Gluco- and mineralocorticoid biological effects of a 7-day treatment with low doses of hydrocortisone and fludrocortisone in septic shock

2012 ◽  
Vol 38 (8) ◽  
pp. 1306-1314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Laviolle ◽  
Djillali Annane ◽  
Claire Fougerou ◽  
Eric Bellissant
Author(s):  
Beatrice Campanella ◽  
Laura Colombaioni ◽  
Edoardo Benedetti ◽  
Agostino Di Ciaula ◽  
Lisa Ghezzi ◽  
...  

A mini review of the toxicity of Thallium (Tl) at low doses is herein presented. Thallium has severe toxicity. Although its acute biological effects have been widely investigated and are well known, its biological effects on human health and in cell cultures at low doses (<100 μg/L) due, for example, to Tl chronic exposure via consumption of contaminated water or foods, have often been overlooked or underestimated. Relatively few papers have been published on this topic and are herein reviewed to provide a focused scientific opinion in the light of current worldwide regulatory issues.


Blood ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 93 (11) ◽  
pp. 4011-4018
Author(s):  
Maikel P. Peppelenbosch ◽  
Marjory DeSmedt ◽  
Tessa ten Hove ◽  
Sander J.H. van Deventer ◽  
Johan Grooten

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a mediator of inflammation and septic shock during bacterial infection. Although monocytes and macrophages are highly responsive to LPS, the biological effects of LPS in these cell types are only partially understood. We decided, therefore, to investigate the influence of LPS on macrophage pinocytosis and Fc receptor–mediated endocytosis, two prominent and related macrophage effector functions. We observed that LPS did not greatly influence endocytosis in either macrophages or monocytes, but did exert a dual action on pinocytosis: at lower concentrations (0.1 to 100 ng/mL), LPS caused a decrease in pinocytosis in both macrophages and monocytes, whereas at higher LPS concentrations, enhanced pinocytosis in macrophages was observed. Detoxified LPS was two orders of magnitude less potent in producing these effects. After inhibition of the LPS receptor CD14, the LPS-induced decrease in pinocytosis was absent, and stimulation of pinocytosis at lower LPS concentrations was unmasked. We conclude that LPS can influence pinocytosis via CD14-dependent and CD14-independent signaling pathways. Furthermore, as addition of LPS to macrophages effected pinocytosis but not Fc receptor–mediated endocytosis, these two processes are independently regulated in macrophages.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 285-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. K. Nayyar ◽  
P. Keshavanath ◽  
B. I. Sundararaj ◽  
E. M. Donaldson

The effects of 20-day treatment with ovine luteinizing (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), partially purified salmon gonadotropin (SG-G100), and testosterone were investigated by evaluating the maintenance of spermatogenesis in the testes and secretory activity in the seminal vesicles of the catfish, Heteropneustes fossilis, after hypophysectomy during the prespawning period. Low doses of LH (0.1 or 1 μg per fish) neither maintained spermatogenesis in the testes nor secretory activity in the seminal vesicles, whereas a higher dose of LH (10 μg per fish) maintained spermatogenesis qualitatively, and sustained the seminal vesicles in a moderately secretory state. One microgram of SG-G100 per fish partially maintained spermatogenesis but the seminal vesicles showed poor maintenance. Ten micrograms of SG-G100 per fish not only sustained spermatogenesis qualitatively and quantitatively, but also induced spermiation; the seminal vesicles, though enlarged, contained little secretion, indicating possible reduction through spermiation. FSH did not maintain spermatogenesis in the testes or secretory activity in the seminal vesicles. Testosterone (10, 100, or 500 μg per fish) had a dose-dependent maintenance response in the testes and seminal vesicles; with 500 μg of testosterone the maintenance of testes and seminal vesicles was similar to that in initial intact controls, with no indication of spermiation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 23-29
Author(s):  
V. G. Korolev

By definition, low doses are minimum doses of a damaging agent, in particular radiation, causing a recorded biological effect. The problem of exposure to low doses of radiation is being discussed in scientific literature for decades, but there is still no generally accepted conclusion concerning the existence of some features of the effect of low doses in contrast to that of acute exposure. This is due to the fact as follows: if being fixed, these effects have a weak expression and can be easily criticized. The second important aspect of this problem is that biological effects are mainly described phenomenologically in literature, without deciphering their molecular causes. In recent years, a number of articles appeared in which the authors, when studying exposure to low doses of DNA-tropic agents, show that postreplication repair (in particular, its error-free branch) plays a key role in these effects. In the laboratory of eukaryotic genetics of Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute named by B. P. Konstantinov, it was possible to isolate unique yeast mutants with a disrupted branch of error-free postreplication repair. A study of the processes of eliminating DNA damage with minimal deviations of their number from a spontaneous level made it possible to explain at the molecular level the differences in cell response to low doses from acute exposure.


1991 ◽  
Vol 65 (05) ◽  
pp. 497-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Erik Hack ◽  
John Wagstaff ◽  
Robert J M Strack Van Schijndel ◽  
Anke J M Eerenberg ◽  
Herbert M Pinedo ◽  
...  

SummaryPatients treated with high doses of interleukin-2 (IL-2) because of cancer, develop hemodynamic and vasopermeability changes, that resemble those observed in sepsis. These patients thus provide a unique opportunity to study the early events in the development of septic shock. We analysed the changes that occurred in the contact system of coagulation in plasma from 4 patients, who together received seven 12-day cycles of high doses of IL-2. Levels of factor XII and prekallikrein during the cycles progressively fell to 50 and 30% of their initial levels, respectively, whereas significant increases in plasma factor XIIa-and kallikrein-C1-inhibitor complexes were not observed (in 3 out of 211 samples slightly increased levels of both complexes were found). The reductions in factor XII and prekallikrein were only in part due to protein leakage, since levels were still significantly lower, i. e., 80 and 50%, respectively, when corrected for albumin decreases. Levels of high molecular weight kininogen (HMWK) also decreased during IL-2 therapy, however, this decrease paralleled that of albumin. SDS-PAGE analysis of plasma HMWK did not reveal increased cleavage of this protein. The reduction of factor XII and prekallikrein, corrected for protein leakage, significantly correlated with albumin levels and inversely with daily cumulative weight gain in the patients.Thus, we demonstrate that factor XII and prekallikrein decrease during IL-2 therapy. As these decreases, already observed after 1 day treatment, were disproportional to that of albumin, a negative acute phase reactant, and correlated with signs of the vascular leak syndrome, we favor the explanation that they reflected activation rather than a decreased synthesis of the contact system proteins. Further studies are needed to substantiate this hypothesis.


Author(s):  
Wojcik Andrzej ◽  
Colin J Martin

Biological effects of radiation have been interpreted based on the assumption that DNA is the primary target, but recent research has shown that non-targeted mechanisms may affect cells that are not directly exposed. The most important effect in humans from low doses of radiation is the induction of cancer, but risks of other effects such as cataract and cardiac or circulatory disease are becoming apparent. Epidemiological studies of Japanese survivors of atomic bombs demonstrate a clear linear relationship between solid cancer incidence and organ dose. This is supported by other epidemiological data. This has become the gold standard for prediction of malignancy based on a linear no-threshold ‘LNT’ extrapolation, which links risk directly to radiation dose. However, the risk calculations involve many assumptions and approximations. They are designed to provide guidance on which a workable protection framework can be based. It is important that practitioners are aware of their limitations.


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