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Tissues anaerobic

Cardiac or ventilatory failure inadequate oxygenation of the tissues anaerobic metabolism release of lactic acid. [Pg.94]

Within a few hours after death the muscles become stiff and rigid. Since the blood no longer delivers oxygen to the tissues, anaerobic metabolism produces lactic acid which lowers the pH. As the ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is depleted, the muscles harden—contract. [Pg.942]

Cefuroxime (35) is effective against community-acquired pneumonia in which ampicillin-resistant Haemophilus influence is the probable etiologic agent. Cefoxitin (23) is used to treat mixed aerobic—anaerobic infections including pelvic infections, intra-abdorninal infections, and nosocomial aspiration pneumonia. Cefonicid (31), because of its long half-life has been used in a once-a-day regimen to treat a variety of mild to moderate infections including community-acquired pneumonias, urinary tract infections, and infections of the skin and soft tissue (132,215). [Pg.39]

Lactate Accumulates Under Anaerobic Conditions in Animal Tissues... [Pg.632]

Antidiabetic Drugs other than Insulin. Figure 3 The antihyperglycaemic effect of metformin involves enhanced insulin-mediated suppression of hepatic glucose production and muscle glucose uptake. Metformin also exerts non-insulin-dependent effects on these tissues, including reduced fatty acid oxidation and increased anaerobic glucose metabolism by the intestine. FA, fatty acid f, increase i decrease. [Pg.119]

Entamoeba histolytica is an anaerobic rhizopod that occurs in tropical and subtropical areas. It can cause intestinal and extraintestinal manifestations. It is transmitted orally by ingestion of cysts that develop into trophozoites in the large intestine. Amebic trophozoites release several cytolytic factors, e.g. amoe-bapore, which enable the parasite to invade tissue. In intestinal amoebiasis, E. histolyticatrophozoites invade the intestinal mucosa, causing a form of ulcerative colitis with bloody and mucous diarrhoea. Extraintestinal manifestation of amebiasis results in abscess formation, usually in the liver but sometimes in the brain. [Pg.477]

Lack of oxygen in blood or tissues. Tissue hypoxia can be caused by injury, inflammation, or tumor growth, due to disruption of blood supply. Tissue hypoxia is normally associated with acidosis, as anaerobic metabolism leads to production of lactic acid. [Pg.610]

The mode of action of metronidazole (Flagyl) is not well understood, but it is thought to disrupt DNA and protein syndiesis in susceptible organisms. This drug may be used in the treatment of serious infections, such as intraabdominal, bone, soft tissue, lower respiratory, gynecologic, and CNS infections caused by susceptible anaerobic (able to live without oxygen) microorganisms. [Pg.102]

In the presence of air, the roots, coleoptile, mesocotyl, endosperm, scutellum, and anther wall of maize synthesise a tissue-specific spectrum of polypeptides. The scutellum and endosperm of the immature kernel synthesise many or all of the ANPs constitutively, along with many other proteins under aerobic conditions. Under anaerobic conditions all of the above organs selectively synthesise only the ANPs. Moreover, except for a few characteristic qualitative and quantitative differences, the patterns of anaerobic protein synthesis in these diverse organs are remarkably similar (Okimoto et al., 1980). On the other hand, maize leaves, which have emerged from the coleoptile, do not incorporate labelled amino acids under anaerobic conditions and do not survive even a brief exposure to anaerobiosis (Okimoto et al., 1980). [Pg.168]

The shift in pattern of protein synthesis during anaerobiosis has been observed in root tissue of many other plant species including rice, sorghum, barley, pea, and carrot (see Sachs Ho, 1986). In anaerobically treated barley aleurone cells, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity increases (Hanson Jacobsen, 1984) as does enzyme activity and mRNA levels for ADH (Hanson, Jacobsen Zwar, 1984). [Pg.168]

Under anaerobic conditions, p,p -DDT is converted to p,p -DDD by reductive dechlorination, a biotransfonnation that occurs postmortem in vertebrate tissues such as liver and muscle and in certain anaerobic microorganisms (Walker and Jefferies 1978). Reductive dechlorination is carried out by reduced iron porphyrins. It is carried out by cytochrome P450 of vertebrate liver microsomes when supplied with NADPH in the absence of oxygen (Walker 1969 Walker and Jefferies 1978). Reductive dechlorination by hepatic microsomal cytochrome P450 can account for the relatively rapid conversion of p,p -DDT to p,p -DDD in avian liver immediately after death, and mirrors the reductive dechlorination of other organochlorine substrates (e.g., CCI4 and halothane) under anaerobic conditions. It is uncertain to what extent, if at all, the reductive dechlorination of DDT occurs in vivo in vertebrates (Walker 1974). [Pg.104]

Glucose is metabolized to pyruvate by the pathway of glycolysis, which can occur anaerobically (in the absence of oxygen), when the end product is lactate. Aerobic tissues metabolize pyruvate to acetyl-CoA, which can enter the citric acid cycle for complete oxidation to CO2 and HjO, linked to the formation of ATP in the process of oxidative phosphorylation (Figure 16-2). Glucose is the major fuel of most tissues. [Pg.122]

Tetanus occurs when Cl. tetani, ubiquitous in the soil and faeces, contaminates wounds, especially deep puncture-type lesions. These might be minor traumas such as a splinter, or major ones such as battle injury. At these sites, tissue necrosis and possibly microbial growth reduce the oxygen tension to allow this anaerobe to multiply. Its growth is accompanied by the production of a highly potent toxin which passes up peripheral nerves and diSuses locally within the central nervous system. It acts like strychnine by affecting normal function at the synapses. Since the motor nerves of the brain stem are the shortest, the cranial nerves are the first affected, with twitches of the eyes and spasms of the jaw (lockjaw). [Pg.85]

This consists of absorbable strands of collagen derived fiom mammahan tissue, particularly the intestine of sheep. Because of its source, it is particularly prone to bacterial contamination, and even anaerobic spores may be found in such material. [Pg.422]

NADH, which enters the Krebs cycle. However, during cerebral ischaemia, metabolism becomes anaerobic, which results in a precipitous decrease in tissue pH to below 6.2 (Smith etal., 1986 Vonhanweh etal., 1986). Tissue acidosis can now promote iron-catalysed free-radical reactions via the decompartmentalization of protein-bound iron (Rehncrona etal., 1989). Superoxide anion radical also has the ability to increase the low molecular weight iron pool by releasing iron from ferritin reductively (Thomas etal., 1985). Low molecular weight iron species have been detected in the brain in response to cardiac arrest. The increase in iron coincided with an increase in malondialdehyde (MDA) and conjugated dienes during the recirculation period (Krause et al., 1985 Nayini et al., 1985). [Pg.76]

The principal function of the circulatory system is to supply oxygen and vital metabolic substrates to cells throughout the body, as well as removal of metabolic waste products. Circulatory shock is a life-threatening condition whereby this principal function is compromised. When circulatory shock is caused by a severe loss of blood volume or body water it is called hypovolemic shock, the focus of this chapter. Regardless of etiology, the most distinctive manifestations of hypovolemic shock are arterial hypotension and metabolic acidosis. Metabolic acidosis is a consequence of an accumulation of lactic acid resulting from tissue hypoxia and anaerobic... [Pg.195]

Acute pancreatitis can progress to several distinct consequences. Pancreatic fluid collections and pancreatic abscesses can form during the course of acute pancreatitis. Pancreatic necrosis can occur when pancreatic enzymes damage the pancreatic tissue or when pancreatic abscesses become secondarily infected. This infection is usually due to bacteria that are normally found in the gastrointestinal tract, including Escherichia coli, Enterobacteriaceae, Staphylococcus aureus, viridans group streptococci, and anaerobes. [Pg.338]

Tinidazole, a second-generation nitroimidazole with protozoal and anaerobic activity, has been available outside the United States for over 30 years.18 Recently, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved it for use in the United States. As a single 2-g dose, tinidazole has an efficacy equivalent to a 2-g dose of metronidazole. Tindazole also has a longer half-life than metronidazole, 14 and 7 hours respectively, and penetrates into male reproductive tissue better than metronidazole. [Pg.1167]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.73 ]




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