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Results 451 - 500 of 1142
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Gupta A K - - 1999
Jugular bulb oximetry is the most widely used method of monitoring cerebral oxygenation. More recently, measurement of brain tissue oxygenation has been reported in head-injured patients. We compared the changes in brain tissue oxygen partial pressure (PbO2) with changes in jugular venous oxygen saturation (SjVO2) in response to hyperventilation in ...
Armstead W M - - 1999
These studies were designed to characterize the cerebral hemodynamic effects of fluid percussion brain injury (FPI) in the newborn pig equipped with a closed cranial window. Reductions in cerebral blood flow, pial artery diameter, and cerebral oxygenation following FPI were greater in newborn (1-3 days old) vs. juvenile (3-4 weeks ...
Stvolinsky S L - - 1999
1. The biological effects of carnosine, a natural hydrophilic neuropeptide, on the reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathological generation are reviewed. 2. We describe direct antioxidant action observed in the in vitro experiments. 3. Carnosine was found to effect metabolism indirectly. These effects are reflected in ROS turnover regulation and lipid ...
Ludbrook G L - - 1999
BACKGROUND: Previous work had shown dysequilibrium between the arterial blood and brain concentrations of the intravenous anaesthetic agent propofol following its rapid administration over 2 min to sheep. The extent of dysequilibrium was examined following slower administration as a constant rate 45-min infusion (10 mg/min). METHODS: Six sheep were prepared ...
Rapoport S I - - 1999
In vivo brain imaging of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) using positron emission tomography (PET) demonstrates progressive reductions in resting-state brain glucose metabolism and blood flow in relation to dementia severity, more so in association than primary cortical regions. During cognitive or psychophysical stimulation, blood flow and metabolism in the ...
Hackett P H - - 1999
The diagnosis, treatment and prevention of high altitude cerebral edema (HACE) are fairly well established. The major unresolved issues are 1) the pathophysiology, 2) the individual susceptibility, and 3) the relationship of HACE to acute mountain sickness (AMS) and to high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE). In the context of the ...
Hackett P H - - 1999
Despite normal cerebral oxygenation and normal global cerebral metabolism, vasogenic edema develops in humans (and sheep) who become moderately ill with AMS/ HACE during 24 hr or more of hypoxic exposure. Hypoxic cerebral vasodilatation appears to be a necessary ingredient but does not per se explain the development of brain ...
Zarković N - - 1999
Immunohistochemical analysis of the distribution of the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) in the brain of baboons exposed to experimental hemorrhagic traumatic shock or sepsis showed that systemic oxidative stress and the thereby generated HNE affect the blood:brain barrier and the regulation of cerebral blood flow determining secondary brain damage. ...
Hossmann K A - - 1999
The high energy requirements compared to the low energy reserves render the brain particularly vulnerable to hypoxic conditions. To protect the brain against hypoxia, powerful cerebrovascular regulatory systems assure an increase of blood flow to compensate for the reduced arterial oxygen content. This system is so efficient that during respiratory ...
Rousselle C H - - 1998
Studies of drug distribution to brain should be controlled for the experimental method used. Numerous methods have been employed to ascertain brain distribution and many of these approaches use anesthetic agents. The in situ rat brain perfusion method is one of the most sensitive and widely used methods for evaluating ...
Doolette D J - - 1998
This study aimed to evaluate the relative importance of diffusion-limited vs. perfusion-limited mechanisms in compartmental models of blood-tissue inert gas exchange in the brain. Nitrous oxide concentrations in arterial and brain efferent blood were determined using gas chromatographic analysis during and after 15 min of nitrous oxide inhalation, at separate ...
Vespa P - - 1998
OBJECT: To determine the extent and duration of change in extracellular glutamate levels after human traumatic brain injury (TBI), 17 severely brain injured adults underwent implantation of a cerebral microdialysis probe and systematic sampling was conducted for 1 to 9 days postinjury. METHODS: A total of 772 hourly microdialysis samples ...
Bruehl C - - 1998
PURPOSE: Interictal measurements of cerebral blood flow are less helpful in localizing epileptic foci than are measurements of brain metabolism. This may be related to an uncoupling of blood flow and metabolism. In this study, brain metabolism and blood flow were compared in an acute experimental model of focal interictal ...
Ye J - - 1998
BACKGROUND: In the past few years, although significant efforts have been made to assess flow distribution during retrograde cerebral perfusion with microspheres, dye, or hydrogen clearance, flow distribution in real time is still undefined. We used MR perfusion imaging to monitor flow distribution in the brain during and after deep ...
Jessen C - - 1998
The temperatures of the arterial blood and the brain in black Bedouin goats were measured continuously by miniature data loggers. The animals were either euhydrated or dehydrated to 75-80% of the initial body mass by withholding water for 3-4 days during exposure to intense solar radiation. The daily blood temperature ...
Mindermann T - - 1998
Antimicrobial therapy for brain infections is notoriously difficult because of the limited extent of knowledge about drug penetration into the brain. Therefore, we determined the penetration of rifampin into various compartments of the human brain, including the cerebral extracellular space (CES). Patients undergoing craniotomy for resection of primary brain tumors ...
Dutta S - - 1998
Based on volume-flow relationships, CNS agents that are highly lipid soluble (log octanol-water partition coefficient > 2) are expected to have equilibration half-times (T1/2 kE0) that are proportional to brain solubility. Propofol, the most lipophilic anaesthetic in clinical use, has T1/2 kE0 values of 1.7 and 2.9 min in rats ...
Chen G - - 1998
To test the hypothesis that brain to blood clearance is a mechanism by which brain inflammation and damage can increase circulating acute phase cytokines, rate of transfer of [125I]-tumor necrosis factor-alpha ([125I]-TNF) from brain to blood was determined. Acid precipitable [125I]-TNF appeared in peripheral blood within 5 min of intracerebroventricular ...
George A. Cowan
Neurophysiological and behavioral observations of rats, primates, and humans demonstrate that the amounts of blood which flow to the sensory and cognitive domains of the brain increase with the degree of environmental stimulation and interaction. These studies provide information on the early rate and extent of development of synaptic architecture ...
Brust P - - 1998
Available information on the dopamine (DA) metabolism of the immature brain is rare. In order to establish a useful animal model we have performed PET experiments in anesthetized neonatal pigs using 6-[18F]-fluoro-L-DOPA (FDOPA) as tracer. In this study, we have simultaneously determined the cerebral blood flow and the rate constant ...
Thornton J S - - 1998
Cerebral apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) were determined in nine newborn piglets before and for 48 h after transient hypoxia-ischemia. Phosphorus MRS revealed severely reduced cerebral energy metabolism during the insult and an apparently complete recovery 2 h after resuscitation commenced. At this time, mean ADC over the imaging slice (ADCglobal) ...
Qian S Y - - 1998
AIM: To estimate the values of transcranial doppler (TCD) in the determination of brain death in children. METHOD: Fifty-eight comatose children (from 2 days to 13 years, median 28 months) with Glasgow Coma Sores of < or = 7 had TCD examinations. The waveforms and the cerebral blood flow velocities ...
Fike J R - - 1998
The effects of an intravenous (i.v.) injection of the bradykinin analog RMP-7 (100 ng/kg) were assessed in normal dogs and dogs with focal, radiation-induced brain lesions. A dose of 20 Gy was delivered to a point 0.75 cm from a removable interstitial 125I source; parameters relating to blood flow and ...
Heath D L - - 1998
Traumatic brain injury has been shown to result in a decrease in brain-free magnesium concentration that is associated with the development of neurologic motor deficits. Although these changes have been well characterized in the brain, changes in free magnesium homeostasis have not been characterized in other fluid compartments. The current ...
Drew P A - - 1998
This study was designed to determine the distribution of fat which reaches the brain by the internal carotid artery, and the consequent alterations in the blood brain barrier, in a rat model of cerebral arterial fat embolism. The distribution of the blood flow in this model was determined by the ...
Johnson B - - 1998
The L-type calcium channel antagonist, isradipine, reduces brain ischemia in animal models of ischemic stroke. These effects of isradipine appear more pronounced in dopamine (DA) rich brain regions. These same DA-rich brain regions have also been shown to be the areas most affected by cocaine-induced ischemic changes. Using a novel ...
Hillered L - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: Brain interstitial glycerol was studied as a potential marker for membrane phospholipid degradation in acute human brain injury. METHODS: Glycerol was measured in microdialysis samples from the frontal lobe cortex in four patients in the neurointensive care unit, during the acute phase after severe aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage. Microdialysis probes ...
Madsen P - - 1998
During orthostatic hypotension we evaluated whether presyncopal symptoms relate to a reduced brain oxygenation. Nine subjects performed 50 degrees head-up tilt for 1 h and eight subjects were followed during 2 h of supine rest and during 1 h of 10 degrees head-down tilt. Cerebral perfusion was assessed by transcranial ...
Evrard P A - - 1998
A simultaneous brain and blood microdialysis system was developed to study the passage of colchicine through the blood-brain barrier in the mouse. Colchicine was administered as a bolus in the jugular vein (1.5 mg kg-1) and its hippocampal extracellular fluid (ECF) and blood kinetics were determined over a 4 h ...
Nagasaka T - - 1998
We hypothesize that selective brain cooling (SBC) can occur in hyperthermic humans despite the fact that humans have no carotid rete, a vascular structure that facilitates countercurrent heat exchange and that is located at the base of the skull in some mammals. We postulate that an increase in emissary and ...
Warren D A - - 1998
The central nervous system is the principal target of 1,1,1-trichloroethane (TRI), and several studies of this volatile solvent have demonstrated effects on learned animal behaviors. There have been few attempts, however, to quantitatively relate such effects to blood or target organ (brain) solvent concentrations. Therefore, Sprague-Dawley rats trained to lever-press ...
Thoman W J - - 1998
The ability to visualize intracranial dynamics during simulated clinical scenarios is a valuable tool for teaching brain physiology and the consequences of different medical interventions on the brain. Studies have isolated physiologic variables and shown their effects on brain dynamics. However, no studies have shown the combined effects of these ...
Roos M W - - 1998
This work describes changes in relative blood flow caused by discrete emboli reaching the brain of conscious rabbits. With [14C]iodoantipyrine autoradiography, small ischemic foci were observed scattered throughout the brain. After correction for tracer diffusion from the surroundings, the ischemic regions located in the deeper parts of the brain were ...
Mayevsky A - - 1998
In order to evaluate the relationship between brain oxygen supply and demand (O2 balance) in real time, it is necessary to use a multiparametric monitoring approach. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is a representative parameter of O2 supply. The extracellular level of K+ is a reliable indicator of O2 demand since ...
Park C K - - 1998
The present study investigates the neuroprotective effects of temporary mild systemic hypothermia and selective brain cooling against focal cerebral infarction in the rat and the changes of cortical blood flow, and compares these two treatment modalities. In permanent middle cerebral artery (MCA) model, the treatments were induced 15 min following ...
Nakase H - - 1998
Sinus-vein thrombosis is increasingly recognized as a much more frequent neurological disorder than was anticipated before. We examined the pathophysiology of superior sagittal sinus thrombosis (SSST) from 19 patients and a rat SSST model. We treated 19 cases with SSST who were diagnosed by angiography. The symptoms of nine patients, ...
Bouma G J - - 1998
The pathogenesis of traumatic brain swelling is unclear. Brain edema (increased water content) is considered an important cause of swelling, but there is also evidence that vasodilatation with increased cerebral blood volume (CBV) plays a role. We have evaluated early posttraumatic changes in CBV in 37 head-injured patients, using dynamic ...
Doppenberg E M - - 1998
Measuring brain tissue oxygenation is now possible due to major advances in the technical development of Clark-electrodes and fiberoptic systems. However, to make this technique clinically useful for both nurses and medical staff, the ischemic threshold for brain tissue oxygen tension (brain pO2) must be determined. Three end points were ...
Hudetz A G - - 1998
Spontaneous, low frequency (4-12 cpm) fluctuations, independent of the cardiac and respiratory cycles, in human and animal brains were first recorded with the O2 polarographic technique in the late 1950s. They were seen in NADH and cytochrome oxidase and associated with spontaneous vasomotion pial and large cerebral arteries. Renewed interest ...
Mayevsky A - - 1998
Intracranial pressure (ICP) is currently the main parameter monitored following severe head injury or during the post operative period in neurosurgical patients. The normal cerebral cortex depends upon a continuous supply of O2, and direct coupling exists between adequate cerebral blood flow (O2 supply) and ion homeostasis as well as ...
Schwab M - - 1998
Hypothermia maintains the impermeability of the blood-brain barrier to proteins and, therefore, presumably the development of vasogenic brain edema after brain ischemia. We intended to determine whether mild hypothermia would have a protective effect against cytotoxic brain edema, the early stage of ischemic brain edema. Two groups of Wistar rats ...
Zauner A - - 1998
In order to optimize therapy for the injured brain it is desirable to continuously monitor substrate delivery in the critically ill patient. Interruption of substrate delivery is a major factor of the great vulnerability to ischemic damage, which affects a majority of patients after severe head injury, stroke or subarachnoid ...
Katayama Y - - 1998
The non-hemorrhagic mass effect of cerebral contusions is commonly attributed to vasogenic edema and/or cytotoxic edema (cellular swelling). We propose that a marked increase in osmolality within the contusion necrosis proper, in which the cellular elements uniformly undergo shrinkage, disintegration and homogenation, represents an important and unique mechanism underlying the ...
Nilsson G E - - 1997
Histological studies have detected nitric oxide (NO) synthase in the central nervous system of all vertebrates examined, from lampreys to mammals. However, there are still very few comparative physiological studies on the function of NO synthase in the brain of non-mammalian vertebrates. So far, we know that acetylcholine can cause ...
Kume N - - 1997
We report a pregnant 19-yr-old patient with moyamoya disease who had undergone bilateral superficial temporal artery to middle cerebral artery anastomosis and encephalomyosynangiosis at 8 yr with an uneventful postoperative course and who desired natural delivery after becoming pregnant at 18 yr. We determined her cerebral vascular reserve since natural ...
Broaddus W C - - 1997
High-flow microinfusion is a novel technique for delivery of compounds directly into the brain parenchyma, bypassing the blood-brain barrier. The feasibility of this technique has been demonstrated with low-molecular-weight compounds, macromolecular dyes, and proteins. Delivery of antisense oligonucleotides into the brain parenchyma represents an additional potential application of this technique ...
Chen G - - 1997
To test the hypothesis that interleukin-6 (IL-6) induced within the brain can be released into peripheral blood, 125I-labeled IL-6 was injected into the lateral cerebral ventricle of rats, and its concentration in peripheral blood followed serially. Acid-precipitable tracer appeared within 5 min of injection and entered the blood following first-order ...
Sancho E - - 1997
The bioconcentration of fenitrothion in the brain of the european eel (Anguilla anguilla) and its posterior elimination have been studied. Animals were exposed to a sublethal concentration of fenitrothion (0.04 mg/L) for 96 hours in a flow-through test system. After this pesticide exposure, animals were transferred to clean water for ...
Hoyer D - - 1997
Hypoxic-ischemic disorders of the neonatal brain function depend in particular on critical decrease of arterial blood pressure (ABP) below the limited range of cerebral autoregulation. An experimental design including an extracorporal ABP controller is presented which enables the induction of gradual hemorrhagic hypotension at different stages of blood flow reduction ...
Ye J - - 1997
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to investigate flow distribution during retrograde and antegrade cerebral perfusion with India ink as a marker. METHODS: Ten pigs received cerebral perfusion with a solution containing 50% filtered India ink for 5 minutes either antegradely through both internal carotid arteries at a flow ...
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