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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Plasma and blood cell volumes were measured simultaneously with [(131)I]
albumin
and [(32)P]erythrocytes, together with the arterial haematocrits, in acutely splenectomized dogs anaesthetized with sodium barbital. These measurements were made during control runs and after the administration of vasoactive substances.2. With these data and previously derived equations the mean composite radius of all small vessels with a radius < 150 mu, the distribution of the blood volumes between small and large vessels, and other variables could be calculated.3. Adrenaline, CaCl(2) or
vasopressin
administration caused a reduction of the mean composite radius, a net shift of erythrocytes and plasma out of the small vessel volume, and an expansion of the large vessel volume. Histamine, KCl and MgCl(2) produced opposite effects.4. Adrenaline appeared to cause the release of sequestered erythrocytes into the active circulation.5. The effects of CaCl(2) and KCl persisted for several hours, while those of MgCl(2) did not.6. The effects of
vasopressin
could be reversed by histamine, those of adrenaline by splenic plasma or KCl, and those of CaCl(2) by MgCl(2).7. It was suggested that the observed vasoactions are essentially the resultants of diverse combinations of direct and indirect actions on the capacitance section of the small vessel volume.
...
PMID:Variations in small and large vessel volumes caused by cations, adrenaline and histamine. 603 May 7
Experiments were carried out to compare the effectiveness of oncotic and osmotic therapy in dogs with experimental cerebral edema caused by a left parietal cold lesion. Animals were divided into five groups and treated for 6 hours with either crystalloid (control group), or mannitol,
albumin
, furosemide, or
albumin
/furosemide (treatment groups). The cerebral effects of therapy were evaluated by intracranial pressure (ICP) measurements and by postmortem evaluations of water content, using computerized tomography (CT) density measurements and wet-dry weight measurements. The ICP was significantly reduced by all treatments except
albumin
alone, and was reduced equally by mannitol, furosemide, and
albumin
/furosemide. The CT density of the lesion area was significantly increased by all treatments. The density of the contralateral nonlesioned hemisphere was significantly increased by all treatments except
albumin
. The water content of the lesion area was significantly decreased by all treatments; water content of the opposite hemisphere was not significantly reduced. The systemic effects of therapy were evaluated by measuring net fluid balance, wedge pressures, hematocrits, free water clearance, and
vasopressin
. Negative fluid balance without an increase in hematocrit or in
vasopressin
secretion occurred only in dogs treated with
albumin
/furosemide. Such oncodiuretic therapy seems to cause normovolemic dehydration and to have cerebral effects similar to mannitol and furosemide, without their undesirable systemic effects.
...
PMID:Intracranial and systemic effects of osmotic and oncotic therapy in experimental cerebral edema. 642 10
Severe bleeding and hypovolemic shock causing hypotension are most often associated with tachycardia. In response to passive head-up tilt, five healthy men exhibited an increase in heart rate (HR) from 62 to 79 beats X min-1 and a gradual increase in the plasma concentration of aldosterone and protein. The increase in HR was followed by a decrease of 29 beats X min-1 (range 11-46) at the time when blood pressure decreased 38 mmHg (6-73). When tilted back to 0 degree, blood pressure immediately reversed while HR remained unchanged. Hypotension was associated with large but variable increases in plasma
vasopressin
(86 +/- 28 pg X ml-1) accompanied by peripheral vasoconstriction. In two cases where patients with internal bleeding presented with a moderate HR of 96 beats X min-1, the ensuing fall in blood pressure was associated with a decrease in HR to 68 and 76 beats X min-1, respectively. Administration of
albumin
solution and blood normalized cardiovascular function. Two other patients showing initial HR of 130 and 100 beats X min-1, respectively, also developed relative bradycardia in conjunction with a decrease in blood pressure. Administration of ephedrine and atropine increased HR temporarily from 56 to 90 and from 36 to 110 beats X min-1, respectively. The latter two patients died in extreme bradycardia and autopsies revealed severe internal bleeding. It is concluded that although hypovolemic shock is most often associated with an increase in HR, the increase is modest and a paradoxical bradycardia develops in severe but potentially reversible hypotensive hypovolemic shock.
...
PMID:Bradycardia during severe but reversible hypovolemic shock in man. 650 30
[3H'-thymidine incorporation above control levels was observed when normal mouse spleen cells were cultured with pituitary hormone-coupled albumins. Most striking was the observation of proliferation with self-hormone-coupled self-
albumin
, for instance
vasopressin
-coupled mouse serum albumin. The proliferating cells were not sensitive to anti-Thy 1 antiserum plus complement and were present in nude mouse spleens. Proliferation was accompanied with the appearance of antibody-forming cells against an irrelevant antigen (sheep red blood cells). These results strongly suggest polyclonal induction of B-cell proliferation/differentiation by self-hormone-coupled self-
albumin
.
...
PMID:Primary in vitro mouse B-cell response induced by self-hormone-coupled self-albumin. 697 45
Our purpose was to determine whether the chronic increase in plasma volume (PV), resulting from heat exposure (HE) and exercise training (ET), was due only to elevated rectal temperature (Tre) or whether there were additional nonthermal factors related to the exercise. Eight men were divided into two groups. The HE group sat for 2 h/day (Tdb = 42 degrees C, 93% rh) for 8 consecutive days; Tre was raised by 1.72 +/- 0.04 degrees C to 38.5 degrees C each day. The ET group rode a bicycle ergometer for 2 h/day for 8 days (Tdb = 25 degrees C, 60% rh) at a load (60-65 Vo2max) that gave the same area under their Tre curve. PV increased by 177 ml (4.9%, P less than 0.05) in the HE group and by 427 ml (12.0%, P less than 0.05) in the ET group. This exercise-induced hypervolemia was associated with thermal factor(s) that contributed 40% and nonthermal factors that accounted for the remaining 60%. Some nonthermal, exercise-induced factors were twofold greater increases in plasma osmotic and
vasopressin
levels during exercise, and a fivefold increase in resting plasma protein (
albumin
) content.
...
PMID:Role of thermal and exercise factors in the mechanism of hypervolemia. 699 62
To investigate the time course and mechanism of the increase in blood volume (BV) during isotonic exercise training, blood hemoglobin, hematocrit, and plasma volume (PV), osmotic, electrolyte, renin activity (PRA),
vasopressin
(AVP), and protein fractions were measured periodically in eight trained men 20-22 yr (Vo2max = 57 ml . min-1 . kg-1) before, during, and after ergometer exercise training (approximately 160 W, 65% Vo2max) for 2 h/day for 8 days. During training, plasma total osmolar and
albumin
contents increased to maintain a constant plasma osmolality and protein concentration during PV expansion. After training, BV increased by 457 ml (+8.1% P less than 0.05), due to an increase in PV of 427 ml (+12.1%, P less than 0.05); red cell volume was essentially constant (delta = +30 ml, NS). Plasma hypervolemia during training was associated with two major factors: 1) a ninefold elevation in PRA and AVP during exercise that facilitated Na+ and H2O retention, and 2) a progressive, chronic increase in plasma
albumin
content that provided increased H2O-binding capacity for the blood. Thus an efficient procedure for increasing PV is the daily performance of high-intensity isotonic leg exercise (65% Vo2max) for 2 h/day.
...
PMID:Exercise training-induced hypervolemia: role of plasma albumin, renin, and vasopressin. 699 63
Previous studies have shown that a neutral metallo-endopeptidase purified from rat kidney degrades the B chain of insulin, glucagon, ACTH and, at a markedly slower rate, the A chain of insulin. In contrast the enzyme does not attack native insulin, oxytocin,
vasopressin
, ribonuclease,
albumin
or denatured hemoglobin. The current studies demonstrate that the neutral peptidase also degrades the isolated C-peptide of proinsulin and cleaves certain peptide bonds in and near the C-peptide moiety of native proinsulin. Time courses of the formation of fluorescamine-reactive material during digestion of proinsulin and isolated C-peptide with the peptidase were identical. However, structural analysis of the peptidase-digested proinsulin showed that the enzyme does not convert proinsulin to insulin but that the peptidase cleaves one bond, Tyr26-Thr27, in the B chain moiety and five bonds in the C-peptide moiety, producing four split proinsulins. One of the split proinsulins is des-octacosa-peptide (27-54) porcine proinsulin or des-tetracosapeptide (27-50) bovine proinsulin. Each is a derivative of the insulin molecule having an extension of nine residues (ten residues in the case of the derivative from bovine proinsulin) at the N-terminus of A chain and lacking four residues at the C-terminus of B chain. This two chain derivative retains full immunoreactivity with insulin antibodies and exhibits 2.4-times more biological activity (promotion of glycogenesis in primary cultured hepatocytes) than proinsulin and about two-thirds the activity of insulin.
...
PMID:Degradation of proinsulin and isolated C-peptide by rat kidney neutral metallo-endopeptidase. 702 23
Twelve stable cirrhotic patients with ascites received a 20 mL/kg water load. Seven patients had abnormal water excretion (27.3% +/- 5.4% of the water load in 5 hours) and a minimal urine osmolality of 262 mosmol/kg water. Five patients excreted 82.6% in 5 hours and had a minimal urine osmolality of 65 mosmol/kg water. Mean plasma arginine vasopressin values after water load were significantly higher in Group 1 (1.34 +/- 0.36 pg/mL) than in Group 2 (undetectable). An effective blood volume lower in Group 1 than Group 2 patients was suggested by a lower plasma
albumin
(2.5 versus 3.3 g/dL, p less than 0.02), a higher pulse rate (96 versus 72, p less than 0.001), a higher plasma renin activity (7.8 versus 1.5 ng/mL . h, p less than 0.005), a higher plasma aldosterone (66 versus 21 ng/dL, p less than 0.05), and a lower urinary sodium excretion (2.7 versus 14.2 meq Na/5 h, p less than 0.005). The results suggest that nonosmotic stimulation of
vasopressin
secondary to a decrease in effective blood volume is an important factor in the abnormal water excretion of cirrhosis.
...
PMID:Role of vasopressin in abnormal water excretion in cirrhotic patients. 706 56
Papillary plasma flow (PPF) was measured by the
albumin
accumulation technique in rats of the Brattleboro strain with or without diabetes insipidus (DI and HZ respectively) and in Wistar rats. Measurements were also performed in DI rats receiving
antidiuretic hormone
for 30 min or 5 days and in dehydrated Wistar rats. PPf in HZ control and Wistar control rats was similar to previously published measurements. In contrast PPF was significantly higher in DI rats (461 +/- 26 microliters/min . g versus 263 +/- 28 in HZ) and decreased significantly after acute ADH administration. It returned to control values after prolonged ADH administration (262 +/- 40). Plasma flow entering the papilla was inversely correlated with urine osmolality up to 1000 mosmol/kg H2O. Further increases in urine concentration (dehydration of Wistar rats) did not modify further PPF (255 +/- 28 versus 270 +/- 16 in non dehydrated Wistar). PPF might be influenced indirectly by ADH or prostaglandins and seems to depend on the osmotic environment of the papilla up to a certain limit. The factors which maintain PPF at a given minimum level with further increases in urine concentration are not known.
...
PMID:Papillary plasma flow in rats. I. Relation to urine osmolality in normal and Brattleboro rats with hereditary diabetes insipidus. 714
The effects of prostaglandin F2 alpha on renal function were studied in hydropenic dogs. Peak responses occurred in 45 to 60 min. PGF 2 alpha (0.3 microgram.kg-1.min-1) increased urine flow by 1.3 +/- 0.3 ml/min and increased sodium excretion by 27.1 +/- 4.6 microEq/min. Papillary nonurea solute concentration was decreased from 981 +/- 153 to 347 +/- 58 mOsm/kg of H2O and the corticomedullary urea gradient was abolished. Although renal blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, peritubule capillary hydrostatic pressure and renal venous pressure were not changed by PGF2 alpha, urine from the infused kidney became distinctly hypotonic. A "washout" of medullary solutes was not supported by the data since the volume of distribution of 125I-
albumin
, an index of papillary perfusion rate, was not changed by PGF2 alpha. The contribution of decreased salt reabsorption from Henle's loop was evaluated in dogs that received furosemide and produced essentially isotonic urine. Subsequent intrarenal PGF2 alpha, increased CH2O and produced hypotonic urine with no significant further change in UNaV. These studies suggest that inhibition by PGF2 alpha of salt reabsorption from the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop may account for the modest natriuretic effect and contribute to the dissipation of the nonurea solute gradient. Additionally, there is an inhibition of both
vasopressin
-mediated water and urea reabsorption which contributed to the diuretic and hyposthenuric effects of infused prostaglandins.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of the natriuretic and diuretic effects of prostaglandin F2 alpha. 722 97
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