Cough is a common and important symptom of asthma and allergic rhinitis. Previous experimental evidence has shown enhanced cough sensitivity during early phase of experimental allergic rhinitis in guinea pigs. We hypothesized that airway inflammation during the late phase response after repeated nasal antigen challenge may affect the afferent sensory nerve endings in the larynx and tracheobronchial tree and may also modulate cough response. In the present study we evaluated the cough sensitivity during a period of early and late allergic response in sensitized guinea pigs after repeated nasal antigen challenges. Forty-five guinea pigs were sensitized with ovalbumin (OVA). Four weeks later 0.015 ml of 0.5 % OVA was intranasally instilled to develop a model of allergic rhinitis that was evaluated from the occurrence of typical clinical symptoms. Animals were repeatedly intranasally challenged either by OVA (experimental group) or by saline (controls) in 7-day intervals for nine weeks. Cough was elicited by inhalation of citric acid aerosols. Cough was evaluated at 1 or 3 h after the 6th nasal challenge and 17 or 24 h after the 9th nasal challenge. The cough reflex was significantly increased at 1 and 3 h after repeated nasal challenge in contrast to cough responses evoked at 17 and 24 h after repeated nasal challenge. In conclusion, enhanced cough sensitivity only corresponds to an early allergic response after repeated nasal challenges.
Exposure to hyperbaric oxygen leads to increased amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are derived from various sources. After the discovery that ROS can function as signaling molecules, the idea of ROS being hazardous to biological tissues has been challenged. The aim of this study was to examine the changes in oxidative stress parameters in diabetics undergoing hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) due to foot ulcers. Twenty patients, who received HBOT for diabetic foot ulcers, were included in the study. Blood samples were taken before HBOT and 30 min after exit from the chamber, on the day of the first and the 15th HBOT sessions. They were used for the determinations of malondialdehyde (MDA), 8-isoprostane and advanced oxidation protein products (AOPPs). 8-Isoprostane and AOPP levels were not altered significantly after the first HBOT session, while both were increased on the fifteenth day (p<0.05). MDA was significantly increased only after the first HBOT session, and remained unchanged on the fifteenth day (within-day variations). Plasma AOPP levels were lowered significantly after fifteen consecutive HBOT sessions (between-day variations). Decreased AOPP levels suggest that increased oxygenation of tissues due to HBO therapy may activate some endogenous factors that prevent hazardous effects of the disease itself., F. Gürdöl, M. Cimşit, Y. Öner-İyidoğan, Ş. Körpinar, S. Yalçinkaya, H. Koçak., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
The question was addressed whether short-term (4 hour) NO deficiency, inducing an increase in blood pressure in anaesthetized dogs, does influence proteosynthesis in the myocardium and coronary arteries. A potentially positive answer was to be followed by the study of the supporting role of ornithine decarboxylase for the polyamines pathway. NG-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME) (50 mg/kg per hour) was administered i.v. to inhibit NO synthase. After the first L-NAME dose diastolic blood pressure increased from 131.8 ±2.0 to 149.4 ±3.9 mm Hg (p< 0.001) and was maintained at about this level till the end of the experiment. Systolic blood pressure only increased after the first dose (from 150.8 ±1.1 to 175.0 ±5.8 mm Hg, p<0.01), returning thereafter to the control level. Similarly, the heart rate declined only after the first dose (from 190.4±5.3 to 147.6±4.5 beats/min, p<0.01). Total RNA concentrations increased in the left cardiac ventricle (LV), the left anterior descending coronary artery (LADCA) and left circumflex coronary artery (LCCA) by 15.9 ±0.7, 29.7 ±1.3 and 17.6 ±1.0%, p<0.05, respectively. The same applied to [14C]leucine incorporation (by 86.5 ±5.0, 33.5 ±2.6, 29.3±4.1 %, p<0.05, respectively). The above parameters indicated an increase of proteosynthesis in the LV myocardium and both coronary arteries LADCA and LCCA after short-term NO deficiency. Surprisingly, the ornithine decarboxylase activity in the LV myocardium decreased significantly by 40.2± 1.6 % (p<0.01) but the changes were not significant in the coronary arteries. This unexpected finding makes the role of polyamines in increasing proteosynthesis during a pressure overload due to NO deficiency questionable.