Nikolay Ivanovich Pirogov, one of the greatest Russian surgeons of the 19th Century, was convinced of the importance of deploying nurses to care for the casualties of war. With the support of Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, sister-in-law of Tsar Nikolas I, Pirogov realised the idea during the Crimean war when Russia became the first country to send female nurses to the battle front. Later in the 19th century, large numbers of Russian women trained as nurses under the auspices of the Russian Red Cross, founded in 1867.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the fabrication of living soft matter made as a result of the symbiotic relationship of two unicellular microorganisms. The material is composed of bacterial cellulose produced in situ by acetobacter (Acetobacter aceti NCIMB 8132) in the presence of photosynthetic microalgae (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cc-124), which integrates into a symbiotic consortium and gets embedded in the produced cellulose composite. The same concept of growing living materials can be applied to other symbiotic microorganism pairs similar to the combination of algae and fungi in lichens, which is widespread in Nature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNikolay Pirogov qualified as a physician from Moscow University in 1828 and then studied surgery and anatomy at University of Dorpat. He developed new surgical techniques, including the eponymous osteoplastic foot amputation. His application of scientifically based techniques extended surgery from a craft to a science.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRhamnose is one of the sugars regularly used to conduct the dual sugar permeability test. For more than 30 years, it has been assumed that rhamnose is an inert sugar not metabolized by the human body and only fermented by some colonic bacteria into rhamnulose. While conducting an investigation on gut permeability in children undergoing cardiac surgery, increased concentrations of rhamnitol were found in the urine samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn searching for an analgesic with fewer side effects than morphine, examination of morphine's active metabolite, morphine-6-glucuronide (M6G), suggests that M6G is possibly such a drug. In contrast to morphine, M6G is not metabolized but excreted via the kidneys and exhibits enterohepatic cycling, as it is a substrate for multidrug resistance transporter proteins in the liver and intestines. M6G exhibits a delay in its analgesic effect (blood-effect site equilibration half-life 4-8 h), which is partly related to slow passage through the blood-brain barrier and distribution within the brain compartment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Pediatric cardiac surgery is associated with a temporary rise in cardiac troponin T (cTnT) during the postoperative period. We examined whether dexamethasone given before cardiopulmonary bypass has myocardial protective effects as assessed by the postoperative production of cTnT.
Design And Setting: Prospective randomized interventional study in the pediatric intensive care unit in a university hospital.
Pediatr Crit Care Med
September 2005
Objective: Intestinal mucosal ischemia can occur during and after cardiac surgery. Severe decreases in mucosal perfusion may be a causative factor for postoperative mortality or complications such as necrotizing enterocolitis. Mesenteric perfusion is challenged preoperatively due to an imbalance between the systemic and pulmonary circulations and challenged intraoperatively due to hypothermic circulatory arrest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
August 2005
Objectives: Little attention has been paid to the effect of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome on intestinal dysfunction in the postoperative period. Several proinflammatory cytokines have been reported to increase the permeability of intestinal mucosa in vitro. We investigated the effect of dexamethasone on gut permeability in pediatric patients undergoing cardiac surgery by using the dual sugar permeability test and absorption of 2 other saccharides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The influence of alfentanil on the pharmacokinetics of propofol is poorly understood. Therefore, the authors studied the effect of a pseudo-steady state concentration of alfentanil on the pharmacokinetics of propofol.
Methods: The pharmacokinetics of propofol were studied on two occasions in eight male volunteers in a randomized crossover manner with a 3-week interval.
Background: Remifentanil is often combined with propofol for induction and maintenance of total intravenous anesthesia. The authors studied the effect of propofol on remifentanil requirements for suppression of responses to clinically relevant stimuli and evaluated this in relation to previously published data on propofol and alfentanil.
Methods: With ethics committee approval and informed consent, 30 unpremedicated female patients with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status class I or II, aged 18-65 yr, scheduled to undergo lower abdominal surgery, were randomly assigned to receive a target-controlled infusion of propofol with constant target concentrations of 2, 4, or 6 microg/ml.
Unlabelled: Anesthetics act in the spinal cord to ablate both movement and the ascending transmission of nociceptive information. We investigated whether a spinal cord action of isoflurane affected cortical activity as determined by the electroencephalogram desynchronization that occurs after electrical stimulation of the midbrain reticular formation (MRF). Six goats were anesthetized with isoflurane, and neck dissections were performed to permit differential isoflurane delivery to the head and torso.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: The enhancing action of propofol on gamma-amino-n-butyric acid subtype A (GABA(A)) receptors purportedly underlies its anesthetic effects. However, a recent study found that a GABA(A) antagonist did not alter the capacity of propofol to depress the righting reflex. We examined whether the noncompetitive GABA(A) antagonist picrotoxin and the competitive GABA(A) antagonist gabazine affected a different anesthetic response, immobility in response to a noxious stimulus (a tail clamp in rats), produced by propofol.
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