Oxygen deprivation following cessation of blood flow to vital organs such as brain, heart, and kidney is a ubiquitous human disease, invariably leading to devastating consequences. Studies in experimental models support the contention that membrane permeability is altered, ion fluxes impaired, and energy stores depleted under these circumstances. Certain lipids such as diglycerides (DG) and arachidonic acid (AA), both of which are important cellular second messengers, appear to increase during ischemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study demonstrated that nitric oxide, which is an important mammalian metabolite, can inhibit oxidation by lipoxygenase, cyclooxygenase and hemoglobin. The inhibition is manifested as a lag-phase that is reversible. The inhibitory effect of nitric oxide on lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase seems to derive from i) the capability of .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBenzoate monohydroxy compounds, and in particular salicylate, were produced during interaction of ferrous complexes with hydrogen peroxide (Fenton reaction) in a N2 environment. These reactions were inhibited when Fe complexes were flushed, prior to the addition in the model system, by nitric oxide. Methionine oxidation to ethylene by Fenton reagents was also inhibited by nitric oxide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Prostaglandin Thromboxane Leukot Res
March 1991
The appearance of arachidonic acid (AA) oxidation products in fetal rabbit brain and placenta under normal or partial short-term ischemic episodes induced by placental blood vessel restriction was examined. Intracerebral administration of [3H]AA into close-to-term rabbit fetuses gave rise to radioactively labeled prostaglandin (PG) E2, thromboxane B2, and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha metabolites as detected by HPLC analysis. A significant increase of 20-30% of [3H]AA precursor into eicosanoids was detected in brain of fetuses after 2-h restriction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structure of sleep and number of body movements (BMS) and periodic leg movements during sleep (PMS), were studied in three unrelated girls suffering from L-DOPA responsive hereditary dystonia with marked diurnal fluctuation and in their 11 healthy, close relatives. All three girls had an increased number of BMS during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Five of the six parents and three siblings had abnormal PMS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypoxic-ischemic insults caused by placental insufficiency in perinatal life are today considered a major cause for neuronal injury and impaired postnatal development. A major consequence of placental insufficiency and ischemia is the change in metabolism of arachidonic acid and its oxidation products. A burst of postischemic production of prostaglandins, unequivocally shown in many systems, is documented in the fetal rabbit brain as well as in placenta tissue soon after vascular restriction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree Radic Res Commun
July 1989
Methionine was oxidized to ethylene by an "Iron Redox" system containing H2O2, Fe-EDTA and ascorbate, generating hydroxyl radicals or another species of similar reactivity. Oxy or met forms of haemoglobin and myoglobin were found to inhibit methionine oxidation. Methionine oxidation was elevated in the "Iron Redox" system by increasing ascorbic acid concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
October 1988
There is increasing evidence that vitamin D metabolites have a developmental function. We have investigated the influence of the vitamin D status on the activity of creatine kinase in the brain. Normally fed rats show an increase in the specific activity of cerebral and cerebellar creatine kinase during postnatal development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new experimental model for studying the effects of acute ischemia on brain development in the near-term fetal rat has been devised. Ischemic conditions are achieved by complete clamping of blood vessels branching from the uterine vasculature into each individual fetus for designated times followed by removal of the clamps to permit reperfusion. Accumulation of lactic acid in the fetal brain depends on the length of the restriction period, reaching a plateau level of 29 mumol/g tissue at about 30 min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSamples of radiation-sterilized mechanically deboned turkey meat were inoculated with a strain of Campylobacter jejuni , stored at 5°C, and viable counts of the test organism determined during a 7-week period. As compared to results obtained with unsupplemented samples, addition of ascorbic acid or sodium isoascorbate (erythorbate) to the meat, at a concentration of 5 mmol/kg, caused an increase in the death rate of C. jejuni .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe posterior fossa (PF) is a common site of lesions in the brain during childhood and infancy. Sixty pediatric patients with PF lesions shown on CT scans are presented. The most common lesions (48.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree Radic Res Commun
May 1989
The oxidation of 2-keto-4-thiomethyl butyric acid (KTBA) and methionine to ethylene has been used to evaluate generation of ferryl species or hydroxyl radicals by H2O2-activated haemproteins or free ferric ions. Hydrogen peroxide was generated by a glucose oxidase-glucose system at a rate of 1 microM/min. Free ferric in the presence of H2O2 oxidizes KTBA, and this was highly inhibited by hydroxyl radical scavengers, caeruloplasmin, superoxide dismutase (SOD) and EDTA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree Radic Res Commun
May 1989
The reaction of H2O2 with resting metmyoglobin (MetMb), methaemoglobin (MetHb) and cytochrome-c (Cyt-c) was studied in the Soret and visible regions. The differences between the original and the final peak heights of the native haemproteins at 408 nm was found to be directly proportional to the loss of iron from the molecule. The release of iron from haemproteins was studied in a system generating H2O2 continuously at a low rate by an enzymic system, or by addition of large amounts of H2O2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVascular placental insufficiency is considered a common pathogenic factor in human intrauterine growth retardation. To mimic this condition, the rabbit, a 'perinatal brain developer' was utilized as an experimental model. Ischemic conditions were achieved by total ligation of approximately 30% of the uteroplacental vessels of half of the fetuses in each pregnant rabbit in the last third of gestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour cases of hereditary progressive dystonia with diurnal fluctuation were studied. All were sporadic; three of them mimicked spastic diplegia; and the fourth showed some similarity to torsion dystonia. Emotional or cognitive disturbance, or both, was seen in three.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytosolic (100,000 g) fractions of fetal rabbit brain and placenta tissue convert [1-14C]arachidonic acid into several oxidation products identified with the lipoxygenase [12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HETE) and 15-HETE] and cyclooxygenase [prostaglandin E2 (PGE2)] pathways. Formation of 12-HETE and 15-HETE by fetal brain is time-dependent, reaching a plateau after 40 min and is linear with protein concentration. An apparent affinity constant of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebellar ataxia and opsoclonus were the initial manifestations of an associated neuroblastoma in a 20-month-old girl. Two months after the initial symptomatology, a physical examination revealed an abnormal mass palpable left to the midline. Urinary catecholamines were within normal limits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForty-three children with CT studies demonstrating abnormalities in the posterior fossa are presented. Tumors constitute the largest group of lesions (53.5%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA healthy intelligent 13.5-year-old boy is reported who presented with paroxysmal kinesigenic choreoathetosis. He had had unilateral tonic spasms for 2 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDesferrioxamine (DFO) involvement in several peroxidative systems was studied. These systems included: a) membranal lipid peroxidation initiated by H2O2-activated metmyoglobin (or methemoglobin); b) phenol-red oxidation by activated metmyoglobin or horseradish peroxidase (HRP): c) beta-carotene-linoleate couple oxidation stimulated by lipoxygenase or hemin. Desferrioxamine was found to inhibit all these systems but not ferrioxamine (FO).
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