scholarly journals SURGICAL THERAPEUTIC INDICATION AND LIMIT OF CHOLELITHIASIS WITH HEPATIC FUNCTIONAL DISTURBANCE

1974 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-158
Author(s):  
M. MIKI ◽  
G. FUJISHIMA ◽  
M. YOSHIOKA ◽  
M. ONDA ◽  
K. HAKOZAKI ◽  
...  
The Lancet ◽  
1933 ◽  
Vol 222 (5730) ◽  
pp. 1479-1480
Author(s):  
K Zucker

2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 411-414
Author(s):  
Nazamuddin Md ◽  
Wadud Abdul ◽  
Najeeb Jahan ◽  
Tanwir Alam M ◽  
Asim Mohammad Khan ◽  
...  

Gul-e-Surkh (Rose flower) is the Persian name for the Rosa damascena Mill. In Unani system of medicine Rose flower is used for medicinal purposes. Ibn Sina considers Gul-e- Surkh as one of the best drug for liver. Rose flower in various doses form and/or in combination with many other drugs are indicated in various disease. It is commonly being used as general tonic for Lungs, Stomach, Intestine, Liver, Rectum, Kidney, Heart, and Uterus. Fresh flowers are purgative and dried one is astringent in properties. In this review article authors try to encompass the therapeutic indication of Rosa damascena Mill described in Unani literature.


2011 ◽  
Vol 497 ◽  
pp. 197-209
Author(s):  
Kou Yamada ◽  
Iwanori Murakami ◽  
Yoshinori Ando ◽  
Takaaki Hagiwara ◽  
Da Zhi Gong ◽  
...  

Disturbance observers have been used to estimate the disturbance in the plant. Several paperson design methods of disturbance observers have been published. Recently, the parameterizationof all disturbance observers for discrete-time plants with any output disturbance was clarified. However,no paper examines the parameterization of all disturbance observers for discrete-time plants withany input disturbance. In this paper, we clarify existance conditions of a disturbance observer and ofa linear functional disturbance observer for discrete-time plants with any input disturbance. Underthese conditions, we propose parameterizations of all disturbance observers and all linear functionaldisturbance observers for discrete-time plants with any input disturbance.


1919 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 513-529 ◽  
Author(s):  
William deB. MacNider

1. Uranium nitrate is relatively more toxic for old animals than for young animals. 2. This relative toxicity is not only expressed in the old animals by a greater functional disturbance of the kidney, but is also shown by an inability on the part of these animals to repair the kidney injury and reestablish its functional capacity. 3. The intoxication in younger animals has been followed by a repair of the renal injury and a partial restoration of kidney function. 4. In these animals the processes of repair lead to the development of a chronic diffuse type of nephropathy in which the acid-base equilibrium of the blood may be maintained at the point of normality. In these animals renal functional tests indicate the presence of severe kidney injury.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1953 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-252
Author(s):  
ENRIQUE GALÁN ◽  
MANUEL PÉREZ-STABLE ◽  
ORLANDO GARCÍA FAEZ ◽  
EMILIO UNANUE ◽  
OTTO GARCÍA ◽  
...  

The role of tubular reabsorption in the pathogenesis of nephrotic edema led the authors to study the participation of antidiuretic hormone and adrenal steroids in regard to changes in renal hemodynamics and tubular function during different clinical events that may induce an increase or a decrease of urinary flow in nephrotic children. Formaldehydogenic steroids in urine, plasma and ascitic fluid and serum antidiuretic substance were simultaneously studied with clearance tests, electrolyte excretion and plasma constituents through 10 different periods of observations. From previous and present studies on renal function it was found that changes in renal hemodynamics and tubular transport mechanisms are responsible for variations in urinary flow leading to accumulation or disappearance of edema in the nephrotic syndrome. An increase in urinary flow was seen to occur with no change in the GFR but with a marked decrease in the U/P inulin and potassium ratio. Serum antidiuretic substance appeared to correlate closely with antidiuresis. Injection of nephrotic sera into peritoneal cavity of rats was followed by an antidiuretic effect similar to that produced by pitressin and posterior pituitary hormone. Antidiuretic factor seemed to be present in the globulin fraction of plasma proteins. No such effect was seen with intraperitoneal injections of plasma albumin, protein-free filtrate and ascitic fluid. An increase in titer of antidiuretic substance was observed during initial doses of ACTH and the reverse at the onset of diuretic response. Urinary excretion of formaldehydogenic steroids depended partly on diuresis in nephrotic children; this was not so in control cases. The influence of tubular function was suggested by the relationship found between urinary excretion of steroids and the V/Cin and V/Cth ratio and between clearance of steroids and diuresis. The influence of renal functional disturbance prevented a correct evaluation of adrenal activity by estimation of urinary steroids in nephrotic children. During the edematous-oliguric stage of nephrosis and in the absence of any stimulating or depressing effect upon the elaboration of adrenal steroids their urinary excretion was not significantly different from that seen in control cases. Formaldehydogenic steroids did not seem to have a direct role in producing variations of urine flow in nephrotic children. Increase and decrease in diuresis occurred simultaneously with an increase and a decrease in urinary and plasma steroids and vice versa. Formaldehydogenic material was found in variable amounts in the ascitic fluid suggesting an appreciable retention in the increased extracellular fluid during the oliguricedematous stage of the nephrotic syndrome. This material appears to be mostly true adrenal steroids. Potassium excretion was related to urinary steroids in nephrotic children but not in control cases. Potassium clearance was related to glomerular filtration in both control and nephrotic children. At the present time it remains a matter of some speculation of the role that steroids present in extracellular fluids may play in the physiologic and morphologic changes known to occur in the course of the nephrotic syndrome and experimentally reproduced by injection of DOCA to animals.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 431-434
Author(s):  
Sidney Carter

FOR MOST PARENTS their child's first convulsion is a dramatic, frightening event which demands immediate medical attention. The physician, on the other hand, may see the patient after recovery from the attack and may tend to minimize the severity of the situation and assume a wait-and-see attitude before investigation and treatment are initiated. The convulsion is a symptom that indicates a disturbance of cerebral neurones. This disturbance may be the result of underlying organic disease of the brain, either fixed or progressive, or it may be an indication of a functional disturbance related to a circulatory or metabolic disorder. The first attack may be so mild that the child is unaffected but subsequent attacks may be prolonged, or result in status epilepicus, and produce a mild or severe degree of mental impairment. There is considerable evidence to indicate that anoxia associated with convulsions can cause brain damage and for this reason every child who has had a convulsion should be investigated and, with rare exception, placed on prophylactic daily anticonvulsant medication when no specific treatable condition is discovered. EVALUATION The first step in the study of a child who has a convulsion is to document its occurrence. Anxious parents are, as a rule, poor witnesses. Despite this, every effort should be made to obtain a description of the seizure, particularly premonitory symptoms, loss of consciousness, convulsive movements, duration of the attack, and the state of the patient following the attack. In infants breath-holding spells may simulate convulsive seizures. In breath-holding spells there is always a precipitating factor, usually a slight injury or some emotional disturbance which results in violent crying, ending suddenly in respiratory apnea. The cyanosis in such attacks appears before the loss of consciousness and convulsive movements.


1870 ◽  
Vol 16 (73) ◽  
pp. 31-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francis E. Anstie ◽  
Francis E. Anstie

In the present paper I do not intend to deal with those graver affections, such as apoplexy or paralysis, which frequently occur in the aged, and which depend on gross lesions of tissue. Nor shall I mention the severe and intractable neuralgias of advanced life. I desire to direct attention to a class of neuroses, which more or less inevitably attend the decline of life, and which, though they do not involve any serious catastrophe, are the cause of so much suffering that it is surprising that they should have received little or no systematic notice from medical writers. The neglect of these complaints is not merely a negative evil; for, owing to the fact that their neurotic nature is ignored, certain superficial symptoms which they present are treated as if they depended on functional disturbance of the liver, or ordinary stomach catarrh, &c., and very often with depressing remedies, which greatly aggravate the existing evil.


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