نتایج جستجو برای: burned body surface

تعداد نتایج: 1324918  

Journal: :The American surgeon 1997
J Still E Law H K Orlet K Frye A Luterman H Pickens P S Minor

Bars and cocktail lounges serve various forms of flaming drinks, usually made with very high-proof alcohol. The drinks are lit and then served. If additional alcohol from the bottle is added to a still-burning drink, flames may spread up the stream of alcohol into the bottle and cause a flash of flame out the bottle's neck. Injuries can require grafting. Three cases are reported. A 32-year-old ...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 1998
J W Horton J White D Maass B Sanders

This study examined the effects of arginine supplement of fluid resuscitation from burn injury on cardiac contractile performance and bacterial translocation after a third-degree burn comprising 43% of the total body surface area in adult rats. Before burn injury, rats were instrumented to measure blood pressure; after burn (or sham injury), paired groups of sham-burned and burned rats were giv...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2009
Ambikaipakan Balasubramaniam Rashika Joshi Chunhua Su Lou Ann Friend Sulaiman Sheriff Richard J Kagan J Howard James

We previously determined that ghrelin synthesis was downregulated after burn injury and that exogenous ghrelin retained its ability both to stimulate food intake and to restore plasma growth hormone levels in burned rats. These observations and the finding that anabolic hormones can attenuate skeletal muscle catabolism led us to investigate whether ghrelin could attenuate burn-induced skeletal ...

Journal: :International journal of clinical and experimental pathology 2013
Yong Zhang Hong Yan Shang-Gun Lv Lin Wang Guang-Ping Liang Qian-Xue Wan Xi Peng

Glutamine decreases myocardial damage in ischemia/reperfusion injury. However, the cardioprotective effect of glutamine after burn injury remains unclear. Present study was to explore the protective effect of glycyl-glutamine dipeptide on myocardial damage in severe burn rats. Seventy-two Wistar rats were randomly divided into three groups: normal control (C), burned control (B) and glycyl-glut...

2005
J. C. Neff J. W. Harden G. Gleixner

Boreal ecosystems contain a substantial fraction of the earth’s soil carbon stores and are prone to frequent and severe wildfires. In this study, we examine changes in element and organic matter stocks due to a 1999 wildfire in Alaska. One year after the wildfire, burned soils contained between 1071 and 1420 g/m2 less carbon than unburned soils. Burned soils had lower nitrogen than unburned soi...

Journal: :Clinical chemistry 1957
B BALIKOV R A CASTELLO E R LOZANO

RONOUNCED CHANGES IN NIThOGEN METABOLISM are known to occur as the result of a serious burn (1-8). Although considerable information is available on these changes, little attention has been given to the quantitative excretion of peptides in the urine of the burned patient. Such an assay has interesting theoretical possibilities. The nitrogenous products in the urine come from ingested food and ...

2011
Jenna M. Jacobs J. A. Colin Bergeron Timothy T. Work John R. Spence

The genus Calosoma (Coleoptera: Carabidae) is a group of large, sometimes ornate beetles, which often voraciously attack caterpillars. Many studies have reported Calosoma beetles being highly conspicuous during defoliator outbreaks. Based on observations of individual beetle behavior, patterns of activity density and phenology we provide a hypothesis on how environmental cues may synchronize Ca...

Journal: :Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries 2012
Ingrid Steinvall Mats Fredrikson Zoltan Bak Folke Sjoberg

Organ dysfunction and failure are important for burned patients as they increase morbidity and mortality. Recent evidence has suggested that organ injuries are occurring earlier after burns, and are more common than previously thought. In this study we have assessed the extent to which liver function, assessed by the plasma disappearance rate of indocyanine green (PDR(ICG)), is affected in pati...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2006
Mette Møller-Kristensen W K Eddie Ip Lei Shi Lakshmi D Gowda Michael R Hamblin Steffen Thiel Jens Chr Jensenius R Alan B Ezekowitz Kazue Takahashi

Burn injury disrupts the mechanical and biological barrier that the skin presents against infection by symbionts like the Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a Gram-negative bacteria. A combination of local factors, antimicrobial peptides, and resident effector cells form the initial response to mechanical injury of the skin. This activity is followed by an inflammatory response that includes influx of pha...

2015
Eduardo Mansilla Gustavo H. Marín Mirta Berges Silvia Scafatti Jaime Rivas Andrea Núñez Martin Menvielle Roberto Lamonega Cecilia Gardiner Hugo Drago Flavio Sturla Mercedes Portas Silvia Bossi Maria Victoria Castuma Sandra Peña Luengas Gustavo Roque Karina Martire Jose Maria Tau Gabriel Orlandi Adrian Tarditti

BACKGROUND In January 2005, Rasulov et al. originally published "First experience in the use of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for the treatment of a patient with deep skin burns". Here, we present the first ever treated patient with cadaveric bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (CMSCs) in the history of Medicine. METHODS A young man, who severely burned 60 % of his total body surfa...

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