Search results for "Constriction"

showing 4 items of 254 documents

Oral Propranolol for Circumscribed Choroidal Hemangioma

2011

Introduction: Several therapeutic approaches have been developed to treat choroidal hemangioma. However, all these therapies are associated with a potential risk of damaging the overlying retina. Case Report: We report a case of circumscribed choroidal hemangioma (CCH) in a 59-year-old man refractory to laser treatment. Visual acuity was 20/200 and a serous macular detachment was present. The CCH was treated with oral propanolol, whereupon visual acuity improved to 20/20 and the macular detachment resolved without systemic or local adverse effects. Discussion: Propanolol is a β-blocker commonly used in cardiology that may induce endothelium vasoconstriction and inhibit endothelial prolifera…

medicine.medical_specialtyVisual acuityEndotheliumCircumscribed choroidal hemangiomaPropranololβ-Blockerlcsh:OphthalmologyOphthalmologymedicineCircumscribed choroidal hemangiomaAdverse effectRetinaEndothelial proliferationbusiness.industryβ-Blockereye diseasesSurgeryOphthalmologyPublished: February 2011medicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:RE1-994sense organsmedicine.symptombusinessVasoconstrictionmedicine.drugPropanololCase Reports in Ophthalmology
researchProduct

Myogenic effects enhance norepinephrine constriction: Inhibition by nitric oxide and felodipine

1998

Myogenic effects enhance norepinephrine constriction: Inhibition by nitric oxide and felodipine. Myogenic, pressure-induced vasoconstriction may amplify the effects of circulating vasoconstrictors. Through intravital microscopy in cremaster arterioles (31 to 115 μm diameter), the relative contribution of myogenic responses (MR) to norepinephrine (NE)-induced constriction and the inhibitor potency of nitric oxide (NO) or a Ca2+ entry blocker (CEB), felodipine (F), were examined. In 24 anesthetized hamsters, a vessel occluder was placed around the aorta to control cremaster vessel inflow pressure (IP). NE infusion increased blood pressure (by 50 ± 2mm Hg) and induced significant constriction …

medicine.medical_specialtyendotheliumVasodilator AgentsmicrocirculationMyogenic mechanismBayliss effectBlood PressureNitric OxideNitroarginineMuscle Smooth VascularConstrictionNitric oxideMicrocirculationNorepinephrine (medication)Norepinephrinechemistry.chemical_compoundCricetinaeInternal medicineintravital microscopymedicineAnimalsVasoconstrictor AgentsBayliss effectAorta AbdominalcremasterFelodipineCapillariesArteriolesEndocrinologychemistryFelodipineNephrologyAnesthesiacalcium entry blockerInjections Intravenouscardiovascular systemmedicine.symptomVasoconstrictionmedicine.drugKidney International
researchProduct

Is prolonged febrile syndrome associated with reactive thrombocytosis a possible association in the diagnosis of Takayasu’s arteritis? A case report

2021

Takayasu’s arteritis is a rare, systemic, inflammatory vasculitis of large blood vessels with an unknown aetiology that more frequently affects women of childbearing age with progression to stenosis, fibrosis or thrombogenesis. Clinical manifestations are associated either with inflammation of the vascular wall (including fever, myalgia, arthralgia, weight loss) or the development of aneurysms and extensive vascular lesions, which creates challenges for a differential diagnosis. This current report presents the case of a female Caucasian patient, aged 23 years, that presented herself repetitively at the hospital reporting symptoms including fever, productive cough, myalgia associated with …

medicine.medical_specialtyfibrin monomersMedicine (General)case presentationUnknown aetiologyTakayasu's arteritisCase ReportsConstriction PathologicBiochemistryFebrile syndromeDiagnosis DifferentialR5-920Reactive thrombocytosismedicineHumansArteritisThrombocytosisThrombocytosisbusiness.industryBiochemistry (medical)Takayasu’s arteritisCell BiologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseDermatologyTakayasu Arteritisprolonged febrile syndromeChildbearing ageFemalebusinessVasculitisJournal of International Medical Research
researchProduct

The pupillary response to mental overload

1977

The hypothesis that the pupil constricts below base level in situations of mental overload was tested. Subjects had to perform in a four-alternative forced-choice task at 75%, 100%, and 125% the speed of their maximum processing capacity. No indication of a pupillary constriction in the overload situation was found. The pupil dilated under all three conditions. The pupil diameter of male subjects significantly decreased after the sharp increase at the beginning of the experimental phases, while the female subjects’ pupil diameter remained at the same level after the initial increase. The amount of dilation depended on information load for male subjects only. Results were taken as further in…

medicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresPhysiologyGeneral NeurosciencePupil diameterPupil sizePupillary ConstrictionStimulationAudiologyPupilDevelopmental psychologymedicinePupillary responsesense organsPsychologyPhysiological Psychology
researchProduct