Publications by authors named "A V Shun'kin"

Cardiosurgical stress initiates endothelial injury of the colliquation necrosis type (without activating coagulation necrosis) in coronary capillaries of infants aged under 1 year. The dark cells exhibited high tolerance to operation stress in the presence of labile ultrastructural response of endothelial cells of the main and light types. The percentage of dark cells does not change during surgical intervention, which is a sign predicting a favorable course of the postoperative period.

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Examination of 36 infants of the first year of life, who had been operated on under extracorporeal circulation, revealed the activation of the monocytic cellular pool. This reaction was accompanied by an increase in the content of activated HLA-DR-positive cells. Limitation of the monocytic test via apoptotic mechanisms was inadequate.

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Cerebral oxygenation (rSO(2)) in the region of sagittal sinus and main hemodynamic parameters were measured in 112 patients with ischemic heart disease and class II-III angina. Four groups of patients were distinguished according to degree of rSO(2) lowering. Hemodynamics and oxygen transport function of the blood were proportionally related to degree of rSO(2) lowering.

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Ultrastructural changes in endothelial cells (EC) of myocardial capillaries were studied in 24 dogs which underwent hypothermia without perfusion. Biopsy specimens for electron microscopy were taken from the left ventricle of each dog in the control group, during anesthesia (prior to active cooling), and at the end of moderate (28-30 degrees ) and deep (22-24 degrees ) artificial body cooling. The following morphological types of the EC were identified both in the control group and in all test groups: those with moderately dense cytoplasm, light, dark, and irreversibly damaged cells.

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Carbohydrate metabolism and insulin status have been studied in 89 patients with congenital heart valve defects operated on in conditions of profound perfusion-free hypothermic protection. It has been established that anesthesia, hypothermia, and surgical trauma are accompanied by hyperinsulinemia, which had nothing to do with the introduction of exogenic hormone. Insulin effect is attenuated and insulin resistance develops, which leads to a drop not only in glucose consumption but also in the consumption of glycolysis products.

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