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11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The present paper describes the rheological properties of hydroxypropylcellulose (HPC) gels formulated in propylene glycol (PG), water, ethanol, and mixtures of these components. The effects of molecular weight, polymer concentration, and solvent composition on the apparent viscosity and flow characteristics have been studied by continuous shear rheometry. The HPC gels are shear thinning and do not exhibit significant yield or hysteresis in their rheograms. The apparent viscosity increases with increasing molecular weight and concentration of the polymer, as expected. Although not so pronounced at lower concentrations (< or = 1.5%), HPC gels tend to become increasingly non-Newtonian with increasing molecular weight at higher polymer concentrations (3%). A mathematical model has been proposed for the prediction of viscosities of HPC gels. There exists a high degree of dependence on molecular interactions between various solvent molecules in the prediction of mixture viscosities in ternary systems. The effects of solvent composition on the viscoelastic behavior of these gels have also been examined by dynamic mechanical analysis. The HPC gels are highly viscoelastic and exhibit greater degrees of elasticity with increased PG content in ternary solvent mixtures with water and ethanol. The study also suggests that dynamic mechanical analysis could prove to be a useful tool in the determination of zero-shear viscosities, viscosities that are representative of most realistic situations.
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PMID:Rheological characterization of hydroxypropylcellulose gels. 1006 48

In the United States, in both sexes and all races, long-term heavy alcohol consumption (of any beverage type) is the leading cause of a nonischemic, dilated cardiomyopathy, herein referred to as alcoholic cardiomyopathy (ACM). ACM is a specific heart muscle disease of a known cause that occurs in two stages: an asymptomatic stage and a symptomatic stage. In general, alcoholic patients consuming > 90 g of alcohol a day (approximately seven to eight standard drinks per day) for > 5 years are at risk for the development of asymptomatic ACM. Those who continue to drink may become symptomatic and develop signs and symptoms of heart failure. ACM is characterized by an increase in myocardial mass, dilation of the ventricles, and wall thinning. Changes in ventricular function may depend on the stage, in that asymptomatic ACM is associated with diastolic dysfunction, whereas systolic dysfunction is a common finding in symptomatic ACM patients. The pathophysiology of ACM is complex and may involve cell death (possibly due to apoptosis) and changes in many aspects of myocyte function. ACM remains an important cause of a dilated cardiomyopathy, and in latter stages can lead to heart failure. Alcohol abstinence, as well as the use of specific heart failure pharmacotherapies, is critical in improving ventricular function and outcomes in these patients.
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PMID:Alcoholic cardiomyopathy: incidence, clinical characteristics, and pathophysiology. 1268 36

We have investigated the combined effect of ionic calcium and ethanol on the visual creaming behavior and rheology of sodium caseinate-stabilized emulsions (4 wt% protein, 30 vol% oil, pH 6.8, mean droplet diameter 0.4 microm). A range of ionic calcium concentrations, expressed as a calcium/caseinate molar ratio R, was adjusted prior to homogenization and varying concentrations of ethanol were added shortly after homogenization. A stability map was produced on the basis of visual creaming behavior over a minimum period of 8 h for different calcium/caseinate/ethanol emulsion compositions. A single narrow stable (noncreaming) region was identified, indicating limited cooperation between calcium ions and ethanol. The shear-thinning behavior of the caseinate-stabilized emulsions is typical of systems undergoing depletion flocculation. Addition of calcium ions and/or ethanol was found to lead to a pronounced reduction in viscosity and the onset of Newtonian flow. The state of aggregation was correlated with emulsion microstructure from confocal laser scanning microscopy. Time-dependent rheology (18 h) with a density-matched oil phase (1-bromohexadecane) revealed that the visually stable emulsions were time-independent low-viscosity fluids. Surface coverage data showed that increasing amounts of caseinate were associated with the oil-water interface with increasing R and ethanol content. A decrease in free calcium ions in the aqueous phase with moderate increases in R and ethanol content was observed, which is consistent with greater calcium-caseinate binding (aggregation). Ostwald ripening occurred at the high-ethanol emulsion compositions that were stable to depletion flocculation. While the coarsening rate was low, this can account for the cream plug formation observed during gravity creaming experiments. The caseinate emulsion with no ionic calcium or ethanol exhibits depletion flocculation from excess nonadsorbed caseinate submicelles. Addition of calcium ions reduces the submicelle number density via specific calcium-binding in the aqueous phase (fewer, larger calcium-caseinate aggregates) and at the droplet surface (increased surface coverage). Nonspecific ethanol-induced (calcium-dependent) caseinate submicelle aggregation in the bulk phase and on the droplet surface (increased surface coverage) culminates in a reduction in the number density of caseinate submicelles. A narrow window of inhibition of depletion flocculation occurs in systems containing both calcium ions and ethanol, both species combining to aggregate the protein and so reduce the density of free submicelles.
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PMID:Stability and rheology of emulsions containing sodium caseinate: combined effects of ionic calcium and alcohol. 1514 44

Pregnant rats were administered a liquid diet containing 5% (w/v) ethanol between gestational days 10 and 21, and the brains of nine offspring were examined at 8 weeks of age. Two ethanol-treated offspring showed obvious hydrocephalus characterized by markedly enlarged lateral ventricles. Most of the other ethanol-treated rats only showed a slight enlargement of the lateral ventricles. An ethanol-treated offspring showed no neuropathological signs of hydrocephalus. Histological observation of the hydrocephalic brains revealed dilation of the lateral ventricles, loosely bundled corpus callosum, hypoplasia of the septum and fimbria, and thinning of the cerebral cortices. There were no differences in the shape of the third ventricle and aqueduct between hydrocephalic and non-hydrocephalic rats. Ectopic cell clusters were found on the surface of the lateral ventricle and in the interventricular foramen in ethanol-treated rats with hydrocephalus. However, leptomeningeal heterotopias were found on the cortical surface in ethanol-exposed rats independently of whether or not they showed hydrocephalus. Thus, heterotopias within the ventricles may be related to the genesis of hydrocephalus following prenatal ethanol exposure. However, whether they could be a direct cause of the hydrocephalus is uncertain as they seem to be not enough large to block the current of the cerebrospinal fluid. We also examined the expression of L1, a cell adhesion molecule suspected of involvement in the genesis of hydrocephalus after prenatal ethanol exposure, in 1-day-old rats. Western blot analysis using specific antibody against L1 showed no significant change in L1 protein expression in ethanol-exposed rats. These data suggest that L1 protein expression is not affected by ethanol.
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PMID:Hydrocephalus following prenatal exposure to ethanol. 1536 20

We evaluated a 9-amino-acid peptide, SALLRSIPA (SAL), an agonist of activity-dependent neurotrophic factor (ADNF), for its protective properties against fetal alcohol-related brain growth retardation, using an established liquid diet model of alcohol-related neurodevelopmental disorder (ARND) in C57BL/6 mice. Alcohol exposure during neurulation reduced body weight, head size, and specifically brain weight and volume. Major gross brain deficits include underdevelopment of brain areas, cortical thinning, ventricle enlargement, and restricted midline neural tissue growth leading to openings at the roof/floor plate. SALLRSIPA (SAL) treatment increased fetal body weight and restored brain weight, brain volume, and regional brain size. Furthermore, SAL restored cortical thickness, reduced the size and frequency of neural tube openings, and attenuated ventricular enlargement. The ability of SAL to antagonize alcohol-retarded brain growth and development of forebrain and midline neural tube at midgestation suggests its potential use as an antagonist against fetal alcohol- rendered microencephaly early in development.
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PMID:A neuroprotective peptide antagonizes fetal alcohol exposure-compromised brain growth. 1545 32

In drug abusers, white matter hyperintensities, perfusion deficits, and metabolic disturbances are detected by neuroimaging analyses in different brain regions. A specific pattern of involvement or a predominance of a specific brain region cannot be drawn. To examine changes of the cerebral microvasculature as a possible morphological substrate of the neuroimaging findings, brain specimens of 12 polydrug abusers and 8 controls were obtained at autopsy. The basal lamina of blood vessels from the frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes was analysed by means of immunohistochemistry for collagen type IV. The numerical density of vessels was determined in the gray and white matter, and their staining intensity was rated using a three-point scale. In the gray and white matter of polydrug abusers, the number of vessels showing strong immunoreactivity for collagen type IV was significantly reduced, whereas the number of vessels with mild and moderate immunoreactivity was increased as compared to controls. The total numerical density of vessels was not significantly changed. Our results show a significant reduction in immunoreactivity for collagen type IV in the brains from polydrug abusers compared to controls, which may be due to a thinning of the basal lamina of cerebral vessels. The data of the present study show morphological changes of the basal lamina in the brain of polydrug abusers, which might represent the morphological substrate of a disturbed blood-brain barrier. However, it remains yet to be established if the observed changes are responsible for the alterations seen in different neuroimaging analyses and which drug might be of major pathogenetic significance.
Drug Alcohol Depend 2005 Jul
PMID:Alterations of the vascular basal lamina in the cerebral cortex in drug abuse: a combined morphometric and immunohistochemical investigation. 1594 45

We study the dependence of viscosity of ethanol on shear rate using constant volume and constant pressure nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations, with the emphasis of the interrelationship between breaking, stability, and alignment of hydrogen bonds and shear thinning at high shear rates. We find that although the majority of hydrogen bond breakings occur at low shear rates, we do not observe shear thinning until there is some shear-induced alignment of the hydrogen bonds with the direction of shear.
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PMID:Hydrogen bonding in ethanol under shear. 1600 64

The therapeutic and pathogenetic effects of Dolichos pruriens were evaluated using experimental models in rats. In the therapeutic experiment Wistar rats were housed in a heated environment (25+/-3 degrees C) to induce itch, and treated with ascending potencies D. pruriens (6 cH, 9 cH, 12 cH and 30 cH), each for 10 days. The positive control group received vehicle (ethanol 30% in water). The negative control group received no treatment and were kept at a standard temperature. In the pathogenetic experiment, all animals were kept at a temperature of 20+/-3 degrees C and treated for 30 consecutive days with D. pruriens 6 or 30 cH, or ethanol vehicle, or no treatment. The experiments were performed blind. The statistical analysis used Bartlett's test, followed by ANOVA/Tuckey-Krammer or Kruskal-Wallis/Dunn. The results point to the existence of therapeutic effects, with inhibition of the itching, skin lesions and fur thinning produced by heat, more evident in later observations, with the 9 12, and 30 cH potencies (Kruskal-Wallis/Dunn; P=0.001). No changes were observed in the other parameters, such as open field activity and laterality of the itching. In the pathogenetic experiment, no changes were observed in any parameters examined. We conclude that the proposed experimental model demonstrates the therapeutic effect of D. pruriens, but not its pathogenetic effects.
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PMID:Therapeutic and pathogenetic animal models for Dolichos pruriens. 1681 16

Chronic heavy alcohol consumption alters cardiac structure and function. Controversies remain as to whether hearts from females respond to the chronic ethanol intake in a manner analogous to males. In particular, sex differences in the myocardial response to chronic alcohol consumption remain unresolved at the molecular level. The purpose of the present set of experiments was to determine whether alterations in cardiac structure and protein metabolism show sexual dimorphism following chronic alcohol consumption for 26 wk. In control animals, hearts from female rats showed lowered heart weights and had thinner ventricular walls compared with males. The smaller heart size was associated with a lower protein content that occurred in part from a reduced rate of protein synthesis. Chronic alcohol consumption in males, but not in females, caused a thinning of the ventricular wall and intraventricular septum, as assessed by echocardiography, correlating with the loss of heart mass. The alterations in cardiac size occurred, in part, through a lowering of the protein content secondary to a diminished rate of protein synthesis. The decreased rate of protein synthesis appeared related to a reduced assembly of active eukaryotic initiation factor (eIF)4G.eIF4E complex secondary to both a diminished phosphorylation of eIF4G and increased formation of inactive 4Ebinding protein (4EBP1).eIF4E complex. The latter effects occurred as a result of decreased phosphorylation of 4EBP1. None of these ethanol-induced alterations in hearts from males were observed in hearts from females. These data suggest that chronic alcohol-induced impairments in myocardial protein synthesis results, in part, from marked decreases in eIF4E.eIF4G complex formation in males. The failure of female rats consuming ethanol to show structural changes appears related to the inability of ethanol to affect the regulation protein synthesis to the same extent as their male counterparts.
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PMID:Sex-dependent differences in the regulation of myocardial protein synthesis following long-term ethanol consumption. 1694 86

Discrepancies exist regarding potential sex differences in the effects of ethanol on the myocardium. Therefore, the aims of this study were to determine if long-term ethanol consumption was associated with the development of a dilated cardiomyopathy (CM) in female rats and, second, to determine if the absence of ovarian hormones modulated this effect. Adult male and female (n=6-8/group) sham-operated and ovariectomized (OVX) Sprague-Dawley rats received the Lieber DeCarli ethanol-containing (8% vol/vol) or control liquid diet for 8 months. All ethanol groups showed echocardiographic evidence of a cardiomyopathy; however, more significant ethanol-elicited differences were found in the male ethanol group than in either the female or female OVX groups. In addition, the male ethanol group had significant reductions in in vivo measures of contractility, such as the maximum derivative of change in systolic pressure and preload recruitable stroke work. Sex differences were also apparent in the pattern and degree of posterior and septal wall thickness changes, in that the male ethanol group had more posterior and septal wall thinning. In conclusion, similar to male rats long-term ethanol consumption in gonad-intact and OVX female rats is associated with the development of a dilated cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Long-term effects of alcohol consumption in male and female rats. 1799 Jan 29


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