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Pathological changes

Health and Safety Factors. Completely fluorinated alkanes are essentially nontoxic (16). Rats exposed for four hours to 80% perfluorocyclobutane and 20% oxygen showed only slight effects on respiration, but no pathological changes in organs. However, some fluorochemicals, especially functionalized derivatives and fluoroolefins, can be lethal. Monofluoroacetic acid and perfluoroisobutylene [382-21-8] are notoriously toxic (16). [Pg.283]

Nowadays the one of the leading cause of death in industrial country is Heart Failure (HF). Under the pathological conditions (e.g., Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD)) the changes in the enzymes activity and ultrastructure of tissue were obtained. The behavior of trace elements may reflect the activity of different types of enzymes. Pathological changes affects only small area of tissue, hence the amount of samples is strictly limited. Thereby, nondestructive multielemental method SRXRF allow to perfonu the analysis of mass samples in a few milligrams, to save the samples, to investigate the elemental distribution on the sample area. [Pg.353]

The elemental homeostasis is the particularity of total homeostasis of organism, the alteration of the parameters of this system may result in pathological changes. The liver is the organ where the detoxication processes take place. The elemental content of the liver may reflect the pathological processes which occur not only in the liver but also in the whole organism. [Pg.387]

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. Table 1 Pathological changes in chronic obstructive pulmonary... [Pg.363]

Pathological changes observed in animals treated with chlorodibenzo-dioxins were inconsistent from animal to animal and species to species. Hepatic lesions were observed consistently, but the nature, degree, and distribution of the lesions were variable. Changes in organs other than the liver were sporadic and unpredictable. Gross and microscopic examination of tissues after chlorodibenzodioxin treatment did not reveal the cause of death. An in-depth evaluation of the toxicity associated with chronic exposure to the chlorodibenzodioxins is needed. [Pg.68]

Few studies have focused on the pathological changes in the spinal cord associated with HIV neuropathy. Selective degeneration of the gracile tract in patients with sensory neuropathy, characterized by loss of axons and myelin sheaths in the... [Pg.66]

An intriguing area of research on opioids has been the accumulating evidence for plasticity in opioid controls. The degree of effectiveness of morphine analgesia is snbject to modulation by other transmitter systems in the spinal cord and by pathological changes induced by peripheral nerve injury. Thus in neuropathic states, pain after nerve injury, morphine analgesia can be reduced (but can still be effective) and tactics other than dose-escalation to circumvent this will be briefly discussed in Chapter 21. [Pg.259]

Evidence from cellular studies in vitro initially showed how oxidative processes could play a central role in the pathological changes involved in the genesis of atherosclerosis. LDL can be oxidatively modified in culture by a range of cell types including endothelial cells (Henriksen et a.1., 1981), arterial smooth muscle cells... [Pg.44]

Neuropathic pain is defined as spontaneous pain and hypersensitivity to pain associated with damage to or pathologic changes in the peripheral nervous system as in painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN), acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), polyneuropathy, post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) or pain originating in the central nervous system (CNS), that which occurs with spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis, and stroke. Functional pain, a relatively newer concept, is pain sensitivity due to an abnormal processing or function of the central nervous system in response to normal stimuli. Several conditions considered to have this abnormal sensitivity or hyperresponsiveness include fibromyalgia and irritable bowel syndrome. [Pg.488]

Hypertension is the most common cardiovascular disease in fact, nearly 25% of adults in the U.S. are considered hypertensive. Hypertension is defined as a consistent elevation in blood pressure such that systolic/diastolic pressures are >140/90 mmHg. Over time, chronic hypertension can cause pathological changes in the vasculature and in the heart. As a result, hypertensive patients are at increased risk for atherosclerosis, aneurysm, stroke, myocardial infarction, heart failure, and kidney failure. There are several categories of antihypertensive agents ... [Pg.210]

Olney, J. W., Labruyere, J. Price, M. T. (1989). Pathological changes induced in cerebrocortical neurons by phencyclidine and related drugs [see comments]. Science 244, 1360-2. [Pg.243]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.757 , Pg.760 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.285 , Pg.286 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.614 ]




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