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Query: UMLS:C0848237 (acute stress)
4,619 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Young (90 days) and old (15 months) male, Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to an acute and massive myocardial infarct by giving them two injections of a large dose of isoproterenol. The animals were autopsied at sequential time intervals to ascertain the similarities or dissimilarities in the pathophysiologic events which attend acute myocardial infarction and repair in young vs old rats. Although the signs and severity of hypotensive shock appeared to be equal, mortality was higher in the old rats, especially during the acute necrosis phase. The older rats also manifested more severe and persistent congestive heart failure, i.e., hydrothorax. Serum enzymes (CPK, SGOT, SGPT, and LDH), lipids (triglycerides, free fatty acids, and cholesterol), glucose, and BUN levels manifested a dynamic rise and fall concomitant with the induced myocardial necrosis and repair phases with distinct differences in these metabolic changes between young and old rats. Despite initially higher circulating levels of corticosterone in the old vs young rats, the older animals manifested little or no increase in circulating corticosterone levels during the acute stress of myocardial infarction. This apparent lack of adrenocortical responsiveness was accentuated by the concomitant finding of greatly hypertrophied, hemorrhagic, and lipid-depleted adrenal glands in the old rats vs a dynamic increase in circulating corticosterone levels and alterations in the weight of adrenal and thymus glands of the young rats. During the myocardial repair phase, the young rats manifested extensive endocardial fibrosis whereas the old rats displayed little or no endocardial fibrosis but copous and persistent myocardial edema and ground substance in keeping with their higher concentration of cardiac hexosamine. The pathophysiologic course of events which attends myocardial necrosis and repair is quite different in young vs old rats and may be related to the degree of responsiveness of the pituitary-adrenal axis which changes with age.
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PMID:Myocardial infarction in young vs old male rats: pathophysiologic changes. 65 13

Initial and follow-up fasting serum glucose levels following acute stroke were evaluated retrospectively in 392 selected hospitalized patients. Transitory reactive hyperglycaemia was observed in a large number of patients (28% of the total series) without a history of diabetes prior to the acute cerebrovascular event. The data from this group suggest a possible relationship between the impairment of carbohydrate metabolism and the type and location of stroke since both the frequency and severity of the hyperglycaemic response were higher in patients with haemorrhagic stroke and brainstem infarction as compared with cerebral infarction. The incidence and degree of the reactive hyperglycaemia were also related to the severity of the acute stroke. There were more comatose patients in the group showing this phenomenon. Initial serum glucose levels in the latter group were higher in unconscious patients than in alert ones. In addition, hospital mortality was significantly higher in these patients. Transitory reactive increases of serum glucose levels were also observed in the majority of patients with a history of overt diabetes prior to the acute stroke. The hyperglycaemic reaction following acute stroke may be attributed to several underlying mechanisms. These include: a non-specific reaction to acute stress and tissue injury with the associated autonomic, hormonal and metabolic alterations; uncovering of underlying latent diabetes by the acute stroke; increased secretion of growth hormone due to stroke-induced hypothalamic dysfunction; and irritation of the glucose regulatory centres in the hypothalamus and brain stem by blood-laden cerebrospinal fluid or local ischaemia.
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PMID:Reactive hyperglycaemia in patients with acute stroke. 97 11

The effects of acute stress upon circulating triglyceride, glucose, insulin, free fatty acids, and glycerol were investigated in obese desert sand rats. Three groups of animals, designated "nonstress", "non-exertional stress", and "exertional stress", were studied. Acute stress, with or without accompanying exercise, was associated with significant decreases in circulating triglyceride; significant increases in circulating glucose, free fatty acids, and glycerol; and variable changes in circulating insulin. Since these data indicated that substrate availability and hepatic insulization were adequate and therefore could not explain the observed fall in circulating triglyceride, endogenous triglyceride secretion rates were examined by the Triton method. Compared to predicted rates based upon earlier studies, both nonexertional and exertional stress were associated with significantly decreased endogenous triglyceride secretion. Thus, acute stress in the sand rat, with or without accompanying exercise, appears to induce an immediate decrease in endogenous triglyceride secretion and circulating triglyceride.
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PMID:Stress-induced inhibition of triglyceride secretion in vivo sand rats (Psammomys obesus). 99 40

Hepatocyte beta-adrenoceptors were characterized in trout with chronically raised plasma cortisol levels (132.1 +/- 14.8 ng/ml, n = 8, 11-12 days) and compared with shams (1.8 +/- 0.9 ng/ml, n = 8) using radioreceptor assay techniques. Hepatocytes prepared from sham trout possessed 1,696 +/- 179 beta-adrenoceptors/cell. These receptors were characterized as beta 2-adrenoceptors based on the potency order of specific inhibition of CGP binding. The number of putative surface beta 2-adrenoceptors significantly increased to 6,005 +/- 1,165 receptors/cell, in hepatocytes from trout exposed to the elevated plasma cortisol concentration. The physiological significance of the increase in hepatocyte surface receptors was assessed by the in vitro responsiveness of hepatocytes to a range of epinephrine concentrations (10-1,000 nmol/l). Both total glucose production and intracellular adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate content, indicators of epinephrine responsiveness, were enhanced as a result of chronically raised levels of plasma cortisol. We suggest that these cortisol-mediated alterations in the adrenergic responsiveness of trout hepatocytes may ultimately enhance the ability of the liver to supply glucose to the fish during acute stress after extended periods of chronic stress.
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PMID:Rainbow trout hepatocyte beta-adrenoceptors, catecholamine responsiveness, and effects of cortisol. 131 31

Four experiments examined the effects of stress on hypothalamic insulin and plasma hormones in rats. Two hours daily of immobilization (IM) stress for 2 and 4 days resulted in an increase in hypothalamic insulin. In contrast, 15 min of daily IM over 13 days or 48 h of continuous signalled shock avoidance did not alter hypothalamic insulin. These findings are interpreted to indicate that changes in hypothalamic insulin are part of the stress response. Possible reasons for the different effects of time and paradigm on the hypothalamic insulin responses to stress are discussed. Plasma insulin and glucose levels were not responsive to any of the stressors. Brief acute stress caused increases in the stress-responsive hormones ACTH, corticosterone, and prolactin, as expected, and these responses attenuated or disappeared with repeated or longer stress exposures.
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PMID:Effect of stress on hypothalamic insulin in rats. 132 77

1. Anguilla anguilla (L.) was exposed to a sublethal concentration of 0.167 ppm (0.25 of the 96-hr LC50) of lindane for 6, 12, 24, 48, 72 and 96 hr. 2. Changes in glycogen, glucose, pyruvate and lactate contents of liver and muscle after lindane exposure, were studied. 3. Muscle and liver glycogen levels decreased significantly during the exposure time. Muscle glucose values increased but on the other hand we found a decrease in those of liver. 4. Muscle and liver pyruvate content increased as did lactate levels in both tissues. 5. The observed effects of lindane on carbohydrate metabolism in fish are discussed in relation to acute stress syndrome.
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PMID:Lindane-induced changes in carbohydrate metabolism in Anguilla anguilla. 137 99

Intragastric glucose prevents acute stress-induced gastric mucosal injury in the restrained rat. Because increased gastric contractions contribute to mucosal injury in this model and because parenteral glucose infusions have been shown to suppress gastric contractility, we hypothesized that centrally mediated responses to hyperglycemia might contribute to the cytoprotective effect of intragastric glucose. We compared intragastric and intravenous 25% glucose with saline infusions during cold restraint and measured their impact on gastric lesions, serum glucose levels, gastric residual volume (an indirect indicator of net gastric contractility), acidity, and mucin concentration. We found that both intravenous and intragastric glucose infusions increased serum glucose to over 500 mg/dl after 4 hr of stress. Intragastric glucose increased residual volume and gastric pH, as well as decreased gastric mucosal injury, but intravenous glucose had no effects on gastric function. We found that none of the potentially protective effects of intragastric glucose are mediated by central responses to hyperglycemia, and likewise that intravenous glucose has no effect on gastric mucosal injury.
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PMID:Effects of intragastric and intravenous glucose on restraint model of stress ulceration. 147 35

1. Eel were exposed to a sublethal concentration of lindane (0.335 ppm) for 6, 12, 24, 48, 72 and 96 hr. 2. Concentrations of glycogen, glucose, lactate, pyruvate and lipids were determined in gill tissue after lindane exposure. 3. Gill glycogen decreased and glucose levels increased at 6 hr of treatment, lactate and pyruvate concentration increased between 6 and 48 hr. Total lipid values decreased between 6 and 24 hr; thereafter, the levels increased up to 72 hr of exposure. 4. Clear changes were found in all parameters tested in gill tissues. The observed effects of lindane on metabolism in fish are discussed in relation to acute stress syndrome.
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PMID:The effect of time on physiological changes in eel Anguilla anguilla, induced by lindane. 171 18

Exposure of the European eel (Anguilla anguilla) to a high sublethal concentration of 0.335 ppm (0.50 of the 96-hr LC50) of lindane for 6, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 96 hr affected carbohydrate metabolism. Muscle glycogen levels decreased significantly (P less than 0.05) at 6, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 96 hr; liver glycogen content did not decline at any time. Muscle glucose levels in fish were elevated at 6, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 96 hr but in liver, the levels increased only at 96 hr. Mean values of muscle and liver pyruvate were elevated significantly (P less than 0.05) at 6, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr. Muscle lactate levels increased at 6, 12, 24, and 48 hr in pesticide-treated fish. Liver lactate levels were elevated only at 12, 24, and 48 hr of treatment. The observed effects of lindane on carbohydrate metabolism in fish are discussed in relation to acute stress syndrome. Measurement of carbohydrate metabolites in fish for 6 hr or longer could prove useful as a rapid method for evaluating the toxicity of pesticides and other toxicants.
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PMID:Effects of lindane on fish carbohydrate metabolism. 171 27

The respiratory pathophysiology of placental insufficiency is well understood, whereas the metabolic effects of chronical or acute malnutrition still need further evaluation. In a comprehensive study of 20 deliveries respiratory parameters and substrates of carbohydrate- and lipid-metabolism were analysed simultaneously from maternal blood at 4 cm dilatation, at cord clamping immediately delivery and 2 hours post partum as well as from arterial and venous umbical blood samples. Normal deliveries were compared with cases of fetal retardation and moderate acute fetal acidosis. For glucose, insulin, c-peptide and pyruvate a strong rise in maternal blood during labour was observed as well as for the non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), which have a high materno-fetal gradient. Arterio-venous differences of concentrations were found in the umbilical cord blood for glucose, pyruvate and NEFA. In cases of chronical insufficiency of the placenta especially elevated lactate levels were measured, whereas a moderate fetal acidosis obviously leads to an additional feto-maternal pyruvate transfer. The results lead to the conclusion that the fetal metabolism has considerable means of adaptation during delivery even under chronical or moderate acute stress conditions.
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PMID:[Maternal and fetal metabolic parameters in acute and chronic fetal malnutrition]. 188 57


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