Turpentine oil, owing to the presence of 7-50 terpenes, has analgesic, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, antibacterial, anticoagulant, antioxidant, and antitumor properties, which are important for medical emulsion preparation. The addition of turpentine oil to squalene emulsions can increase their effectiveness, thereby reducing the concentration of expensive and possibly deficient squalene, and increasing its stability and shelf life. In this study, squalene emulsions were obtained by adding various concentrations of turpentine oil via high-pressure homogenization, and the safety and effectiveness of the obtained emulsions were studied in vitro and in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMauthner neurons (MN)*, specific multifunctional neurons of fish, are a unique object for investigating the adaptive potentialities of the cell. The goal of the work was to study the structure of MN of fish Percсottus glehni during wintering under the conditions of hypothermia and deficit of oxygen and energy substrates. It was shown using a light microscope that the volume of the somatic moiety of neurons changes slightly at the beginning of wintering and is significantly reduced by the termination of wintering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCephalosomatic anastomosis requires neuroprotective techniques, such as deep hypothermia, to preserve brain activity. Despite the failure of pharmacologic neuroprotection, new strategies, including ischemic pre- and postconitioning and the use of Perftoran, have to be explored to complement hypothermia. This article summarizes the field of brain protection during CSA and these promising strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Endocrinol (Lausanne)
February 2015
Aging is the phenotype resulting from accumulation of genetic, cellular, and molecular damages. Many factors have been identified as either the cause or consequence of age-related decline in functions and repair mechanisms. The hypothalamus is the source and a target of many of these factors and hormones responsible for the overall homeostasis in the body.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConditions for the realization in rats of moderate physiological stress (PHS) (30-120 min) were selected, which preferentially increase adaptive restorative processes without adverse responses typical of harmful stress (HST). The succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (KDH) activity and the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in mitochondria were measured in lymphocytes by the cytobiochemical method, which detects the regulation of mitochondria in the organism with high sensitivity. These mitochondrial markers undergo an initial 10-20-fold burst of activity followed by a decrease to a level exceeding the quiescent state 2-3-fold by 120 min of PHS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMenopausal transition is often accompanied by a variety of adverse pathological symptoms, currently treated with hormone replacement therapy, which is associated with a number of health risks. This report investigated the role of a food supplement--a composition of energy-exchange metabolites, with succinate as the main component--for treating menopausal syndrome. We studied the impact of a 4-week succinate-based food composition (SBC) treatment on the estral cycle, and bone mass and calcium content of aging mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtif Cells Blood Substit Immobil Biotechnol
May 2005
Clinical experience of Perftoran (commercial drug of low concentrated perfluorocheminal emulsion) applications is presented in some statistical data and in brief analysis of clinical trials and following clinical studies described in the Russian scientific literature. Observed data allow us to suppose that Perftoran facilitates oxygen delivery together with remaining red blood cells at blood replacements and will have more wider area for application than just a blood substitute. Its infusion alleviates symptoms of ischemia at different types of occlusion vessels disease, improves grafting in plastic surgery, diminishes inflammation and prevents rejection of transplants, activates detoxication functions of liver, inhibits retro-virus infection development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFunctional recovery after burn injury can be significantly limited by scar contraction and contracture. Mechanisms to explain these problems are not well described. Surface (shear) waves were generated in normal skin and hypertrophic burn scar with a newly described device.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe steady-state oxidation of 2 mM pyruvate in pigeon and rat heart mitochondria in the presence of ADP-glucose-hexokinase load can be strongly inhibited by excess (10-40 mM) of pyruvate or beta-hydroxybutyrate. This inhibition is accompanied by the accumulation of alpha-ketoglutarate and a decrease of malate. The mechanism of such substrate inhibition may be associated with the limitation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle flux by low levels of oxaloacetate and free CoA due to their being trapped as alpha-ketoglutarate and acetyl-CoA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCold acclimation of Wistar rats for 2-4 weeks at about 3 degrees C resulted in an increased respiration rate and a reduced ADP/O ratio in liver mitochondria. With increasing duration of acclimation up to 10-12 weeks, these parameters returned to a normal level. The increase in the respiration rate and the decline of the mitochondrial ADP/O ratio were associated with a significant activation of the electroneutral release of Ca2+.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF