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  • 1
    ISSN: 1520-5010
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Medicine
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pflügers Archiv 380 (1979), S. 65-70 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Hemoglobinemia ; Hypoxia in mice ; Altitude exposure ; Heme oxygenase induction ; 2,3-DPG ; Splenic hypertrophy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Male and female mice were exposed to a simulated altitude of 5,500m for 10, 30 or 90 days. After exposure to altitude for 90 days one group of each sex was then returned to sea level pressures for 10 days. In addition to the expected increases in hematocrit and hemoglobin, altitude exposure increased the 2,3-DPG content of red cells. Maximum values of 2,3-DPG (μmoles/g hemoglobin) occurred after 10 days at altitude and thereafter declined to values comparable to those in sea level mice despite continued exposure to hypoxia. As previously described for rats, mice also exhibit an altitude-induced hemoglobinemia which occurs in the face of a polycythemia. Plasma hemoglobin concentrations were at a steady state after about 30 days at altitude. Both sexes also showed a significant splenic hypertrophy, a bilirubinemia and a hemoglobinuria as a result of altitude exposure. As assessed in male mice a significant induction of heme oxygenase activity occurred in the kidneys but not in the spleen or liver. The latter finding contrasts with results previously observed in rats where induction of heme oxygenase occurs in the liver desplte a decrease in the liver/body weight ratio. Sex differences in the response to hypoxia previously observed with rats also occur in mice. The altitude-induced rise in hematocrit but not hemoglobin appears to be more pronounced in males as was the failure to gain weight. Perhaps both male mice and rats are more severely compromised by altitude than are females of the same species The time course of the hemoglobinemia and its reversal at sea level paralleled the changes in hemoglobin and hematocrit suggesting that it was correlated with the demand on hematopoietic effort. Perhaps the hemoglobinemia is secondary to ineffective hematopoiesis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-0738
    Keywords: Methemoglobin ; Hemoglobin ; Autoxidation ; Acationox
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Some mammalian hemoglobins, e.g., dog, cat and to lesser extents mouse and rat, exhibit a greatly increased rate of autoxidation in solutions containing low concentrations of a nonionic detergent. Human, rabbit and hamster hemoglobins were more stable toward detergent. Human hemoglobin was the most stable under these conditions, but even so its rate of autoxidation was at least five times faster with detergent than with saponin where the hemoglobins of all species appeared to be equally stable. Among the more unstable hemoglobins the rate of autoxidation in the presence of detergent was so rapid that it compromised the accuracy of methemoglobin analyses. The results of tests for detergent-induced heme loss suggested that the detergent did not significantly increase the thermolability of any of the hemoglobins tested.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-0738
    Keywords: Cyanide ; Hydroxylamine ; Nitrite ; Dimethylaminophenol ; Methemoglobin ; Sulfide
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Intraperitoneal doses of 4-dimethylaminophenol hydrochloride (DMAP), hydroxylamine hydrochloride (H2NOH) and sodium nitrite (NaNO2) were found where each converted a maximum of about 37% of the total circulating hemoglobin in mice to methemoglobin. Those doses in mmol/kg were: 0.29 for DMAP, 1.1 for H2NOH, and 1.1 for NaNO2. For DMAP and H2NOH the peak was sharp and at about 7 min after injection whereas for NaNO2 the peak was much broader and at about 40 min. The i.p. LD50's in mmol/kg were: 0.48 for DMAP, 1.8 for H2NOH and 2.3 for NaNO2. When mice pretreated with each of the methemoglobin-generating agents were challenged with sodium cyanide, the ratios of the LD50's in protected mice to those in control mice (protection index, PI) were 1.5 for H2NOH, 2.0 for DMAP and 3.1 for NaNO2. When sodium thiosulfate was also given in combination with each of the three methemoglobin-generating agents, the protective effect was at least additive. The PI against sodium sulfide was also significantly greater in mice pretreated with NaNO2 than in mice given H2NOH. Methemoglobins generated from human and mouse hemoglobins by either NaNO2 or by H2NOH had identical binding affinities (dissociation constants) for cyanide. When human red cells containing methemoglobin generated by exposure to either NaNO2 or H2NOH were injected into the peritoneal cavity of mice and then followed by cyanide challenges, there was no difference in the PI for the two kinds of methemoglobin. Not only was the PI the same in each case with human cells, but it was also identical with that in mice given NaNO2 systemically to generate the same total amount of methemoglobin. The difference in PI between NaNO2 and H2NOH (or DMAP) in mice appears to be related to the high rate of methemoglobin reductase activity in mouse RBC. It appears likely that cyanmethemoglobin is a substrate for mouse methemoglobin reductase activity, and that NaNO2 is an inhibitor of mouse methemoglobin reductase. No differences in cyanide antagonism between NaNO2 and H2NOH would be anticipated in humans because of the slow rates of methemoglobin reduction in human red cells.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of toxicology 55 (1984), S. 203-205 
    ISSN: 1432-0738
    Keywords: Hydroxylamine ; Methemoglobinemia ; Vasodilation ; Hypotension
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract When given IV in bolus doses to intact anesthetized dogs or cats, hydroxylamine hydrochloride produced transient but precipitous falls in the mean arterial blood pressure in a dose-related manner, as well as a significant methemoglobinemia. The half-time for recovery of the mean arterial pressure was also dose-related. These effects were very similar to those elicited by comparable doses of sodium nitrite, except that the half-recovery time for return to normal blood pressure was somewhat longer with the nitrite. Although hydroxylamine has long been known to relax vascular smooth muscle in vitro, we are not aware of previous demonstrations of hypotensive effects in vivo. Acute poisoning by either nitrite or hydroxylamine is apt to result in both an anemic hypoxia due to methemoglobinemia and a stagnat (hypokinetic) hypoxia due to direct vasodilation. Hydroxylamine, but not nitrite, also appeared to stimulate respiration possibly through an effect on the chemoreceptors of the carotid body.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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