Eighth Day (eighth + day)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Valproic Acid-Induced Hyperammonemic Encephalopathy with Triphasic Waves

EPILEPSIA, Issue 7 2000
Akira Kifune
Summary: Purpose: To examine a patient with valproic acid (VPA)-induced hyperammonemic encephalopathy accompanied by triphasic waves. Methods: A 61-year-old male patient with epilepsy experienced disturbance of consciousness after VPA dose was increased because of poor seizure control. The electroencephalogram (EEG) taken on admission revealed triphasic waves and high-amplitude ,-activity with frontal predominance. Although serum hepatic enzymes, such as AST and ALT, were normal, serum ammonium level was high at 96 ,g/dl (normal range, 3,47 ,g/dl). Serum amino acid analysis showed multiple minor abnormalities. Administration of VPA was discontinued immediately after admission, while other anticonvulsants were continued. Results: The patient's condition was improved on the fourth day of admission. An EEG, serum ammonium level, and amino acid profile were normal on the eighth day. Based on VPA administration, serum ammonium levels, and results of amino acid analysis, this patient had VPA-induced hyperammonemic encephalopathy. Conclusions: Our case indicates that caution is required if triphasic waves appear in VPA-induced hyperammonemic encephalopathy. [source]


Combined endoscopic and laparoscopic en bloc resection of the urachus and the bladder dome in a rare case of urachal carcinoma

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 4 2007
Francesco Porpiglia
Abstract: Urachal carcinoma is a rare neoplasm treated with surgical resection. We report a case of adenocarcinoma of the urachus treated with a new surgical technique. In a 44-year-old man affected by urachal carcinoma we performed a combined endoscopic,laparoscopic surgical en bloc resection of the urachus and bladder dome. The procedure lasted 240 min, and no postoperative complications were recorded. The patient was discharged on fourth day and the catheter was removed on eighth day. Bladder capability resulted normal with no evident physical change. Multiple bladder biopsy and computed tomography scans at 6, 12 and 18 months proved negative. [source]


Diphenyl diselenide protects against glycerol-induced renal damage in rats

JOURNAL OF APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, Issue 7 2009
Ricardo Brandão
Abstract In this study we evaluated the effect of diphenyl diselenide (PhSe)2 on glycerol-induced acute renal failure in rats. Rats were pre-treated by gavage every day with (PhSe)2 (7.14 mg kg,1) for 7 days. On the eighth day, rats received an intramuscular injection of glycerol (8 mL kg,1). Twenty-four hours afterwards, rats were euthanized and the levels of urea and creatinine were measured in plasma. Catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione S -transferase (GST), , -aminolevulinate dehydratase (, -ALA-D) and Na+, K+ -ATPase activities and ascorbic acid levels were evaluated in renal homogenates. Histopathological evaluations were also performed. The results demonstrated that (PhSe)2 was able to protect against the increase in urea and creatinine levels and histological alterations in kidney induced by glycerol. (PhSe)2 protected against the inhibition in , -ALA-D, CAT and GPx activities and the reduction in ascorbic acid levels induced by glycerol in kidneys of rats. In conclusion, the present results indicate that (PhSe)2 was effective in protecting against acute renal failure induced by glycerol. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Sensitization of Ventral Tegmental Area Dopamine Neurons to the Stimulating Effects of Ethanol

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 9 2009
Zheng-Ming Ding
Background:, Previous studies indicated that chronic alcohol drinking increased the sensitivity of the posterior ventral tegmental area (p-VTA) to the reinforcing effects of ethanol. The current study tested the hypothesis that local exposure of the p-VTA to ethanol would increase the sensitivity of dopamine (DA) neurons to the stimulating effects of ethanol. Methods:, Experiment 1 examined the stimulating effects of ethanol in the p-VTA after a 7-day ethanol pretreatment in the p-VTA. Adult female Wistar rats were pretreated with microinjections of 200 mg% ethanol or artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) into the p-VTA once a day for 7 days. On the eighth day, rats received a challenge injection of ethanol (100, 200, or 300 mg%) or aCSF into the p-VTA, and extracellular DA levels were measured in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell with microdialysis. Experiment 2 examined the stimulating effects of ethanol (200 mg%) after a 3- or 5-day ethanol (200 mg%) pretreatment in the p-VTA. Experiment 3 examined the stimulating effects of ethanol (200 mg%) 7 days after the last of the 7-day ethanol (200 mg%) pretreatments in the p-VTA. Results:, Experiment 1: in both aCSF- and ethanol-pretreated rats, the challenge microinjection of ethanol dose-dependently increased DA release in the NAc shell, with significantly greater increases in ethanol-pretreated groups. Experiment 2: the 5-day, but not 3-day, ethanol pretreatment protocol increased the response of p-VTA dopamine neurons to the ethanol challenge. Experiment 3: the increased stimulating effects of ethanol were still evident after 7 days. Conclusions:, The results indicate that repeated local ethanol exposure of the p-VTA produced neuroadaptations in DA neurons projecting to the NAc shell, resulting in a persistent increase in the sensitivity of these neurons to the stimulating effects of ethanol. [source]


The effect of digesta sampling time and dietary protein source on ileal nitrogen digestibility for the growing rat,

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, Issue 4 2002
Christine A Butts
Abstract The effect of time that digesta were collected on the quantity and representativeness of ileal digesta and on the determination of apparent and true ileal nitrogen (N) digestibility for growing rats was investigated. Semi-synthetic diets containing chromic oxide as an indigestible marker were given to 200,g live weight rats for 8 days as a single daily meal. The experimental treatments comprised six diets (lactalbumin, soy protein isolate, wheat gluten, fish, protein-free (PF), enzymically hydrolysed casein (EHC)) and four ileal digesta sampling times (3, 4, 5 and 6,h after the start of feeding). On the eighth day the rats were fed and slaughtered according to treatment, and digesta were sampled from the terminal ileum. Endogenous ileal nitrogen excretion was determined using both the protein-free and peptide alimentation methods. There was a significant (P,,=,0.027) effect of experimental diet averaged across sampling times for chromium recovery (CrRec). The CrRec was higher for the rats fed the PF diet than for the other diets. Responses to sampling time varied significantly (P,<,0.05) among diets for ileal digesta weight (IDW), nitrogen/chromium (N/Cr) ratio, ileal digesta weight relative to dry matter intake (IDW/DMI), CrRec, N flow, apparent N digestibility and true N digestibility (determined using the protein-free method). The optimal digesta sampling times for each of the diets were 3,h for PF, EHC, lactalbumin and fish and 4,h for soy protein isolate and wheat gluten. Consequently, 3 or 4,h after the start of feeding is recommended as the optimum ileal digesta sampling time for most purified protein sources when fed to the growing rat as a single daily meal. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Is a long-term ranitidine-based triple therapy against Helicobacter pylori only a heritage of the past?

ALIMENTARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 4 2005
A prospective, randomized clinicopharmacological study
Summary Background:, Acid suppression plus two antibiotics is currently considered the gold standard anti- Helicobacter pylori treatment, but the effective role of gastric antisecretory drugs is still poorly understood. Aims:, To compare a 14-day ranitidine-based triple regimen against Helicobacter pylori with one based on omeprazole, and to study the influence of antisecretory drugs on metronidazole pharmacokinetics in human plasma. Methods:, A total of 150 dyspeptic H. pylori -infected patients were randomized for ranitidine 300 mg b.d. (RCM group) or omeprazole 20 mg b.d. (OCM group) 14-day triple therapy, with clarithromycin 500 mg b.d. and metronidazole 500 mg b.d. On the eighth day of therapy, metronidazole pharmacokinetics was studied in plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography. The pharmacokinetic parameters (terminal half-life, area under the curve, peak-plasma level, peak time) of metronidazole were computed using standard non-compartmental methods. H. pylori status was monitored before and 4 weeks after the end of therapy by histology, serology and rapid urease test. Results:, On an intention-to-treat basis, eradication rates were 91 and 76% for the RCM and OCM groups respectively (P < 0.02). Significantly different pharmacokinetic parameters of metronidazole were found between the groups: peak-plasma level (P < 0.01) and area under the curve (P < 0.02). Conclusion:, Our results show that the RCM regimen was more effective than that based on OCM and that the antisecretory drugs affected metronidazole availability, increasing the efficacy of ranitidine-based regimens. [source]


Effect of different challenge doses after repeated citalopram treatment on extracellular serotonin level in the medial prefrontal cortex: In vivo microdialysis study

PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCES, Issue 5 2008
Ihoko Muraki md
Aims:, In order to elucidate the relevance between the delayed onset of clinical efficacy of selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRI) and extracellular 5-HT levels in the medial prefrontal cortex, the present study compared the ability of low-dose (3 mg/kg) and high-dose (30 mg/kg) citalopram to increase extracellular 5-HT levels in the medial prefrontal cortex following repeated citalopram treatment using in vivo microdialysis. Methods:, An SSRI, citalopram, was given 10 mg/kg, s.c. twice daily for 6 days and once on the seventh day in rats. On the eighth day, rats received a single injection of citalopram (3 or 30 mg/kg s.c.), and extracellular 5-HT levels were assessed in the medial prefrontal cortex of rats using in vivo brain microdialysis. Results:, There was no significant difference in basal extracellular 5-HT levels between the repeated citalopram group and the repeated saline group. The low-challenge dose of citalopram (3 mg/kg) produced significantly greater increases (170,200% at each time point) in the repeated citalopram group than in the repeated saline group (150%). The high-challenge dose of citalopram (30 mg/kg), however, increased extracellular 5-HT levels by 200,250% of basal levels in the repeated citalopram group, which was similar to the increases in the repeated saline group. Conclusions:, Repeated SSRI treatment enhances the effect of low-dose SSRI on extracellular 5-HT levels but not that of high-dose SSRI. [source]


Dynamics of Mast Cells in Lymph Node Following Antigenic Stimulation

ANATOMIA, HISTOLOGIA, EMBRYOLOGIA, Issue 1 2004
D. O. Dabak
Summary Dynamics of mast cells in rat cervical lymph nodes were examined using conventional histological techniques after injection of Salmonella paratyphi B-H antigen. There was no significant change in the number of mast cells at sixth hour and on the first day of stimulation compared with the controls. The number of mast cells was increased in all lymph node compartments on the second day of stimulation, which continued in the following 3 days. On the eighth day of stimulation, although the mast cell number decreased in the subcapsular area, it was still high in the paracortical area and medullary sinuses of the lymph nodes. On the second day of stimulation, the mast cell number was apparently increased in the subcapsular area than those of the other compartments. In the following days of stimulation, the highest number of mast cells was seen in the medullary sinuses. The highest paracortical mast cell number was determined on the third day of stimulation and some mast cells were observed near the high endothelial venules (HEVs). The changes of mast cell number among the lymph node compartments after antigenic stimulation support the hypothesis that the migration of mast cells occurred. This migration pattern indicates that mast cells enter the lymph node via afferent lymphatics and migrate to the lymph node compartments following antigenic stimulation. [source]


Synthesis and mobilization of glycogen and trehalose in adult male Rhodnius prolixus

ARCHIVES OF INSECT BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY (ELECTRONIC), Issue 1 2009
Ana C. Mariano
Abstract The vector of Chagas' disease, Rhodnius prolixus, feeds exclusively on blood. The blood meals are slowly digested, and these insects wait some weeks before the next meal. During the life of an insect, energy-requiring processes such as moulting, adult gonadal and reproductive growth, vitellogenesis, muscular activity, and fasting, lead to increased metabolism. Carbohydrates are a major source of energy and their mobilization is important. We determined the amounts of glycogen, trehalose, and glucose present in the fat body and/or hemolymph of adult males of R. prolixus and recorded the processes of accumulation and mobilization of these carbohydrates. We also tested our hypothesis that these processes are under endocrine control. The amount of glycogen in the fat body progressively increased until the fourth day after feeding (from 9.3±2.2 to 77. 3±7.5,µg/fat body), then declined to values around 36.3±4.9,µg/fat body on the fifteenth day after the blood meal. Glycogen synthesis was eliminated in decapitated insects and head-transplanted insects synthesized glycogen. The amount of trehalose in the fat body increased until the sixth day after feeding (from 16. 6±1.7 to 40. 6±5.3,nmol/fat body), decreased abruptly, and stabilized between days 7 and 15 at values ranging around 15,19,nmol/fat body. Decapitated insects did not synthesize trehalose after feeding, and this effect was reversed in head-transplanted insects. The concentration of trehalose in the hemolymph increased after the blood meal until the third day (from 0.07±0.01 to 0.75±0.05,mM) and at the fourth day it decreased until the ninth day (0.21±0.01,mM), when it increased again until the fourteenth day (0.79±0.06,mM) after the blood meal, and then declined again. In decapitated insects, trehalose concentrations did not increase soon after the blood meal and at the third day it was very low, but on the fourteenth day it was close to the control values. The concentration of glucose in the hemolymph of untreated insects remained low and constant (0.18±0.01,mM) during the 15 days after feeding, but in decapitated insects it progressively increased until the fifteenth day (2.00±0.10,mM). We recorded the highest trehalase activity in midgut, which was maximal at the eighth day after feeding (2,830±320,nmol of glucose/organ/h). We infer that in Rhodnius prolixus, the metabolism of glycogen, glucose, and trehalose are controlled by factors from the brain, according to physiological demands at different days after the blood meal. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


Periprocedural Anticoagulation for Atrial Fibrillation Ablation

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2008
M. EYMAN MORTADA M.D.
Background: Catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) can increase risk of left atrial (LA) thrombi and stroke. Optimal periprocedural anticoagulation has not been determined. Objective: We report the role of administering warfarin and aspirin without low molecular weight heparin in patients undergoing AF ablation. Methods: A total of 207 patients underwent ablation for AF. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) guided transseptal puncture and ruled out clot in the LA. After first puncture, the sheath was flushed with heparin (5,000 Units/mL). After second puncture, a bolus of 80 units/kg of heparin was given, followed by an infusion to maintain activated clotting time (ACT) around 300,350 seconds. Warfarin was stopped and aspirin was started (325 mg/day) 3 days preprocedure. Warfarin was restarted on the day of the procedure. Both medications were continued for 6 weeks postablation. Warfarin was continued for 6 months in patients with prior history of persistent or recurrent AF. Thirty-seven patients who showed smoke in the LA on TEE were given low molecular weight heparin postprocedure until international normalized ratio (INR) was therapeutic. Results: Thirty-two patients had persistent and 175 had paroxysmal AF; 87 were cardioverted during ablation. Two patients had transient ischemic attack (TIA) on the sixth and eighth days, respectively, following ablation, with complete recovery. Both had subtherapeutic INRs. Conclusion: In patients without demonstrable clot or smoke in the LA, starting aspirin 3 days prior and warfarin immediately post-radiofrequency ablation, without low molecular weight heparin, with meticulous anticoagulation during the procedure, appears to be a safe mode of anticoagulation. [source]