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

Since the first paravertebral blockade was carried out by Sellheim in 1905, this method has proved effective for the isolated blockade of spinal nerves. The efficacy of preoperative intercostal blockade (ICB) in combination with neuroleptanalgesia (NLA) or Pentothal-pentazocine-N2O anesthesia (Pe-Pz) was studied (unilateral analgesia for cholecystectomy). Group 1: NLA; group 2: NLA with ICB; group 3: Pe-Pz; group 4: Pe-Pz with ICB. The analgesic requirement differed significantly between groups 1 (0.33 mg fentanyl) and 2 (0.15 mg fentanyl) and groups 3 (63.5 mg pentazocine) and 4 (31.5 mg pentazocine). There were also significant differences in circulatory responses. The maximum deviation from the initial value at the beginning of the operation in group 1 compared to group 2 was pulse rate + 28.7% vs + 2.4%, mean arterial pressure (Part) + 24.6% vs + 3.1%, and systolic pressure (Psyst) + 33% vs +/- 0%; group 3 compared to group 4: pulse rate + 16.4% vs + 3.2%, Part + 24.5% vs 0.0%, and Psyst + 26.5% vs + 196. The times of action of ICB extended from 7.54 h to 11.33 h for partial analgeisa, time to the first dose of analgesic from 12.3 h to 16.9 h (etidocaine 0.5% and 1% respectively without and with epinephrine). The mean blood levels after 100 mg bupivacaine-CO2 rose to 1.16 micrograms/ml after 5 min and reached a maximum after 15 min (1.29 micrograms/ml) as compared to 0.98 micrograms/ml after addition of ornithine-vasopressin. These values are very much higher than those after the use of bupivacaine-HCl solution. Etidocaine and bupivacaine-HCl have comparable durations of analgesia. Toxicologically, both substances can be applied safely with consideration of all pharmacological data for ICB. Of a total of 3,485 intercostal blockades, 2,775 were applied perioperatively (pre- and postoperatively); 265 were carried out for trauma patients (rib fractures) and 445 for therapeutic indications (herpes zoster neuralgia, tumor pain, costovertebral pain). In 8 blocks 10% ammonium sulfate, in 4 blocks absolute alcohol, and in 19 blocks 5% phenol were used for neurolysis. In 2 cases a marginal pneumothorax was seen, which was resorbed spontaneously (0.06%). Altogether 16,270 single intercostal nerves were blocked. Single-session intercostal blockade can be combined as unilateral analgesia with general anesthesia. This combination is characterized by stable circulatory conditions with avoidance of hypertensive reactions. The long-lasting analgesia allows early mobilization and physiotherapy both postoperatively and posttraumatically in patients with unilateral thoracic and abdominal pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The single intercostal block--surgical and therapeutic indications]. 264 21

Several clinical studies suggest that the Doppler indices (DI) derived from Doppler waveform analysis may be powerful predictors of perinatal compromise. In contrast, significant paucity exists in experimental verification of the central premise that the DI reliably reflect hemodynamic state downstream from the measurement point. This paper presents the results from two sets of acute animal experiments in which experimentally induced changes in the ovine fetoplacental circulation as reflected by the independently measured hemodynamic parameters were correlated with the corresponding variations in the DI. Doppler velocimetric measurements were performed under general anesthesia in ovine fetuses with gestational ages ranging from 100 to 110 days. A continuous wave Doppler instrument with a 4-MHz transducer was used. In three fetuses, variable vascular constriction was produced by a ligature placed approximately 10 cm from the probe location. In four fetuses, vasopressin was rapidly infused. The hemodynamic parameters measured included the peripheral resistance, volumetric flow, and pressure. The DI included the systolic-diastolic ratio, pulsatility index, and resistance index. The results indicate that, in hemodynamically stable and well-defined obstruction to downstream flow as achieved in the constriction experiments, the DI highly correlated with the hemodynamic state (p less than .005); however, during the more complex and unstable circulatory changes associated with vasopressin administration, these correlations were inconsistent and poor (p greater than .05). This study experimentally establishes in an in vivo animal system the hemodynamic validity of the DI within certain limits. However, the validity does not extend to hemodynamic changes associated with vasopressin administration. Further studies are required to address this issue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hemodynamic validation of Doppler assessment of fetoplacental circulation in a sheep model system. 265 99

Endothelin is a peptide with potent, long-lasting pressor effects characterized by increases in mesenteric and hindquarters vascular resistance and bradycardia following an initial, transient depressor response. This study examined the mechanisms of action of endothelin on regional hemodynamics in conscious, freely moving rats and on baroreflex sensitivity both in conscious and chloralose-anesthetized rats. The pressor response to endothelin (0.67 nmol/kg) was attenuated by nifedipine (25 micrograms/kg) and augmented by chloralose anesthesia. The bradycardia was attenuated by pentolinium (10 mg/kg), atropine methyl sulfate (0.5 mg/kg), or chloralose anesthesia. Hindquarter vaso-constriction was attenuated by nifedipine, pentolinium, and atropine, whereas mesenteric vasoconstriction was less sensitive to blockade. The vasopressin V1 antagonist, [d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)]-AVP (20 micrograms/kg), indomethacin (5 mg/kg), or verapamil (150 micrograms/kg) did not affect any of these cardiovascular responses. Renal sympathetic nerve activity was reduced similarly in chloralose-anesthetized rats to pressor responses elicited by either phenylephrine or endothelin, and the slope of the baro-reflex function curve after endothelin was similar to that of phenylephrine. These results suggest that endothelin is a potent vasoconstrictor in which its action on visceral and skeletal muscle vasculature is mediated by somewhat different mechanisms. Endothelin does not alter baroreceptor reflex control of sympathetic nerve activity or heart rate.
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PMID:Regional hemodynamic and baroreflex effects of endothelin in rats. 267 35

Polyethylene tubes were inserted into the bile duct and femoral vein of rats under pentobarbital anaesthesia and bile was collected for three 2-h periods. After the first (control) period the animals were infused intravenously at a rate of 1.2 ml/h with the following compounds: (1) 0.9% (w/v) NaCl (control group), (2) glucagon (1200 ng/h), (3) vasopressin (1200 ng/h) or (4) angiotensin II (600 ng/h). The concentrations of thyroxine (T4), tri-iodothyronine (T3) and reverse tri-iodothyronine (rT3) in the bile were estimated by radioimmunoassay. No significant differences between groups were found in the biliary excretion of T4 and T3, while the excretion of rT3 after the infusion of all the hormones used was significantly (P less than 0.001 at 2 to 4 h of the infusion) increased, no such increase being found in the controls. It may be concluded therefore that the administration of the above hormones resulted in some changes in iodothyronine metabolism in the liver. These may be explained by an inhibition of iodothyronine 5'-monodeiodination related to the glycogenolytic and gluconeogenetic effects of these hormones.
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PMID:Effect of the glycogenolytic gluconeogenetic hormones, glucagon, vasopressin and angiotensin II, on biliary excretion of iodothyronines in rats is possibly related to the inhibition of 5'-monodeiodination in the liver. 275 63

An infusion of propofol was compared with intravenous boluses of diazepam as sedation for minor oral surgery under local anaesthesia in 12 healthy patients who had elective bilateral surgical extraction of lower third molars; the patients served as their own controls. Plasma catecholamine, vasopressin and cortisol concentrations were determined from repeated blood samples. The total administered dose of propofol was 3.93 (SD 1.34) mg/kg and of diazepam 0.28 (SD 0.07) mg/kg. No cardiovascular depression or airway problems occurred. Other side effects were also rare but some discomfort on injection was frequent with propofol. Recovery times were faster after propofol than after diazepam as assessed by the Maddox wing and visual analogue scales. Propofol also provided better amnesia compared to diazepam at the time of the extraction of the teeth. Eight of the 12 patients subjectively preferred propofol sedation. There was no hormonal stress response in either group.
Anaesthesia 1989 Sep
PMID:Propofol infusion for sedation in outpatient oral surgery. A comparison with diazepam. 280 18

Because neurohumoral responses to cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) are similar to those seen in shock, CPB might be expected to decrease renal blood flow; yet diuresis is commonly observed during and early after routine cardiac procedures with CPB. To examine this apparent paradox, we studied 15 patients before, during, and after CPB for coronary artery bypass grafting. Plasma levels of atrial natriuretic factor (alpha-ANF), aldosterone, and antidiuretic hormone (ADH) and urinary sodium excretion were measured before anesthesia, after sternotomy but before CPB, at 15 and 30 minutes of CPB, and at 15 and 30 minutes after discontinuation of CPB. alpha-ANF increased only slightly during CPB, and the initial natriuresis during CPB occurred in the presence of a markedly increased ADH level. After CPB ended, urine flow and sodium excretion increased in conjunction with increased alpha-ANF and normal ADH. We conclude that the early natriuresis during CPB occurs in the presence of a high ADH concentration, with no significant increase in plasma alpha-ANF. This may be a paradoxic response to supraphysiologic levels of ADH. The natriuresis after CPB appears to be strongly associated with increased alpha-ANF, present for at least the first 30 minutes after CPB, which could reflect alpha-ANF release resulting from atrial distention during volume loading.
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PMID:Natriuresis during and early after cardiopulmonary bypass: relationship to atrial natriuretic factor, aldosterone, and antidiuretic hormone. 281 28

Catecholamines administered intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) have cardiovascular effects mediated by the CNS. Although hypotension constitutes the more prominent response, an increase in blood pressure has also been reported after the intracerebroventricular injection of these amines. Anaesthesia interferes with pressor responses mediated by the CNS to a larger extent than with depressor mechanisms and constitutes one of the major factors influencing the pattern of response to the amines. The depressor response observed after the intracerebroventricular administration of noradrenaline is reversed into increases in blood pressure in awake animals. In the present experiment, the action of intracerebroventricularly injected noradrenaline was compared in anaesthetized and conscious rats. The results indicated that the pressor response in awake rats was not mediated by the sympathetic nervous system and involved the release of a pituitary humoral-factor, most probably vasopressin, whereas the depressor response observed in anaesthetized animals was not dependent on pituitary mediation. The involvement of histaminergic mechanisms in the CNS in the control of the pressor response to intracerebroventricularly administered noradrenaline in the rat is proposed.
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PMID:Mechanism of the CNS-mediated pressor response to intracerebroventricular injection of noradrenaline in unanaesthetized rats. 286 93

In elderly, general surgical patients, oral temazepam 20 mg given in a soft gelatin capsule proved to be a useful light premedicant when given before spinal anaesthesia. In comparison with placebo, it caused preoperative subjective sedation, prevented an increase in heart rate and decreased serum cortisol, but not serum antidiuretic hormone levels. However, simple devices (linear analogue scale, Maddox wing test, critical flicker fusion apparatus) appeared to be quite ineffective in differentiating the clinical effects of temazepam from those of placebo. Temazepam given in a soft gelatin capsule to patients in the supine position had a reasonably fast gastrointestinal absorption, but its blood-lumbar cerebrospinal fluid penetration rate appeared to be quite slow.
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PMID:Oral temazepam as a premedicant in elderly general surgical patients. 288 Apr 47

Sufentanil (mean total dose 2 micrograms/kg) was compared with fentanyl (mean total dose 15 micrograms/kg) as a supplement to 60% N2O anesthesia in 30 adult patients undergoing general surgical procedures. Comparisons were made with respect to stability of hemodynamic variables (heart rate and systolic and diastolic blood pressure), changes in stress hormones (cortisol, antidiuretic hormone, epinephrine, norepinephrine, and dopamine), recovery of alertness and orientation, time to extubation, postoperative analgesia, and measures of respiratory depression (resting end-tidal carbon dioxide tension [PETCO2], CO2 response curve for minute ventilation [delta VE/delta PETCO2]). Hemodynamic variables remained stable and similar in both groups throughout the study. Plasma hormone levels remained similar to baseline in both groups until 1 h postoperatively when epinephrine levels were significantly elevated in both groups (P less than 0.05). Recovery times, including time to extubation, were similar in both groups. Patients given sufentanil had less pain 30 min postoperatively than those given fentanyl, although at 60 min postoperatively pain levels were similar in both groups. Small but significant elevations in resting PETCO2 were seen in both groups postoperatively (P less than 0.05), but postoperative delta VE/delta PETCO2 responses were significantly depressed only in patients receiving fentanyl (P less than 0.05). The results of this study demonstrate that sufentanil-N2O anesthesia is as effective as fentanyl-N2O in attenuating the hemodynamic and hormonal responses to the stress of general surgery. Because continuous intraoperative PETCO2 monitoring was not employed in this study, intraoperative hypocapnea cannot be strictly excluded as a possible influence on the postoperative measures of ventilatory drive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparison of sufentanil-N2O and fentanyl-N2O in patients without cardiac disease undergoing general surgery. 294 75

This study investigated whether excision of either the right or left atrial appendage of rats alters their natriuretic response and the release of atrial natriuretic factor during acute blood volume expansion or reduction. These animals were subjected to a thoracotomy and either had their right or left atrial appendages removed or underwent a right or left atrial sham appendectomy for comparative, control purposes. Intrajugular vein, intracarotid artery, and intravesical catheters were installed 3-4 weeks later under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia. Then, when the rats were conscious, blood volume was expanded using blood from donor rats once every 15 minutes in 3 increments of 10% of the calculated total blood volume at a rate of 5 ml/kg/min. Blood and urine samples were collected before volume expansion and at the end of each 15-minute period, with the withdrawn blood being replaced. A maximal fourfold increase in urinary volume, urinary sodium excretion, and plasma atrial natriuretic factor was observed in all but the right-atrial-appendectomized animals. Plasma atrial natriuretic factor, urinary volume, and urinary sodium excretion were correlated in all 4 groups. No significant changes in blood pressure or hematocrit were noted. Plasma vasopressin, measured at the end of volume expansion, was significantly lower in animals subjected to left atrial appendectomy. High-performance liquid chromatography of plasma from the control groups indicated that most of the released ANF during blood volume expansion corresponded to a high molecular weight peptide. Additional rats, processed as above, were subjected to 10% blood volume decrements.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of right and left atria in natriuresis and atrial natriuretic factor release during blood volume changes in the conscious rat. 295 52


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