Dynamics of the body liquids and composition in long-duration space flight (Bioimpedance Analysis)

2011 ◽  
Vol 37 (7) ◽  
pp. 821-825
Author(s):  
V. B. Noskov ◽  
I. A. Nichiporuk ◽  
A. I. Grigoriev
Author(s):  
Max Fink MD

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an effective medical treatment for severe and persistent psychiatric disorders. It relieves de pressed mood and thoughts of suicide, as well as mania, acute psychosis, delirium, and stupor. It is usually applied when medications have given limited relief or their side effects are intolerable. Electroconvulsive therapy is similar to a surgical treatment. It requires the specialized skills of a psychiatrist, an anesthesiologist, and nurses. The patient receives a short-acting anesthetic. While the patient is asleep, the physician, following a prescribed procedure, induces an epileptic seizure in the brain. By making sure that the patient’s lungs are filled with oxygen, the physician precludes the gasping and difficult breathing that accompany a spontaneous epileptic fit. By relaxing the patient’s muscles with chemicals and by inserting a mouth guard (not unlike those used in sports), the physician prevents the tongue biting, fractures, and injuries that occasionally occur in epilepsy. The patient is asleep, and so experiences neither the painful effects of the stimulus nor the discomforts of the seizure. The physiological functions of the body, such as breathing, heart rate, blood pressure, blood oxygen concentration, and degree of motor relaxation, are monitored, and anything out of the ordinary is immediately treated. Electroconvulsive therapy relieves symptoms more quickly than do psychotropic drugs. A common course of ECT consists of two or three treatments a week for two to seven weeks. To sustain the recovery, weekly or biweekly continuation treatments, either ECT or medications, are often administered for four to six months. If the illness recurs, ECT is prescribed for longer periods. The duration and course of ECT are similar to those of the psychotropic medicines frequently used for the same conditions. Electroconvulsive therapy has been used safely to treat emotional disorders in patients of all ages, from children to the elderly, in people with debilitating physical illnesses, and in pregnant women. Emotional disorders may be of short or long duration; they may be manifest as a single episode or as a recurring event. Electroconvulsive treatment is an option when the emotional disorder is acute in onset; when changes in mood, thought, and motor activities are pronounced; when the cause is believed to be biochemical or physiological; when the condition is so severe that it interferes with the patient’s daily life; or when other treatments have failed.


1988 ◽  
Vol 255 (4) ◽  
pp. G409-G416 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Matsumoto ◽  
S. K. Sarna ◽  
R. E. Condon ◽  
W. J. Dodds ◽  
N. Mochinaga

We investigated whether the gallbladder has cyclic motor activity similar to that of the stomach, lower esophageal sphincter, and sphincter of Oddi in the fasted state. We found that the canine gallbladder infundibulum exhibited a cyclic burst of short duration (69 +/- 3 s) contractions that were closely associated with phase III activity of the antrum. The cyclic motor activity was sometimes less prominent or absent in the body and the fundus of the gallbladder. The mean period of gallbladder cyclic motor activity was not significantly different from the mean period of phase III activity in the stomach and the duodenum. The cyclic bursts of gallbladder contractions lasted for 21 +/- 2 min. The gallbladder cyclic motor activity started at about the same time as the antral phase III activity, and both of these activities started approximately 12 min earlier than the duodenal phase III activity. In addition to the aforementioned cyclic bursts of contractions, the gallbladder sometimes exhibited long duration (6.4 +/- 0.6 min) contractions that occurred irregularly and unpredictably during the duodenal migrating motor complex cycle. We conclude that during fasting the canine gallbladder has a cyclic motor activity that is temporally related to phase III activity of the stomach and the duodenum. The role of short duration phasic contractions during cyclic motor activity may be to periodically stir gallbladder contents, whereas the long duration contractions may partially empty the gallbladder in the fasted state.


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