THE ACTION OF THYROID HORMONES ON THE OXYGEN CONSUMPTION AND RESISTANCE TO COLD OF ADRENALECTOMIZED AND THYROIDECTOMIZED-ADRENALECTOMIZED MICE

1958 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 396-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. GANJU ◽  
MARY F. LOCKETT

SUMMARY The effect of thyroid medication on the oxygen uptake and resistance to cold of normal, adrenalectomized (adx) and thyroidectomized-adrenalectomized (thyx-adx) mice was studied. All adx animals were maintained on salt. 1. 3–12 mg dried thyroid gland or 2·5 μg l-thyroxine, given daily for 7 days, prolonged the survival times of adx and thyx-adx mice in cold. 24 mg, however, decreased survival time. 2. 3–6 mg dried thyroid gland given daily for 6 days raised the oxygen uptake of both normal and thyroidectomized (thyx) but not of adx mice. 3. 10 μg l-thyroxine given daily for 14 days increased the oxygen uptake of adx mice, but 40 μg failed to do so in mice which were also thyx.

1957 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. MATTY

SUMMARY 1. Thyroidectomy of the teleost parrot fish, Pseudoscarus guacamaia, is described. 2. Pseudoscarus is able to survive for at least 3 months in the absence of the thyroid gland. It is concluded, therefore, that the gland is not essential for the maintenance of life in this species. 3. Thyroidectomy does not result in any change in the oxygen consumption of parrot fish. Likewise, injection of l-thyroxine or an extract of parrot fish thyroid into intact parrot fish does not affect the rate of oxygen uptake.


1964 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. C. THORNBURN ◽  
A. J. MATTY

SUMMARY Isolated tissues of the toad Bufo bufo were treated in vitro with thyroxine and triiodothyronine, and their oxygen uptake determined by conventional Warburg manometry. The respiration of the urinary bladder was stimulated by the hormones, and that of the kidney was reduced. Skin, heart, and muscle were affected to a lesser extent, the effect varying with dose and hormone.


1959 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-223
Author(s):  
H. Schachter ◽  
S. Sidlofsky ◽  
D. G. Baker ◽  
J. R. Hamilton ◽  
R. E. Haist

Previous exposure to a cold environment for a period of 12 weeks increased the incidence of survival and prolonged the survival time of heavy rats shocked by a clamping technique. The oxygen consumption at 27 °C in rats previously exposed to cold for 12 weeks was elevated. During the clamping period the oxygen consumption became more nearly the same in the cold-acclimatized and control rats. After release of the clamps there was a slower fall in oxygen consumption in the previously cold-acclimatized rats than in the control animals. The body temperature, measured in the colon, fell more slowly in the previously cold-exposed rats than in the control rats. This slower fall in colonic temperature was found also in rats previously exposed to cold for shorter periods and was not necessarily associated with changes in survival time. Rats exposed to cold for 6 weeks were "acclimatized" in the sense that they withstood exposure to cold after removal of their fur, but they failed to show significantly lengthened survival times when shocked by this clamping procedure. The administration of thyroxine shortened survival times in the shocked rats but reduced the rate of fall of colonic temperature. The administration of cortisone, thyroxine, and cortisone plus thyroxine shortened survival times in the shocked rats.


1959 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 211-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Schachter ◽  
S. Sidlofsky ◽  
D. G. Baker ◽  
J. R. Hamilton ◽  
R. E. Haist

Previous exposure to a cold environment for a period of 12 weeks increased the incidence of survival and prolonged the survival time of heavy rats shocked by a clamping technique. The oxygen consumption at 27 °C in rats previously exposed to cold for 12 weeks was elevated. During the clamping period the oxygen consumption became more nearly the same in the cold-acclimatized and control rats. After release of the clamps there was a slower fall in oxygen consumption in the previously cold-acclimatized rats than in the control animals. The body temperature, measured in the colon, fell more slowly in the previously cold-exposed rats than in the control rats. This slower fall in colonic temperature was found also in rats previously exposed to cold for shorter periods and was not necessarily associated with changes in survival time. Rats exposed to cold for 6 weeks were "acclimatized" in the sense that they withstood exposure to cold after removal of their fur, but they failed to show significantly lengthened survival times when shocked by this clamping procedure. The administration of thyroxine shortened survival times in the shocked rats but reduced the rate of fall of colonic temperature. The administration of cortisone, thyroxine, and cortisone plus thyroxine shortened survival times in the shocked rats.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 40-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Volkova ◽  
O. D. Dygun ◽  
B. G. Lukichev ◽  
S. V. Dora ◽  
O. V. Galkina

Disturbance of the thyroid function is often detected in patients with different profiles. A special feature of patients with chronic kidney  disease is the higher incidence of various thyroid function  disturbances, especially hypothyroidism. It is known that in patients  with chronic kidney disease (CKD) iodine excretion from the body is  violated, since normally 90% of iodine is excreted in urine.  Accumulation of high concentrations of inorganic iodine leads to the  formation of the Wolf-Chaikoff effect: suppression of iodine  organization in the thyroid gland and disruption of the thyroid  hormones synthesis. Peripheral metabolism of thyroid hormones is  also disturbed, namely, deiodinase type I activity is suppressed and  peripheral conversion of T4 into T3 is inhibited (so-called low T3  syndrome). Therefore, patients with CKD are often diagnosed with  hypothyroidism, and the origin of hypothyroidism is not always  associated with the outcome of autoimmune thyroiditis. The article  presents an overview of a large number of population studies of  thyroid gland dysfunction in patients with CKD, as well as  experimental data specifying the pathogenetic mechanisms of  thyroid dysfunction in patients with CKD. Therapeutic tactics are still  not regulated. However, in a number of studies, replacement therapy with thyroid hormones in patients with CKD had some advantages.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (s1) ◽  
pp. 37-37
Author(s):  
Jo Ellen Wilson ◽  
Sarasota Mihalko ◽  
Stephan Heckers ◽  
Pratik P. Pandharipande ◽  
Timothy D. Girard ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Delirium, a form of acute brain dysfunction, characterized by changes in attention and alertness, is a known independent predictor of mortality in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). We sought to understand whether catatonia, a more recently recognized form of acute brain dysfunction, is associated with increased 30-day mortality in critically ill older adults. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We prospectively enrolled critically ill patients at a single institution who were on a ventilator or in shock and evaluated them daily for delirium using the Confusion Assessment for the ICU and for catatonia using the Bush Francis Catatonia Rating Scale. Coma, was defined as a Richmond Agitation Scale score of −4 or −5. We used the Cox Proportional Hazards model predicting 30-day mortality after adjusting for delirium, coma and catatonia status. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We enrolled 335 medical, surgical or trauma critically ill patients with 1103 matched delirium and catatonia assessments. Median age was 58 years (IQR: 48 - 67). Main indications for admission to the ICU included: airway disease or protection (32%; N=100) or sepsis and/or shock (25%; N=79. In the unadjusted analysis, regardless of the presence of catatonia, non-delirious individuals have the highest median survival times, while delirious patients have the lowest median survival time. Comparing the absence and presence of catatonia, the presence of catatonia worsens survival (Figure 1). In a time-dependent Cox model, comparing non-delirious individuals, holding catatonia status constant, delirious individuals have 1.72 times the hazards of death (IQR: 1.321, 2.231) while those with coma have 5.48 times the hazards of death (IQR: 4.298, 6.984). For DSM-5 catatonia scores, a 1-unit increase in the score is associated with 1.18 times the hazards of in-hospital mortality. Comparing two individuals with the same delirium status, an individual with a DSM-5 catatonia score of 0 (no catatonia) will have 1.178 times the hazard of death (IQR: 1.086, 1.278), while an individual with a score of 3 catatonia items (catatonia) present will have 1.63 times the hazard of death. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: Non-delirious individuals have the highest median survival times, while those who are comatose have the lowest median survival times after a critical illness, holding catatonia status constant. Comparing the absence and presence of catatonia, the presence of catatonia seems to worsen survival. Those individual who are both comatose and catatonic have the lowest median survival time.


1982 ◽  
Vol 202 (3) ◽  
pp. 661-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
D G Clark ◽  
M Brinkman ◽  
O H Filsell ◽  
S J Lewis ◽  
M N Berry

(Na+ + K+)-dependent ATPase activity, heat production and oxygen consumption were increased by 59%, 62% and 75% respectively in hepatocytes from tri-iodothyronine-treated rats. Ouabain at concentrations of 1 and 10 mM decreased oxygen uptake by 2-8% in hepatocytes from euthyroid rats and by 5-15% in hepatocytes from hyperthyroid animals. Heat output was decreased by 4-9% with the glycoside in isolated liver parenchymal cells from the control animals and by 11% in the cells from the tri-iodothyronine-treated animals. These results do not support the hypothesis that hepatic (Na+ + K+)-ATPase plays a major role in increased heat production in hepatocytes from hyperthyroid rats.


2009 ◽  
Vol 77 (9) ◽  
pp. 3948-3957 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgit Rathkolb ◽  
Harry A. Noyes ◽  
Andy Brass ◽  
Paul Dark ◽  
Helmut Fuchs ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Trypanosoma congolense is a protozoan parasite that causes severe diseases in livestock. Three major quantative trait loci (QTL), Tir1, Tir2, and Tir3, control the survival time of mice after infection with T. congolense. Congenic mice carrying the C57BL/6 resistance alleles on the A/J background were developed for each of these loci. The congenic mice were used to physically map the regions containing the QTL gene(s) and to investigate the physiological effect of each locus. Clinical chemistry data for infected A/J, C57BL/6, and BALB/c mice were obtained for 15 analytes at five time points. Congenic mice were assessed for survival, parasitemia, and anemia as well as seven clinical-chemical analytes. The survival times were significantly increased in the Tir1 and Tir2 mice but not Tir3 congenic mice. The survival time of the parental inbred mice correlated negatively with parasitemia but positively with alanine aminotransferase activities in serum, suggesting that inflammatory reactions in the liver had a beneficial effect possibly associated with reduced parasitemia. However, there was no difference in parasitemia or liver enzyme activities of Tir1 and Tir2 congenic mice relative to their controls, showing that survival, parasitemia, and degree of liver damage are not associated with each other, despite the correlation in the parental lines. These data suggest that the congenic loci affect survival but do not affect control of parasite number. They may therefore act by limiting the pathological consequences of T. congolense infection.


Parasitology ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. E. Rumpus ◽  
C. R. Kennedy

The respiration rates of individual Gammarus pulex infected by larval Pomphorhynchus laevis were investigated with particular reference to the stage of development of the host and parasite and to the water temperature. At 20°C the oxygen consumption of Gammarus of all sizes was reduced by an average of 19·3 % by the presence of cystacanths of the parasite, but was unaffected by the presence of acanthellae. It is considered that the small size of this larval stage, in relation to that of its host, is responsible for the failure to detect an effect. Multiple infections did not exert any greater effect upon host respiration than single cystacanths, nor did it appear that the parasite had different effects upon hosts of different sexes. At 10°C no significant differences were observed between the respiration rates of infected and uninfected gammarids. The parasite was probably still depressing the host respiration rate at this temperature, but the oxygen uptake of G. pulex is so low that the differences between infected and uninfected individuals were too small to be detected. The parasite has a direct effect upon the physiological processes of the host, but neither the mechanism of this nor the reasons for the different effects found in different host-parasite systems are yet understood. Despite the pronounced effect of P. laevis on respiration of individual hosts, its effect upon the oxygen consumption of a natural host population is small since only a small proportion of the population carries infections and water temperatures remain below 10°C for over half the year.


2008 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
MB. Cunha-Santino ◽  
SP. Gouvêa ◽  
I. Bianchini Jr ◽  
AAH. Vieira

This study aimed to discuss and describe the oxygen consumption during aerobic mineralization of organic products (cells and excretion products) from five unialgal cultures: Cryptomonas sp., Microcystis aeruginosa, Anabaena spiroides, Thalassiosira sp. and Aulacoseira granulata. These species were isolated from Barra Bonita reservoir (22º 29’ S and 48º 34’ W) and cultivated in the laboratory. From each culture, two decomposition chambers were prepared; each chamber contained about 130 mg.L-1 of carbon from water samples of the reservoir. The chambers were aerated and incubated in the dark at 20.0 ºC. The concentration of dissolved oxygen, pH values and electrical conductivity of the solutions were determined during a period of 10 days. The results indicated increases in oxygen consumption for all the solutions studied and also for electrical conductivity. The pH values presented a decreasing tendency throughout the experiment. Oxygen consumption varied from 43 (Aulacoseira granulata chamber) to 345 mg O2 g-1 C (Anabaena spiroides chamber). Decrease in pH values was probably due to increase in CO2 concentration from microbial respiration. Increase in electrical conductivity might be due to the liberation of ions during decomposition. The results demonstrate the potentiality of the studied genera in influencing oxygen availability followed by a die-off event. It also indicates the possibility of changing of the electrical conductivity and pH values in the water column due the aerobic algae mineralization.


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