Physiological and morphological changes produced by corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) stimulation in vivo were studied in pituitaries immunocytochemically stained for ACTH. After 48-h ip minipump infusions of 10 or 50 ng/min CRF, serum ACTH levels were increased significantly over values in control groups that included both intact rats and rats exposed to sham abdominal surgery. Correlative morphological changes included a striking increase in corticotrope cell area. This was coupled with an apparent decrease in the percentage of stained cells, probably due to degranulation. The cellular responses were similar to those after adrenalectomy described previously by us and others. Therefore, in a parallel study, additional groups of rats were adrenalectomized and studied 24 and 48 h after the surgery. Even greater changes in serum ACTH, corticotrope cell area, and percentages were observed in the adrenalectomized rats. The difference between the CRF-infused and adrenalectomized groups was probably due to the lack of corticosterone feedback in the latter group. Among the control groups, there were no differences between intact rats and rats exposed to sham abdominal surgery. Rats subjected to sham adrenalectomy, however, showed corticotrope responses similar to those of CRF-infused rats, except that the cells were more densely stained. The present studies thus show dramatic changes in ACTH cell area, extent of staining, and percentages after in vivo CRF stimulation. In all of the experimental groups, an excellent correlation existed between serum ACTH levels and the degree of the morphological changes in the corticotropes. 相似文献
IntroductionThe standards for the management of open fractures of the lower limb published by the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic surgeons (BAPRAS) and British Orthopaedic Association (BOA) were introduced to improve the treatment received by patients after open injury to the lower limb. These Standards were released after BAPRAS/BOA published Guidelines for the management of open tibial fractures.MethodsWe wished to determine the impact of these Standards upon the surgical management of open tibial fractures by comparing patients admitted to an orthoplastic centre in the 45 months concluding December 2009 (the Guidelines era) with those admitted during 2011 (the Standards era). Surgical procedures required during the first 30 days and 12 months after injury were determined. Cases were divided into ‘directly admitted patients’ (DAP) and ‘transferred patients’ (TP). Standards-era patients were divided further into those who had surgery exclusively at the orthoplastic centre (orthoplastic patients (OPP)) and those transferred after surgery (TASP).ResultsThe number of TP trebled in frequency in the Standards era, 25% of whom were transferred before surgery. Significantly fewer surgical procedures were required for DAP and OPP groups compared with TP (and TASP) groups in both eras (Mann–Whitney U-test, p=0.05). DAP and OPP groups during the Standards era underwent the fewest procedures, with the vast majority of cases treated with two or fewer procedures in the first 12 months (88% and 80%, respectively, compared with 61% in the Guidelines era). In the Guidelines era, 44% of TP cases and in the Standards era 39% of TP and 29% of TASP groups underwent two or fewer procedures.Approximately two-thirds of open tibial fractures managed in our orthoplastic centre were patients transferred after surgery. The greatest impact of the Standards was evident for those who underwent surgery exclusively in the orthoplastic centre, reflecting a more deliberate combined strategy.ConclusionThese findings vindicate the Standards as well as mandating reorganisation and resourcing of orthoplastic services to ensure immediate transfer and early combined surgery. By increasing the capacity to deal with time-dependent initial surgery, the surgical burden that the patient must endure, and which the service must provide, are reduced. 相似文献
We compared the prevalence of hypertension in patients with non–insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) in referral and primary care practices using definitions of The Fifth Report of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC-V), while controlling for other risk factors such as hypertension, obesity, smoking, and age. Patients (n = 1443) were enrolled consecutively from a large referral practice at the Jackson Diabetes Center and four primary care clinics in the vicinity. Blood pressures were measured at three clinic visits after a 5-min rest in a sitting position using a standard clinical sphygmomanometer. Charts were reviewed to determine diabetes duration, insulin usage, height, weight, smoking history, use of antihypertensive and oral hypoglycemic medications, socioeconomic status, and race. Patients were classified as hypertensive based on JNC-V definitions or if they were on antihypertensive medication. Hypertension was termed uncontrolled if blood pressure was JNC-V Stage 2 or higher while on antihypertensive medication.
Seventy-eight percent of referral clinic and 55% of primary care clinic patients had either JNC-V State 1 or higher hypertension or were on antihypertensive medication. Actual blood pressures indicated that more patients had JNC-V Stage 1 (mild) or higher hypertension in referral compared to primary care clinics (62% versus 48% p = 0.01) but fewer had JNC-V Stage 2 or higher (moderate-severe) hypertension (12% versus 19% p = 0.002). Patients seen in the referral clinic were significantly more likely to have greater age, greater duration of diabetes, higher insulin dosage, longer smoking history, antihypertensive medication, and live outside the metropolitan area. By logistic regression, the odds of hypertension were significantly increased with age (OR 1.51/decade), BMI greater than 27 (OR 2.17), diabetes duration (OR 1.04/year), and insulin dosage (OR 1.74/U/kg). Current smoking and attending a referral clinic were not significantly related. The odds of moderate-severe hypertension were significantly increased with age (OR 1.23/decade), decreased by attending a referral clinic (OR 0.45), and not significantly related to other confounders in the model.
The prevalence of hypertension among patients with NIDDM was higher in referral than primary care clinics. The higher prevalence in the referral practice can be accounted for by the greater severity of associated risk factors in the referral practice patients; however, most patients will be diagnosed and treated for hypertension prior to referral. More patients in the referral practice were on hypertensive medication, which lowered the stage or severity of hypertension but still not to the normal range. The results suggest that the primary detection of hypertension in patients with type II diabetes resides with the primary care physician. Management of hypertension will require both a delineation and acceptance of responsibilities between the primary care physician and diabetes specialists. 相似文献
Background and Purpose: During repeat-dose toxicity studies, ECGs are collected from chemically or physically-restrained animals over a short timeframe. This is problematic due to cardiovascular changes caused by manual restraint stress and anesthesia, and limited ECG sampling. These factors confound data interpretation, but may be overcome by using a non-invasive jacket-based ECG collection (JET). The current study investigated whether a jacketed external telemetry system could detect changes in cardiac intervals and heart rate in non-human primates (NHPs), previously implanted with a PCT transmitter.Experimental Approach: Twelve male cynomolgus monkeys were treated weekly with vehicle or sotalol (8, 16, 32 mg kg−1) p.o. ECGs were collected continuously for 24 hours, following treatment, over 4 weeks. A satellite group of six NHPs was used for sotalol toxicokinetics.Key Results: Sotalol attained Cmax values 1–3 hours after dosing, and exhibited dose-proportional exposure. In jacketed NHPs, sotalol dose-dependently increased QT/QTc intervals, prolonged PR interval, and reduced heart rate. Significant QTc prolongation of 27, 54 and 76 msec was detected by JET after 8, 16, and 32 mg kg−1 sotalol, respectively, compared with time-matched vehicle-treated animals. Overall, JET-derived PR, QT, QTc intervals, QRS duration, and heart rate correlated well with those derived from PCT.Conclusions and Implications: The current findings clearly support the use of JET to quantify cardiac interval and rhythm changes, capable of detecting QTc prolongation caused by sotalol. JET may be a preferred method compared to restraint-based ECG because high-density ECG sampling can be collected in unstressed conscious monkeys, over several weeks. 相似文献
Human and rhesus monkey platelets secrete at least two antiheparin proteins: platelet factor 4 (PF4) and low affinity platelet factor 4 (LA-PF4). Neither of these proteins showed species-related antigenic differences. As determined by radioimmunoassay, the levels of PF4 and LA-PF4 antigen per 10(9) monkey platelets amounted to 10.7 and 20.3 microgram, respectively. One milliliter of monkey plasma prepared from blood collected into an anticoagulant composed of EDTA, prostaglandin E1, and theophylline solution contained 22.4 ng LA-PF4 and 8.0 ng PF4. Concentrations of these two platelet-specific proteins in monkeys closely resembled levels found in human platelets and plasma. Infusion of prostacyclin (PGI2) (100 or 300 ng/kg/min) into monkeys for 15 min resulted in a significant decrease of plasma levels of LA-PF4 antigen and of PF4 by 40%--60% (p < 0.0001). This decrease was related to the inhibitory effect of PGI2 on the secretion of platelets stimulated by a catheter or by venipuncture. Longer infusion of PGI2 did not produce further significant change. The supernate obtained after aggregation of human platelets stimulated by thrombin was injected into monkeys receiving PGI2 infusion. The disappearance of LA-PF4 antigen in monkey plasma followed a biphasic exponential curve with half-lives for the fast and slow components of 8.4 and 63 min. PF4 disappeared faster but followed the same pattern (half-lives for the fast and slow component of 2.1 and 70 min). Analysis of the experimental data suggests that the low levels of secreted platelet proteins in monkey plasma are related to their minimal in vivo release and to their rapid clearance. 相似文献
The Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS) trait is expressed in cultured human skin fibroblasts as an abnormal perinuclear concentration of moderately enlarged lysosomes. The cytoskeleton of CHS fibroblasts appears intact. Microtubules are normal in number and morphology, as assessed by colchicine binding studies, antitubulin immunofluorescence, and electron microscopy. Deformability by shear force is unaltered and microfilaments are abundant. However, CHS lysosomes appear to interact abnormally with the cytoskeleton, since the perinculear aggregation partially disperses after depolymerization of cell microtubules with colchicine. These results suggest that CHS is associated with a defect of either the lysosomal membrane itself or of lysosomal membrane- microtubule interaction. 相似文献