•The orexinergic innervation of the cerebral cortex of Cetartiodactyla is described.•All species show a similar innervation pattern.•The density of innervation is far less in cetaceans than ...artiodactyls.
The species of the cetacean and artiodactyl suborders, which constitute the order Cetartiodactyla, exhibit very different sleep phenomenology, with artiodactyls showing typical bihemispheric slow wave and REM sleep, while cetaceans show unihemispheric slow wave sleep and appear to lack REM sleep. The aim of this study was to determine whether cetaceans and artiodactyls have differently organized orexinergic arousal systems by examining the density of orexinergic innervation to the cerebral cortex, as this projection will be involved in various aspects of cortical arousal. This study provides a comparison of orexinergic bouton density in the cerebral cortex of twelve Cetartiodactyla species (ten artiodactyls and two cetaceans) by means of immunohistochemical staining and stereological analysis. It was found that the morphology of the axonal projections of the orexinergic system to the cerebral cortex was similar across all species, as the presence, size and proportion of large and small orexinergic boutons were similar. Despite this, orexinergic bouton density was lower in the cerebral cortex of the cetaceans studied compared to the artiodactyls studied, even when corrected for brain mass, neuron density, glial density and glial:neuron ratio. Results from correlational and principal component analyses indicate that glial density is a major determinant of the observed differences between artiodactyl and cetacean cortical orexinergic bouton density.
Reports on the effects of amiodarone on cardiac function have been variable. This study addresses the effect of long-term amiodarone administration on recovery of cardiac function after a period of ...global ischemia. Normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats were used. Normotensive rats (n = 6) received 240 mg/kg amiodarone for 4 weeks, for a total of 72 ± 3 mg. Hypertensive rats (n = 6) received 500 mg/kg amiodarone for 4 weeks, for a total of 116 ± 5 mg. Final myocardial concentrations of amiodarone and desethylamiodarone were 1.85 ± 1.75 and 0.50 ± 0.61 μg/g wet weight for the normotensive rats and 1.30 ± 0.58 and 0.31 ± 0.17 μg/g for the hypertensive rats (p = nonsignificant). Equal numbers of controls received sterile saline solution for 4 weeks. The hearts were excised and perfused in a Langendorff apparatus. The results indicate that, after 15 minutes of normothermic ischemia, hearts treated with this relatively low dose of amiodarone recovered a greater percentage of preischemic work (97% ± 13%) as compared with the controls (76% ± 17%) (
p < 0.005).
Two types of spongy polyurethane-polydimethylsiloxane blend (Cardiothane 51, Kontron Instruments, Inc., Everett, Mass.) vascular grafts with an internal diameter of 1.5 mm were fabricated by a spray, ...phase-inversion technique. Low-porosity grafts with hydraulic permeability of 2.7 ± 0.4 ml/min per square centimeter and medium-porosity grafts with hydraulic permeability of 39 ± 8 ml/min per square centimeter displayed good handling properties and suturability. Twelve straight low-porosity grafts, 17 straight medium-porosity grafts (1.5 to 2.0 cm in length), and one loop medium-porosity graft (10 cm in length) were implanted by the same surgeon end to end in the infrarenal aorta of 30 male Sprague-Dawley rats. Three months after implantation, patency was 8% for low-porosity grafts (1/12) and 76% for straight medium-porosity grafts (13/17). The loop medium-porosity graft was also patent. The sole patent low-porosity graft showed neointimal hyperplasia and incomplete endothelialization. All but one of the patent straight medium-porosity grafts showed a glistening and transparent neointima with complete endothelialization and no anastomotic hyperplasia. The loop medium-porosity graft displayed endothelialization from each anastomosis and in many islands in the middle portion of the graft, totaling 47% of the luminal surface by morphometric analysis. Thick mural thrombus, anastomotic hyperplasia, or aneurysm formation were not observed in any patent medium-porosity graft. These data indicate that in the rat aortic replacement model it is possible to achieve patency and a high degree of endothelialization in very small-diameter prostheses of appropriate porosity.
Within 30 days of acute myocardial infarction, 108 consecutive patients underwent urgent surgical myocardial revascularization for postinfarction angina between July 1976 and March 1983. There were ...84 men and 24 women whose mean age was 59.6 ± 9.5 years (range 34 to 80). Group I (15 patients, 14%) underwent surgery within 48 hours, Group H (47 patients, 43%) between 3 and 7 days and Group III (46 patients, 43%) within 30 days. Fifty-nine patients (55%) had transmural infarction. The ejection fraction was less than 40% in 21 patients (19%). Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was 20 mm Hg or greater in 42 patients (39%). The incidence of single, double, triple vessel and 70% or greater left main coronary artery stenosis was 4, 20, 59 and 17%, respectively.
There were two deaths (1.8%) within 30 days of operation. The incidence of intraaortic balloon pumping was higher in patients operated on earlier after myocardial infarction (53% of Group I versus 22% of Group III). Statistically, there were no differences in the use of inotropic agents or the occurrence of arrhythmias or postoperative myocardial infarction in the three groups. Late follow-up (mean 35 months, range 18 to 98) is complete for all patients (100%). There were four late myocardial infarctions and eight deaths. Actuarial survival was 87% at 5 years. Seventy-three percent of the 108 patients were free of angina and the condition of 14% improved.
These results indicate that myocardial revascularization in the first 30 days after myocardial infarction can be accomplished with morbidity and mortality rates similar to those of an elective operation for chronic angina refractory to medical management.
In 40 consecutive patients undergoing coronary artery bypass, one of two solutions for cardioplegia, each containing 30 mEq/L of K
+ was used randomly. The groups were comparable except for ...intramyocardial temperature. With electrolyte solution (Group A), it was 16.5° ± 0.34°C, while with blood from the pump-oxygenator (Group B) it was 20.3° ± 0.41°C (
p < 0.001). After bypass left atrial pressure (LAP) was 11.9 ± 0.67 torr in Group A and 8.1 ± 0.49 torr in Group B (
p < 0.001). CPK-MB was elevated in 45% of Group A patients versus 15% in Group B (
p < 0.05). No patient died. Two myocardial infarctions occurred in Group A and one in Group B. Stereological morphometric electron microscopy was performed on biopsy specimens taken from the left ventricle (1) before perfusion, (2) after cardioplegia, and (3) 30 minutes after reperfusion. Group A showed marked intracellular edema, mitochondrial swelling, pronounced depletion of glycogen stores, and focal myofibrillary disorganization. Group B showed near normal myocardial ultrastructure with increased glycogen stores and minimal mitochondrial swelling. Morphometric analysis revealed a statistically significant increase in the degree of mitochondrial swelling (51%) in Group A compared with Group B after reperfusion (
p < 0.001). Thus, blood K
+ cardioplegia resulted in better preservation of myocardial ultrastructure, lower ventricular filling pressure, and lesser CPK-MB release compared with this particular electrolyte cardioplegia.
1.The work of breathing, measured from pressure volume loops, was determined preoperatively and postoperatively in 20 patients following open-heart surgery for acquired valvular disease. In all ...patients the work of breathing was twice normal before operation.2.Thirteen surviving patients had physiologically insignificant increase in the work of breathing on the first or second day following the operation. This change does not explain the respiratory difficulties experienced by these patients.3.In seven fatal cases, the respiratory work increased an average of five times the preoperative value (ten times normal). In such patients, the excessive work of breathing produces a significant demand upon the cardiac output, and controlled mechanical ventilation is indicated in the postoperative period.