Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Evidence suggests that nitric oxide synthesis within the pulmonary circulation may be attenuated during chronic hypoxia in Wistar rats due to reduced L-arginine availability. In contrast, chronically hypoxic Sprague-Dawley rats exhibit normal endothelium-dependent pulmonary vasodilation. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether 1) Wistar rats demonstrate greater right ventricular (RV) hypertrophy in response to chronic hypoxia than Sprague-Dawley rats and 2) chronic administration of L-arginine would diminish this response in Wistar rats. L-Arginine had no effect on the degree of hypoxia-induced RV hypertrophy or polycythemia in either strain of rat. However, Wistar rats demonstrated greater hypoxia-induced RV hypertrophy and polycythemia compared with Sprague-Dawley rats. To determine whether chronically hypoxic Wistar rats indeed exhibit impaired endothelium-dependent pulmonary vasodilation, isolated lungs from control and chronically hypoxic Wistar rats were administered the endothelium-dependent pulmonary vasodilators A23187 or vasopressin. Vasodilatory responses to either agent were unaffected by chronic hypoxic exposure. We conclude that endothelium-dependent pulmonary vasodilation is maintained in the pulmonary circulation of chronically hypoxic Wistar and Sprague-Dawley rats.
...
PMID:Orally administered L-arginine does not alter right ventricular hypertrophy in chronically hypoxic rats. 814 15

A 53-year-old renal allograft recipient developed nocardial cerebral abscess. It manifested clinically with encephalitis, polycythemia, convulsions, syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) and a space-occupying lesion presenting as multiple ring shadows in the left fronto-parietal lobe on computerized tomography (CT scan) of the brain. The initial clinical presentation included an afebrile patient with headache, convulsions and altered sensorium with no lateralising neurological deficit. He deteriorated later and developed coma with right hemiplegia. Purulent material was drained through left frontal craniotomy, and the culture confirmed the presence of nocardial infection. Despite aggressive therapy, the patient died a few days later. We conclude that high degree of early suspicion, diagnosis and prompt treatment should be stressed.
...
PMID:Cerebral nocardiosis in a renal transplant recipient: a case report. 1820 49