Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 15
pro vyhledávání: '"Frederick P. Ferguson"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 171:91-100
Publikováno v:
Endocrinology. 60:761-767
IT HAS been previously reported from this laboratory that decompression of intact, unanesthetized dogs to a simulated altitude of 30,000 feet for 30 to 90 minutes consistently results in a decrease in the plasma potassium concentration (1). The prese
Autor:
Frederick P. Ferguson
Publikováno v:
The Biological Bulletin. 86:154-162
1. In Fundulus heteroclitus, the time required for the blanching of caudal bands of equal width varies greatly among different individuals under the same environmental conditions.2. Each fish manifests a characteristic reaction time, however, and it
Publikováno v:
American Heart Journal. 29:697-703
The distribution of the net QRS and QRS-T potentials on the body surface supports the earlier conclusion that there is a spatial angle between the mean spatial QRS axis (SÂ QRS ) and the mean spatial QRS-T axis (SĜ). The earlier inference that smal
Publikováno v:
Endocrinology. 57:450-455
KLINE (1952) has shown that, in the cat, moderate hypoxia produces a decrease in the plasma potassium concentration, whereas severe hypoxia produces an increase. He believes that these electrolyte shifts are influenced by secretions from the adrenal
Publikováno v:
Endocrinology. 66:763-768
Under conditions of moderate decompression stress (exposure to a simulated altitude of 28,000 feet for 60 minutes), intact cats showed a decrease in plasma potassium concentration from 4.42 m.eq./L. to 3.04 m.eq./L. and an increase in plasma glucose
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content. 145:491-499
Autor:
Walter S. Wilde, Frederick P. Ferguson
Publikováno v:
Experimental Biology and Medicine. 59:263-265
SummaryIn nephrectomy a sudden experimental elevation of the extracellular potassium did not lower the plasma chloride as much as predicted from the Boyle-Conway concept. The chloride fell 3.17 mM while the potassium rose 6.03 mM and the correlation
Publikováno v:
Journal of Applied Physiology. 15:37-39
Exposure of dogs to a simulated altitude of 30,000 feet for 30 minutes resulted in marked respiratory alkalosis and hypokalemia. The data failed to demonstrate, however, the appearance of the early transient hyperkalemic response which has been obser
Publikováno v:
Journal of applied physiology. 16
Results of this investigation confirm the hypothesis that respiratory alkalosis is directly related to hypokalemia in dogs during their exposure to moderate altitude stress. Anesthetized animals were placed in a decompression chamber and subjected to