Indian journal of physiology and pharmacology
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Indian J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Jul 2008
ReviewPathophysiological approach to the management of scorpion envenomation.
Indian red scorpion (Mesobuthus tamulus; MBT) produces lethal stings and is a matter of concern in certain parts of India. MBT envenomation produces multi-systemic involvement, thus presents difficulty in the management. Symptomatic treatment has been practiced earlier that failed to relieve the toxic effects of the venom. Therefore, present manuscript deals with pathophysiologically based approach in the management of toxicity considering the merits and the demerits of treatment protocols so as to evolve a consensus in the treatment strategies of scorpion envenomation.
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Indian J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Jul 2008
Antinociception induced by central administration of histamine in the formalin test in rats.
In the present study, effects of intracerebroventricular (icv) administration of histamine, mepyramine (H1-receptor antagonist) and famotidine (H2-receptor antagonist) have been investigated on the formalin test in rats. Subcutaneous injection of formalin (50 microl, 1%) into the ventral surface of the left hind paw produced a marked biphasic pain response (first phase: 0-5 min and second phase: 15-45 min). ⋯ Pretreatments with mepyramine and famotidine at the same dose of 80 microg, significantly (P < 0.05) prevented the histamine (40 microg)-induced antinociception. These results indicate that brain histamine produces antinociception, and both central H1 and H2 receptors may involve in the histamine-induced antinociception in the formalin test in rats.
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Indian J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Oct 2006
Antioxidant response to oxidative stress induced by smoking.
Oxygen free radicals have been hypothesized to play a pivotal role in the deleterious effects of smoking on health. The present study was undertaken to examine the oxidant and antioxidant system among smokers and nonsmokers. Fourteen smokers and 11 nonsmokers were enrolled for this study. ⋯ In smokers the erythrocyte activities of both glutathione peroxidase and catalase were decreased when compared to that in nonsmokers. The data from the study reemphasizes the presence of oxidative stress in smokers. The concomitant decrease in the activities of both catalase and glutathione peroxidase found in the erythrocytes of smokers raises rational grounds for expressing concern over the increased susceptibility towards oxidative stress in these subjects.
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Indian J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Jan 2006
Effect of yoga based lifestyle intervention on state and trait anxiety.
Considerable evidence exists for the place of mind body medicine in the treatment of anxiety disorders. Excessive anxiety is maladaptive. It is often considered to be the major component of unhealthy lifestyle that contributes significantly to the pathogenesis of not only psychiatric but also many other systemic disorders. ⋯ Anxiety scores, both state and trait anxiety were significantly reduced. Among the diseased subjects significant improvement was seen in the anxiety levels of patients of hypertension, coronary artery disease, obesity, cervical spondylitis and those with psychiatric disorders. The observations suggest that a short educational programme for lifestyle modification and stress management leads to remarkable reduction in the anxiety scores within a period of 10 days.
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Indian J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Apr 2005
Correlation between short-term heart rate variability indices and heart rate, blood pressure indices, pressor reactivity to isometric handgrip in healthy young male subjects.
The purpose of the present study was to determine whether readily measured blood pressure (BP) indices and, responses to autonomic reflex tests could be used as surrogates of short-term heart rate variability (HRV), which is an established marker of autonomic regulation of SA node. Therefore, we examined the correlation between short-term HRV and heart rate (HR), BP indices viz. systolic pressure, diastolic pressure, pulse pressure (PP), and rate-pressure product (RPP), during supine rest and head-up tilt in 17 young healthy normotensive subjects, aged 19.8 +/- 1 yr (mean +/- SD). Three classic autonomic indices viz. ⋯ The possible physiologic significance of these and other correlations is discussed in this paper. In conclusion, the presence of a statistically significant correlation between RPP, PP and spectral measures of short-term HRV supports a simplistic approach to autonomic assessment, in that, easily measurable BP indices could be used as surrogates of HRV when it is not feasible to determine HRV indices directly. However, the same have to be tested in healthy subjects belonging to various age groups and in patients with conditions known to be associated with autonomic dysregulation.