Search results for "Blood"

showing 10 items of 5199 documents

Subchronic Antidepressant Treatment with Venlafaxine or Imipramine and Effects on Blood Pressure and Heart Rate: Assessment by Automatic 24-Hour Moni…

1996

Venlafaxine is a new nontricyclic antidepressant inhibiting the reuptake of serotonin, noradrenaline, and, to a lesser extent, dopamine without antagonizing cholinergic, histaminergic, or noradrenergic receptors. Significantly, in a first placebo-controlled safety and efficacy study, high doses of venlafaxine increased blood pressure in some study subjects. In order to investigate further the effect of subchronic antidepressant drug treatment on blood pressure and heart rate, the effects of a conventional tricyclic (imipramine) and a structurally different phenethylamine antidepressant (venlafaxine) were compared. Sixteen inpatients with major depression (melancholic type) were treated for …

AdultMaleImipramineVenlafaxine HydrochlorideHemodynamicsBlood PressureVenlafaxineAntidepressive Agents TricyclicImipramineDouble-Blind MethodHeart RateHeart ratemedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Psychiatric Status Rating ScalesDepressive Disorderbusiness.industryVenlafaxine HydrochlorideGeneral MedicineBlood Pressure Monitoring AmbulatoryMiddle AgedCyclohexanolsPsychiatry and Mental healthBlood pressureAnesthesiaCirculatory systemAntidepressive Agents Second-GenerationAntidepressantFemalebusinessmedicine.drugPharmacopsychiatry
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Differential association of polymorphisms in the TNFalpha region with psoriatic arthritis but not psoriasis.

2002

To investigate the potential association of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) microsatellite and promoter alleles with psoriatic arthritis (PsA).DNA from 89 white patients with PsA, 65 patients with psoriasis, and 99 healthy white controls was investigated for two TNFalpha promoter (-238 and -308) and three microsatellite polymorphisms (TNFa, c, and d). Patients had previously been studied by serology for HLA class I antigens and by sequence-specific polymerase chain reaction for DRB1* alleles. In addition, TNFalpha production of Ficoll separated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) into culture supernatants after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide, alphaCD3 antibodies, phytohae…

AdultMaleImmunologyArthritisEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayHuman leukocyte antigenurologic and male genital diseasesPeripheral blood mononuclear cellPolymerase Chain ReactionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyStatistics NonparametricPsoriatic arthritisRheumatologyPsoriasismedicineOdds RatioImmunology and AllergyHumansPsoriasisPromoter Regions GeneticAllelesCells CulturedPhytohaemagglutininAgedAged 80 and overChi-Square DistributionPolymorphism Geneticbiologybusiness.industryTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaHaplotypeArthritis PsoriaticMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseExtended ReportCase-Control StudiesImmunologybiology.proteinLeukocytes MononuclearFemaleAntibodybusinessMicrosatellite RepeatsAnnals of the rheumatic diseases
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The quality of plasma collected by automated apheresis and of recovered plasma from leukodepleted whole blood.

2005

Background There exists a current lack of information about the composition of the different types of plasma. No direct comparisons between apheresis plasma (AP) and recovered plasma (RP) derived from in-line-filtered whole blood (WB) have been published to date. Study design and methods Sixty AP units, 100 RP units from in-line-filtered WB held for 3 hours at 20 degrees C between donation and freezing, and an additional 100 RP units held for 15 hours at 20 degrees C before freezing were analyzed for coagulation factors and inhibitors, total protein, immunoglobulin G (IgG), and hemostasis and proteolysis activation markers. The influence of twice freezing and thawing on clotting factors V, …

AdultMaleImmunologyProtein SImmunoglobulin GCitric AcidAndrologyFactor IXLeukocyte CountPlasmaImmunology and AllergyHumansFactor XIWhole bloodClotting factorHemostasisFactor VIIIbiologyChemistryAnticoagulantsFactor VFibrinogenHematologyMiddle AgedApheresisCoagulationHemostasisImmunologybiology.proteinBlood Component RemovalFemaleLeukocyte ElastasePlatelet factor 4Transfusion
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Redundant and synergistic information transfer in cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory variability

2015

In the framework of information dynamics, new tools are emerging which allow one to quantify how the information provided by two source processes about a target process results from the contribution of each source and from the interaction between the sources. We present the first implementation of these tools in the assessment of short-term cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory variability, by introducing two strategies for the decomposition of the information transferred to heart period (HP) variability from systolic arterial pressure (SAP) and respiration flow (RF) variability. Several measures based on the notion of transfer entropy (TE) are defined to quantify joint, individual and redun…

AdultMaleInformation transferComputer scienceEntropyBiomedical EngineeringBlood PressureHealth Informaticscomputer.software_genreCardiovascular Physiological PhenomenaElectrocardiographyHeart RateHumansPaced breathingSimulation1707Motor NeuronsRespirationModels CardiovascularHealthy subjectsHeartCardiorespiratory fitnessHealthy VolunteersSignal ProcessingSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaSystolic arterial pressureFemaleTransfer entropyData miningcomputer
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Lag-specific transfer entropy as a tool to assess cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory information transfer

2014

In the study of interacting physiological systems, model-free tools for time series analysis are fundamental to provide a proper description of how the coupling among systems arises from the multiple involved regulatory mechanisms. This study presents an approach which evaluates direction, magnitude, and exact timing of the information transfer between two time series belonging to a multivariate dataset. The approach performs a decomposition of the well-known transfer entropy (TE) which achieves 1) identifying, according to a lag-specific information-theoretic formulation of the concept of Granger causality, the set of time lags associated with significant information transfer, and 2) assig…

AdultMaleInformation transferMultivariate statisticsDynamical systems theoryDatabases FactualComputer sciencePhysiologyEntropyBiomedical EngineeringBlood Pressuredynamical systemYoung AdultGranger causalityControl theoryHumansAutonomic nervous systemmultivariate time serieTime seriesmutual informationcardiovascular controlconditional entropy (CE)RespirationModels CardiovascularComputational BiologyHeartMutual informationCausalityNonlinear systemSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaGranger causalityTransfer entropy
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Determination of acetylcholine, nitrostigmine and acetylcholinesterase activity in four patients with severe nitrostigmine (E 605 forte) intoxication.

1974

Concentrations of acetylcholine and nitrostigmine as well as acetylcholinesterase activity were determined in 4 patients with severe nitrostigmine intoxication. In the acute phase of the intoxication, acetylcholine levels up to 36 and 55 ng/ml were found in blood plasma and cerebrospinal fluid, respectively. At the same time no activity of acetylcholinesterase in plasma and erythrocytes was detected. Acetylcholinesterase activity gradually recovered at the end of the second week. In the first 3 days after the ingestion plasma nitrostigmine concentrations ranged from 409 to 86 ng/ml. At the end of the third week nitrostigmine was still found in a concentration of about 1 ng/ml plasma. Redist…

AdultMaleInsecticidesErythrocytesAdolescentHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPoison controlAdipose tissueAdministration OralPharmacologyToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundCerebrospinal fluidOrganophosphorus CompoundsBlood plasmaMedicineIngestionHumansbusiness.industryPoisoningClinical courseGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedNitro CompoundsAcetylcholinesteraseAcetylcholineSuicidechemistryAdipose TissueIntestinal AbsorptionAcute DiseaseAcetylcholinesteraseFemalebusinessAcetylcholinemedicine.drugArchives of toxicology
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Comparison of two different techniques of fibreoptic intubation

2009

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE The application of analgesics and sedatives during fibreoptic intubation (FOI) may result in a transient decrease in arterial oxygen saturation.This study evaluates two different techniques of FOI and respective effects on procedural duration, arterial oxygen saturation, and coughing by the patient. METHODS Thirty-four patients received a standardized conscious sedation with fentanyl (1.5 microg kg(-1)) and midazolam (12.5 microg kg(-1)).All patients were randomly allocated to one of the following techniques: the 'vaporization' (VAP) technique included four applications of 2 ml lidocaine 2% administered through the working channel of the fibrescope supplying an oxyg…

AdultMaleInsufflationmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsAdolescentLidocainemedicine.medical_treatmentSedationConscious SedationBlood PressureFentanylFibreoptic intubationYoung AdultIntubation IntratrachealFiber Optic TechnologyHumansMedicineIntubationOxygen saturationAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industryMiddle AgedSurgeryOxygenTreatment OutcomeAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineCoughAnesthesiaMidazolamFemalemedicine.symptombusinessmedicine.drugEuropean Journal of Anaesthesiology
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Interleukin 2 and soluble interleukin 2-receptor secretion defect in vitro in newly diagnosed type I diabetic patients

1989

In this study, we investigated whether an interleukin 2 (IL-2) secretion defect by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) after in vitro stimulation with phytohemagglutinin (PHA-M) occurs in either newly diagnosed or long-standing type I (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients and whether it is accompanied by a dysregulation of soluble IL-2— receptor (IL-2RS) production. PBMC cultures (2.5 × 106 cells), unstimulated or stimulated with PHA-M (25 μg/ml), from 20 type I diabetic patients (10 with time since onset <3 mo and 10 with long-term diabetes of <3 yr) and 10 control subjects were studied for the production of IL-2 and IL-2RS in their respective supernatants. No differen…

AdultMaleInterleukin 2medicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsAdolescentEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismStimulationPeripheral blood mononuclear cellIn vivoInternal medicineInternal MedicinemedicineHumansSecretionPhytohemagglutininsChildReceptorCells Culturedbusiness.industryLymphokineReceptors Interleukin-2In vitroDiabetes Mellitus Type 1EndocrinologySolubilityLeukocytes MononuclearInterleukin-2Femalebusinessmedicine.drug
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Noninvasive measurement of intracranial pressure: Is it possible?

2007

BACKGROUND: Some publications suggest a strong correlation between the intracranial pressure and the intraocular pressure. Other studies claim no correlation between these two physiologic variables. Our aim was to study whether the tonometry could be a useful method to evaluate intracranial pressure in patients with suspected intracranial abnormality. METHODS: We evaluated the correlation between the intracranial pressure and the intraocular pressure, the intracranial pressure and the mean arterial pressure, and the intraocular pressure and the mean arterial pressure in 22 patients, initially comatose, who were admitted to our hospital. All patients required the intracranial pressure monito…

AdultMaleIntraocular pressureMean arterial pressureIntracranial PressureCorrelation coefficientCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicineStatistics Nonparametriclaw.inventionTonometry OcularlawHumansMedicineMonitoring PhysiologicIntracranial pressureComabusiness.industryIntensive Care UnitsPressure measurementBlood pressureBrain InjuriesAnesthesiaLinear ModelsIntracranial pressure monitoringFemaleSurgerymedicine.symptombusinessJournal of Trauma-Injury Infection and Critical Care
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Cardiovascular medication and intraocular pressure: results from the Gutenberg Health Study

2016

BACKGROUND Intraocular pressure (IOP) is well known to be associated with blood pressure and other cardiovascular risk factors. The influence of systemic cardiovascular, in particular antihypertensive, medication on IOP is still controversial. This study analyses the association between the use of cardiovascular medications and IOP in a large European cohort. METHODS The Gutenberg Health Study is a population-based, prospective,observational cohort study in mid-western Germany. IOP was measured using a non-contact tonometer. The medication classes examined were peripheral vasodilators, diuretics, β-blockers (overall, selective and non-selective), calcium channel blockers, renin-angiotensin …

AdultMaleIntraocular pressureTime Factorsgenetic structuresmedicine.drug_classHealth StatusBlood Pressure030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyRisk Assessment03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsGermanyPrevalenceHumansMedicineProspective Studies610 Medicine & healthBeta blockerIntraocular PressureAgedAspirinbusiness.industryCARDIOVASCULAR MEDICATIONSCardiovascular AgentsMiddle AgedPrognosiseye diseasesSensory SystemsOphthalmologyBlood pressureCardiovascular DiseasesPopulation SurveillanceAnesthesiaCohort030221 ophthalmology & optometryFemaleOcular Hypertensionsense organsbusinessBody mass indexFollow-Up StudiesCohort studymedicine.drugBritish Journal of Ophthalmology
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