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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

ATP-depletion in renal cultured cells has been used as a model for studying various cytoskeletal and functional alterations induced by renal ischemia. This communication explores the reversibility of these effects utilizing a novel method [1] that depleted ATP (ATP-D) to 2% of control within 30 minutes and caused complete recovery (REC) of ATP in one hour. Under confocal microscopy, ATP-D (30 min) caused thinning of F-actin from the microvilli, cortical region, and basal stress fibers, with the concurrent appearance of intracellular F-actin patches. These changes were more pronounced after 60 minutes of ATP-D. One hour of REC following 30 minutes of ATP-D produced complete recovery of F-actin in each region of the cell. However, after 60 minutes of ATP-D, a heterogeneous F-actin recovery pattern was observed: almost complete recovery of the apical ring and microvilli, thinned cortical actin with occasional breaks along the basolateral membrane, and a dramatic reduction in basal stress fiber density. The time course of cortical actin and actin ring disruption and recovery coincided with a drop recovery in the transepithelial resistance and the cytoskeletal dissociation and reassociation of the Na,K-ATPase. Additionally, the microvilli retracted into the cells during ATP-D, a process that was reversed during REC. Triton extraction and confocal microscopy demonstrated that villin remained closely associated with microvillar actin during both ATP-D and REC. These distinctive regional differences in the responses of F-actin to ATP depletion and repletion in cultured renal epithelial cells may help to clarify some of the differential tubular responses to ischemia and reperfusion in the kidney.
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PMID:Actin and villin compartmentation during ATP depletion and recovery in renal cultured cells. 858 43

Obstructive colitis is an ulcero-inflammatory and necrotizing condition that occurs in the colon proximal to benign or malignant stenosing lesions. it is the result of ischemia due to impairment of blood supply secondary to elevation of the endoluminal pressure, distension of the colonic wall and other factors which impair adequate perfusion. The incidence among patients with colonic obstruction is reported at between 1 and 7%. Of 50 patients with this condition in this series, 30 female and 20 male, 2/3rds were well over 70 yrs of age. Obstruction was most common in the rectosigmoid. In half the patients this was due to adenocarcinoma, 24 were due to benign obstruction and 15 were caused by diverticular disease. Type, extent and depth of ischemic lesions were highly variable and comprised early mucosal hemorrhage and edema, ulcero-hemorrhagic lesions and transmural necrosis. There was always an abrupt transition between affected and normal bowel. A segment of preserved mucosa was usually present on the proximal side of the stenosis. In 16 patients massive dilatation with stretching and thinning of the bowel wall, associated with a blow-out type of perforation or with transmural necrosis, was observed and was considered to have resulted from a rapid rise of endoluminal pressure to high levels. The microscopic and macroscopic features are described in detail and histological factors discussed in relation to the pathological lesions encountered. Emphasis is placed upon the range of appearances and similarities are shared with other inflammatory colonic diseases, particularly idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease. The importance of recognition of this disease entity, not only by pathologists but by surgeons dealing with the disease at operation, is stressed.
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PMID:Obstructive colitis: an analysis of 50 cases and a review of the literature. 877 Nov 49

Dysbaric osteonecrosis was induced successfully in adult sheep after 12 to 13, 24-hour exposures to compressed air (2.6-2.9 atmospheres absolute) during a 2-month period. All exposed sheep had decompression sickness and extensive bone and marrow necrosis in their long bones. Radiographic analysis of these progressive lesions showed mottled to distinct medullary opacities and endosteal thickening characteristic of dysbaric osteonecrosis. Six months after the last hyperbaric exposure, neovascularization of once ischemic fatty marrow was centripetal from the diaphyseal cortex. Proliferating endosteal new bone, fatty marrow calcification, and appositional new bone formation were widespread. Juxtaarticular osteonecrosis involved marrow fibrosis and loss of osteocytes in subchondral cortical bone. Tidemark reduplication in juxtaarticular bone and cartilage thinning suggested possible early osteoarthritis induction by recurrent episodes of transient ischemia after multiple hyperbaric exposures. Dysbaric osteonecrosis appears to involve a bone compartment syndrome of elevated intramedullary pressure initiated by decompression induced N2 bubble formation in the fatty marrow of the long bones. An animal model that can be used to investigate the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of dysbaric osteonecrosis is discussed.
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PMID:Dysbaric osteonecrosis in divers and caisson workers. An animal model. 937 84

This study was performed to examine the roles of body temperature, NMDA receptors and nitric oxide (NO) synthase in post-ischemic retinal injury in rats. Cell loss in the ganglion cell layer and thinning of the inner plexiform layer were observed 7 days after ischemia. Cell loss in the ganglion cell layer but not thinning of the inner plexiform layer was reduced by hypothermia during ischemia. Intravenous injection of dizocilpine (MK-801) or Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) prior to ischemia ameliorated retinal injury. These results suggest that activation of NO synthase following NMDA receptor stimulation is involved in ischemia-induced retinal injury.
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PMID:Inhibition of NMDA receptors and nitric oxide synthase reduces ischemic injury of the retina. 968 14

To study the efficacy of methylprednisolone/vitamin E in reducing cerebral edema and improving the ultimate neuropathological outcome in perinatal cerebral hypoxia-ischemia, 40 seven-day postnatal rats were subjected to right common carotid artery ligation followed by exposure to 8% oxygen at 37 degrees C for 3 h. The animals were divided into groups. Twenty rat pups received an intraperitoneal injection of 30 mg/kg body weight methylprednisolone and vitamin E (100 U/kg) immediately following cerebral hypoxia-ischemia. Control animals received either no therapy (n = 10) or an equivalent volume of normal saline (n = 10). After 72 h of recovery from hypoxia-ischemia, the animals were killed and their brains were examined to measure the water contents in the right and left hemispheres (29 rat pups), whereas the others were killed at 21 days for neuropathological examination. Methylprednisolone/vitamin E-treated rats had significantly less water content in the right hemisphere (87.08 +/- 0.28%, mean +/- S.E.M.) than saline-treated animals (89.07 +/- 0.37%, mean +/- S.E.M., P < 0.0001). Methylprednisolone/vitamin E significantly reduced water content in the right hemisphere of the brain. Neuropathological study was performed on nine rat pups. The brains of four methylprednisolone/vitamin E- and five saline-treated pups were examined at the end of the 21-day recovery period. Two groups of the right cerebral cortex included thinning of the cortex. Significantly less damage was seen in the methylprednisolone/vitamin E-treated pups. Our study suggests that trials of methylprednisolone/vitamin E might be effective if they are given to the mother at risk of fetal hypoxia during labor or to the hypoxic infant right after delivery in preventing hypoxic brain damage.
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PMID:Methylprednisolone and vitamin E therapy in perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain damage in rats. 1040 17

The authors report a case of a 48 year old woman admitted to hospital because of digital ischemia, in a context of antiphospholipid syndrome. The electrocardiogram-triggered electron beam computed tomography revealed an apical thrombus associated with a thinning left ventricular wall, suggesting painless myocardial infarction. The diagnosis was secondary confirmed by coronarography.
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PMID:[Left ventricular thrombus revealed by electron bean computed tomography, in a patient with antiphospholipid syndrome]. 1091 59

We searched the medical literature for articles containing markers of cardiac ischemia and echocardiography in the evaluation of patients presenting to the emergency department to determine their combined clinical use. Several published articles indicate two-dimensional echocardiography is a useful and cost-effective imaging technique for the evaluation of patients with chest pain in the emergency department. New studies are emerging that evaluate ischemic markers in combination with echocardiography to assess patients presenting to the emergency department with chest pain. We searched the MEDLINE Database for English-language articles published from December 1980 to August 1998 using the key words troponin, echocardiography, myocardial infarction, and emergency. These key words were crossed referenced to determine publications in this area. Pertinent trials and reviews were selected from the database. There were six articles evaluating biochemical markers of ischemia and echocardiography to assess patients presenting with acute coronary syndromes in the emergency department. Very few studies combined the information obtained from novel ischemic markers and echocardiogram analysis to help delineate potential cardiac etiologies of acute coronary syndromes. However, the limited studies available indicate that echocardiography is both sensitive and specific for detecting acute myocardial infarction. The presence of regional wall motion abnormalities increases the chance of in-hospital complications and likelihood of developing congestive heart failure after admission for unstable angina. The combined use of troponin T levels and echocardiographic imaging was a more powerful predictor of adverse events than were isolated results. Myocardial scarring with ventricular wall thinning or aneurysm may allow for rapid diagnosis of 'occult' coronary artery disease in a patient presenting with chest pain who does not have a previous history of a cardiovascular event. Echocardiography may also help identify other cardiovascular causes of chest pain, such as aortic dissection, aortic stenosis, cardiac tamponade, pericarditis, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The clinical use of combining ischemic markers of disease with echocardiographic imaging seems justified given their unique clinical advantages. Future clinical trials are needed to determine whether the combination of novel ischemic markers and echocardiography can provide for a more expedient and accurate diagnosis, resulting in improved patient care and a safe reduction in unnecessary hospitalization.
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PMID:Clinical Use of Ischemic Markers and Echocardiography in the Emergency Department. 1117 40

The purpose of the present review was to determine whether exercise training improves cardiac function in patients with prior myocardial infarction. Home exercise programs for patients with myocardial infarction effectively improve their ability to exercise as well as quality of life. A computer-based, automated, telemetry system comprising central and peripheral computers and telephone line was developed. Myocardial infarction patients were evaluated for peak oxygen uptake and anaerobic threshold. Some studies have in fact suggested that using echocardiography, exercise training in patients with reduced left ventricular function after a myocardial infarction leads to further myocardial damage, including wall thinning, infarct and expansion. A more recent analysis by these investigators suggested that training actually has a beneficial effect on the remodeling process. Many factors appear to influence the extent of the remodeling process, including attenuation by Ace inhibition therapy, extent and site of the infarction, hypertension and continued ischemia. Some results suggest early physical training may be safe and improve the autonomic nerve balance and exercise tolerance in patients with acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:[Rehabilitative intervention after a myocardial infarct]. 1125 12

To determine whether stimulation of adenosine receptors and opening of ATP-sensitive K(+) channels were involved in the protective effect of late preconditioning in the rat retina, rats were subjected to 60 min of retinal ischemia, and ischemic preconditioning was achieved by applying 5 min of ischemia 24 h before 60 min of ischemia. In non-preconditioned rats, cell loss in the ganglion cell layer and thinning of the inner plexiform and inner nuclear layer were observed 7 days after 60 min of ischemia. Ischemic preconditioning completely prevented the retinal tissue damage and 8-phenyltheophylline or 5-hydroxydecanoate reduced the protective effect of ischemic preconditioning. Therefore, stimulation of adenosine receptors and opening of ATP-sensitive K(+) channels might be involved in the mechanism of histological protection by late preconditioning in the retina.
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PMID:Late preconditioning in rat retina: involvement of adenosine and ATP-sensitive K(+) channel. 1133 69

In the years 1981-1997 at the Department of Plastic Surgery Medical Centre for Postsgraduate Education in Warsaw 116 patients were treated surgically using groin flaps and 97 patients using a pedicled cutaneous groin flap. This paper reports the results of the later technique. Reconstructions were performed in 10 female patients aged 18-58 (mean age 37.5 years) and 87 male patients aged 15-67 (mean age 33.8 years). The tissue defects or acquired deformations were caused by: crush injuries (26 cases), scalping injuries (23 cases), rugged injuries (18 cases), avulsion trauma (15 cases), explosion injuries (8 cases) and electric burns (7 cases). Flap size depended upon extent of the tissue defect and the from flaps were 7-26 cm long and 4-12 cm wide. Flap area ranged from 35 to 260 square centimetres. Emergency procedures were performed in 59 patients (61%). Secondary reconstructions were carried out in 38 cases (39%). Operative technique was based on the rules described by McGregor and Jackson. The donor site was sutured primarily tubulizing its basis--as in tube flap. The flap pedicle was cut off during a one stage procedure in 41 patients 21-30 days (mean 23 days) after surgery or during a two-stage procedure in 56 cases. The two-stage procedure consisted of an incision of part of the pedicle after 15-45 days post-op (mean 21 days) followed by a complete dissection after a few days (mean 4 days). In 44 cases the flap required modelling i.e. excision of excessives kin and/or thinning of subcutaneous tissue. The flap healed in 96 patients (99%). Complications at different stages of the treatment were observed in 40 patients (41%). In 3 cases wound ischemia was observed because of too tight suturing. Removal of skin sutures lead to normalization of blood supply. In 7 patients cyanotic skin of the distal part with no significant consequences was observed. In 27 patients (28%) necrosis of the marginal tissues surrounding the operation wound after cutting of the pedicle was noted. Besides supported necrectomy a conservative treatment was also applied by putting dressings soaked with antiseptics and 0.5% neomycine solution on a daily basis. This prolonged treatment by further several weeks. No significant complications were observed at the donor site.
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PMID:[Use of pedicled cutaneous groin flaps in distal reconstruction of the upper extremity]. 1138 10


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