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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (
Thoracic
)
6,478
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have shown that chronic administration of the nitric oxide (NO) precursor L-arginine inhibits atherogenesis in the hypercholesterolemic rabbit. However, the effect of supplemental arginine on preexisting lesions is not known and was the focus of the present study. New Zealand White rabbits received normal chow or 0.5% cholesterol chow for 10 weeks. Subsequently, L-arginine (2.25% in drinking water;
ARG
group) or vehicle (CHOL group) was administered for an additional 13 weeks, while the high-cholesterol diet was continued.
Thoracic
aortae were harvested at weeks 10, 14, 18, or 23. Rings of aorta were used to assess NO-dependent vasodilation to acetylcholine. Maximal relaxation to acetylcholine in the CHOL rabbits became progressively attenuated from 53.4% (at week 10) to 17.4% (by week 23). Planimetry of the luminal surface of the aortae from CHOL animals revealed a progressive increase in lesion surface area from 30.3% (at week 10) to 56.5% (by week 23). By contrast, animals in the
ARG
groups manifested improved endothelium-dependent relaxation associated with a reduction of lesion surface area at 14 and 18 weeks. The arginine-induced improvement in endothelium-dependent relaxation was associated with an increased generation of vascular NO and a reduced generation of vascular superoxide anion. By 23 weeks, 3 of 7
ARG
animals had persistent improvement in NO-dependent vasodilation and exhibited a further reduction of lesion surface area tc 5.4%. We conclude that hypercholesterolemia induces a progressive loss of NO-dependent vasodilation associated with progressive intimal lesion formation. Administration of L-arginine to animals with preexisting intimal lesions augments vascular NO elaboration, reduces superoxide anion generation, and is associated with a reduction in lesion surface area. This is the first demonstration that restoration of NO activity can induce regression of preexisting intimal lesions and provides evidence that L-arginine therapy may be of potential clinical benefit.
...
PMID:Regression or progression. Dependency on vascular nitric oxide. 854 25
Tamil Nadu has experienced the impact of HIV/AIDS for one-and-a-half decades and is considered a trailblazer in India in terms of combating the infection. So what are the knowledge levels among 292 HIV patients at Government Hospital for
Thoracic
Medicine and Christian Medical College? Latent class analysis revealed that it was not adequate. Television and peer contact were found to be most effective as source of knowledge for HIV. Patients who were in contact with health personnel might be expected to have more information but they came out with low scores. Association of knowledge with socio-demographic characteristics revealed that education, occupation, income, place of residence, and age were important predictors. Future information, education and communication programmes need to consider the variation across different socio-demographic groups as a basis for targeting education programmes.
Int J
STD
AIDS 2003 Aug
PMID:One-and-a-half decades of HIV/AIDS in Tamil Nadu: how much do patients know now? 1293 86
Thoracic
injuries in general are of great importance due to their high incidence and high mortality.
Thoracic
impalement injuries are rare but severe due to the combination of cause, effect and result. This study's primary objective is to report the case of a young man who was impaled by a two-wheeled horse carriage shaft while crashing his motorcycle in a rural zone. An
EMT
-B ferry was called at the crash scene and a conscious patient was found, sustaining a severe impalement injury to the left hemithorax, suspended over the floor by the axial skeleton with the carriage shaft coming across his left chest. As a secondary objective, a literature review of thoracic impalement injuries is performed. Cases of thoracic impalement injury require unique and individualized care based on injury severity and affected organs. Reported protocols for managing impalement injuries are entirely anecdotal, with no uniformity on impaled patient's approach and management. In penetrating trauma, it is essential not to remove the impaled object, so that possible vascular lesions remain buffered by the object, avoiding major bleeding and exsanguination haemorrhage. Severed impaled thoracic patients should be transferred to a specialist centre for trauma care, as these lesions typically require complex multidisciplinary treatment. High-energy thoracic impalement injuries are rare and hold a high mortality rate, due to the complexity of trauma and associated injuries such as thoracic wall and lung lesions. Modern medicine still seems limited in cases of such seriousness, not always with satisfactory results.
...
PMID:Management of severe thoracic impalement trauma against two-wheeled horse carriage: a case report and literature review. 2527 54