Alteration of Renal Response to Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitor by Synthetic Adrenal Steroids

1958 ◽  
Vol 195 (1) ◽  
pp. 142-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph H. Perlmutt ◽  
Donald A. Olewine

The increased urinary Na+ output induced by Diamox in water-loaded adrenalectomized rats was partially antagonized by the mineralocorticoid, desoxycorticosterone glucoside (DCG), the increased K+ excretion was augmented and urine volume was not affected. Intact rats subjected to the same treatment showed only a small, but significant, rise in K+ excretion. Under the same conditions, the glucocorticoid, hydrocortisone hemisuccinate (compound FH), significantly elevated Na+, K+ and H2O excretion in adrenalectomized rats receiving Diamox; intact rats showed an increase in Na+ and H2O excretion with no significant change in K+ output. Of particular interest is the finding that 2.5 mg compound FH alone increased H2O excretion in adrenalectomized rats to a slightly greater extent than Diamox alone with considerably less Na+ loss.

1958 ◽  
Vol 192 (3) ◽  
pp. 592-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald A. Olewine ◽  
Joseph H. Perlmutt

Renal excretions of water, Na+ and K+ were determined over a 5-hour period in sham-operated and adrenalectomized male rats injected intraperitoneally with water (5% body wt.) at postoperative intervals of 3, 14, 21 and 28 days. Intact animals maintained fairly constant outputs. In the adrenalectomized group: decreased excretion of water was apparent by 3 days, but was not maximal until after this interval; Na+ excretion increased after 14 days and rose progressively; and K+ excretion was maximally depressed by 3 days. Diamox (25 mg/100 gm body wt.) increased these values in both groups. The absolute increases in water and K+ excretion for the adrenalectomized animals were less than those for the intact animals, while Na+ excretion exceeded that of the intact group at the 14-day and subsequent intervals. These data indicate that the diuretic does not completely overcome the increased water reabsorption occurring after adrenalectomy and that the Na+—K+ exchange mechanism operates at a reduced capacity. Diamox was ineffective in protecting adrenalectomized rats against water intoxication.


1968 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 253-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. W. OGLE ◽  
MARY F. LOCKETT

SUMMARY Repeated exposures of intact rats, neurohypophysectomized rats and rats with denervated kidneys to high-pitched sound (20 kcyc./sec.) for 2 sec. with an intensity of 98–100 decibels caused diuresis, natriuresis and kaluresis: the rate of urinary excretion of adrenaline rose very significantly. Adrenal demedullation abolished the natriuresis and kaluresis in response to 20 kcyc./sec. and converted the diuresis to an antidiuresis. The renal response of normal rats to 20 kcyc./sec. was therefore attributed to the release of adrenaline from the adrenal medulla in amounts sufficient to prevent an emotional release of antidiuretic hormone from the neurohypophysis. Since 20 kcyc./sec. caused a significant increase in the urinary output of vasopressin by adrenalectomized rats, an emotional release of vasopressin is assumed to have proceeded, uninhibited, in adrenal-de-medullated rats exposed to 20 kcyc./sec., and to have caused the observed antidiuresis. The diuresis, natriuresis and kaluresis caused by 150 cyc./sec. mimicked by s.c. injection of 4 m-u. oxytocin, was unaffected by demedullation of the adrenals and was not accompanied by increase in urinary adrenaline.


1954 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 228-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. CAVALLERO ◽  
EMMA DOVA ◽  
L. ROSSI

SUMMARY 1. The content of antidiuretic hormone in the neurohypophysis, the weight of the neurohypophysis and the daily output of urine were studied in the following groups of rats: intact rats which received 2 g NaCl/100 ml. as drinking fluid; adrenalectomized rats; sham-adrenalectomized rats; adrenalectomized rats injected with deoxycorticosterone acetate or aqueous adrenocortical extract, lipo-adrenal extract, cortisone or cortisone and noradrenaline; adrenalectomized rats to which sodium chloride had been administered; and adrenalectomized rats which received both sodium chloride and adrenocortical hormones. 2. The antidiuretic hormone content of the pars nervosa (per mg wet gland) of intact rats to which salt had been given was about half of that of controls without extra salt. There was no significant difference between the mean daily urine volumes of the two series. 3. In adrenalectomized and sham-adrenalectomized rats, 2 days after the operation, the hormone content of the pars nervosa was reduced. In adrenalectomized animals this decrease in antidiuretic activity persisted; in sham-operated rats the antidiuretic activity had increased 5 days after the operation and was fully restored after 7. The daily urine output of the adrenalectomized animals was about one-third of that of intact controls. 4. No significant increase in antidiuretic hormone content of the neurohypophysis occurred when adrenocortical preparations were injected into adrenalectomized rats, but the urine volume of these animals increased. 5. Salt alone, in low or high doses, both orally or subcutaneously administered, increased the amount of antidiuretic principle in the pituitaries of adrenalectomized rats, but control levels were not attained. The daily urine volume of these animals returned to normal. 6. Combined treatment of adrenalectomized rats with salt and adrenocortical extract or cortisone, but not with salt and deoxycorticosterone acetate, led to full restoration of the antidiuretic hormone content of the neurohypophysis. These treatments also produced a rise of the daily urine volume above that of intact controls. 7. In adrenalectomized rats a close relationship was found between the degree to which the various treatments raised the hormone content of the gland and that to which they increased the daily output of urine. 8. The significance of the results is discussed, and the impossibility of drawing conclusions from them about neurohypophysial function in adrenocortical deficiency is stressed.


1957 ◽  
Vol 106 (3) ◽  
pp. 415-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shirley D. Kraus

The desexycorticosterone-mimetic action of ammoniated glycyrrhizin on electrolyte and water metabolism and on pituitary-adrenal function, was demonstrated in rats. Retention of sodium and water was observed in both intact and adrenalectomized rats during 4 hour minerosteroid assays, the degree of retention being a function of log dose. In intact rats, the antidiuretic effect of glycyrrhizin was immediate and cumulative, while retention of sodium appeared only after a latent period and did not increase with time. Adrenalectomized rats, 3 days after the operation, showed a more marked antidiuretic effect than intact rats, but no greater retention of sodium. Rats receiving glycyrrhizin prior to histamine stress showed a marked decrease in adrenal ascorbic acid depletion, suggesting that glycyrrhizin had suppressed the output of ACTH. Whether glycyrrhizin acts on the same target organ as desoxycorticosterone in producing sodium and water retention is still an open question. However, the fact that it is capable of producing a pituitary-adrenal inhibition which resembles that of naturally occurring adrenal steroids is further evidence of the strong pharmacological resemblance between glycyrrhizin and desoxycorticosterone.


1955 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 262-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Dreiling ◽  
Henry D. Janowitz ◽  
Mark Halpern

Author(s):  
Silvia A. Teixeira ◽  
Mariano S. Viapiano ◽  
Augusto F. Andrade ◽  
Mohan S. Nandhu ◽  
Julia A. Pezuk ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (40) ◽  
pp. 5720-5723 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Angeli ◽  
Marta Ferraroni ◽  
Alessio Nocentini ◽  
Silvia Selleri ◽  
Paola Gratteri ◽  
...  

Epacadostat (EPA), a selective indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) inhibitor, has been investigatedin vitroas a human (h) Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitor (CAI).


2013 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Bellissima ◽  
Fabrizio Carta ◽  
Alessio Innocenti ◽  
Andrea Scozzafava ◽  
Piero Baglioni ◽  
...  

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