Publications by authors named "L S Tikhonova"

Article Synopsis
  • * All patients underwent thorough pre-operative evaluations, confirming malignant testicular lesions, and the surgeries proceeded without complications.
  • * The laparoscopic method proved to be minimally invasive, leading to lower postoperative pain, quicker recovery, and fewer complications compared to traditional open surgery.
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The intrarenal reflux is caused by impaired emptying of the renal pelvis, that leads to increased intrarenal pressure. Increased pelvis pressure can be the result of a variety of states. The most common causes are acute upper urinary tract obstruction or overfilling of the pelvis during retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS) or retrograde pyelography.

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Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neuropsychiatric syndrome that develops in patients with severe liver dysfunction and/or portocaval shunting. Despite more than a century of research into the relationship between liver damage and development of encephalopathy, pathogenetic mechanisms of hepatic encephalopathy have not yet been fully elucidated. It is generally recognized, however, that the main trigger of neurologic complications in hepatic encephalopathy is the neurotoxin ammonia/ammonium, concentration of which in the blood increases to toxic levels (hyperammonemia), when detoxification function of the liver is impaired.

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(1) Background: Valproic acid (VPA) is one of the frequently prescribed antiepileptic drugs and is generally considered well tolerated. However, VPA neurologic adverse effects in the absence of liver failure are fairly common, suggesting that in the mechanism for the development of VPA-induced encephalopathy, much more is involved than merely the exposure to hyperammonemia (HA) caused by liver insufficiency to perform detoxification. Taking into account the importance of the relationship between an impaired brain energy metabolism and elevated ammonia production, and based on the ability of VPA to interfere with neuronal oxidative pathways, the current study intended to investigate a potential regional ammoniagenic effect of VPA on rats' brains by determining activities of the enzymes responsible for ammonia production and neutralization.

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Hepatic encephalopathy (HE), a neuropsychiatric disorder developing in patients with severe hepatic dysfunction, has been known for more than a century. However, pathogenetic mechanisms of cerebral dysfunction associated with liver disease are still poorly understood. There is a consensus that the primary cause of HE is accumulation of ammonia in the brain as a result of impaired liver detoxification capacity or the portosystemic shunt.

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