur.
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PMID:Experimental cerebral oligemia and ischemia produced by intracranial hypertension. Part 1: Pathophysiology, electroencephalography, cerebral blood flow, blood-brain barrier, and neurological function. 115 66


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