phenylephrine-hydrochloride and Dehydration

phenylephrine-hydrochloride has been researched along with Dehydration* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for phenylephrine-hydrochloride and Dehydration

ArticleYear
Angularis oculi vein blood flow modulates the magnitude but not the control of selective brain cooling in sheep.
    American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology, 2011, Volume: 300, Issue:6

    To investigate the role of the angularis oculi vein (AOV) in selective brain cooling (SBC), we measured brain and carotid blood temperatures in six adult female Dorper sheep. Halfway through the study, a section of the AOV, just caudal to its junction with the dorsal nasal vein, was extirpated on both sides. Before and after AOV surgery, the sheep were housed outdoors at 21-22°C and were exposed in a climatic chamber to daytime heat (40°C) and water deprivation for 5 days. In sheep outdoors, SBC was significantly lower after the AOV had been cut, with its 24-h mean reduced from 0.25 to 0.01°C (t(5) = 3.06, P = 0.03). Carotid blood temperature also was lower (by 0.28°C) at all times of day (t(5) = 3.68, P = 0.01), but the pattern of brain temperature was unchanged. The mean threshold temperature for SBC was not different before (38.85 ± 0.28°C) and after (38.85 ± 0.39°C) AOV surgery (t(5) =0.00, P = 1.00), but above the threshold, SBC magnitude was about twofold less after surgery. SBC after AOV surgery also was less during heat exposure and water deprivation. However, SBC increased progressively by the same magnitude (0.4°C) over the period of water deprivation, and return of drinking water led to rapid cessation of SBC in sheep before and after AOV surgery. We conclude that the AOV is not the only conduit for venous drainage contributing to SBC in sheep and that, contrary to widely held opinion, control of SBC does not involve changes in the vasomotor state of the AOV.

    Topics: Animals; Body Temperature; Body Temperature Regulation; Brain; Carotid Arteries; Cavernous Sinus; Dehydration; Female; Ligation; Nose; Regional Blood Flow; Sheep, Domestic; Veins

2011
Experimentally induced changes in nasal mucous secretory systems and their effect on virus infection in chickens. I. Effect on mucosal mrphology and function.
    The Journal of experimental medicine, 1969, Jul-01, Volume: 130, Issue:1

    The domestic chicken was used as an experimental model in which to demonstrate morphological and functional relationships of nasal organ systems, principally of mucous systems. Mucous secretions of olfactory, respiratory, lacrimal, and accessory areas were found to have clear histochemical differences, yet were sufficiently miscible in normal circumstances to form an unbroken, synchronously moving sheet. Changes induced experimentally in host physiology did not all affect the mucous components of given areas in the same way or to the same degree. Mucosal changes were produced by the following methods: Topically administered cocaine 20%, in a single application, temporarily paralyzed the cilia, and the consequently reduced traction apparently held mucus in the acini and effected a temporary lag in mucus excretion. Three successive applications caused acute acinar depletion and ciliary paralysis. Hexylcaine chloride 5% immediately desquamated all intranasal epithelia, damaged the proximal portion of the acini, and induced acinar exhaustion and mucosal inflammation-effects not overcome within 5(1/2) days. Internal dehydration produced progressively viscous mucus, severe acinar gaping with mucus anchored in the acini, a heavy surface sheet, and deceleration or arrest of mucociliary flow. Avitaminosis A induced reduction in the height (about 50%) of all mucosae and acini, especially the inner lining of the maxillary concha, caused an actual 50% reduction in the number of cells per acinus, and retarded the mucociliary flow rate about 50%. Pilocarpine induced initial hypersecretion, later exhaustion, and, still later, slow production of densely staining mucus in the acinar cells; also acinar gaping. Breeding in a germfree environment produced a greatly reduced mucosal depth throughout the nasal fossa, an extraordinary reduction in the number of cells per acinus, relative reduction in the number of acinar neck cells, and concomitant increase in ciliated cells in that region. Exposure to a temperature of -20 degrees C for 1 hr caused blanching of all secretory cells, acinar gaping, and temporary reduction of mucosal depth.

    Topics: Amino Alcohols; Animals; Chickens; Cilia; Cocaine; Cold Temperature; Dehydration; Ethers; Germ-Free Life; Mucus; Nasal Mucosa; Nose; Pilocarpine; Virus Diseases; Vitamin A Deficiency

1969
Effect of water deprivation on nasal mucous flow.
    Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.), 1961, Volume: 106

    Topics: Birds; Dehydration; Mucous Membrane; Mucus; Nose; Respiratory Physiological Phenomena; Respiratory System; Water Deprivation

1961