16 results on '"D. E. Hyams"'
Search Results
2. Vascular Effects of Cinnarizine in Patients with Intermittent Claudication
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A H M Jageneau, F Ellis, W Loots, and D E Hyams
- Subjects
Arterial inflow ,Cinnarizine ,Vascular smooth muscle ,business.industry ,Venous occlusion ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Biochemistry ,Intermittent claudication ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,In patient ,medicine.symptom ,Increased blood flow ,business ,Pulse wave velocity ,medicine.drug - Abstract
An ECG-triggered venous occlusion Plethysmographic method to provide an index of arterial inflow, has been used in 10 patients with angiographic confirmed intermittent claudication. The differential quotient of the Plethysmographic arterial pulse has been used to provide an index of pulse wave velocity. The effect of cinnarizine, a drug which acts probably by inhibiting the calcium influx into vascular smooth muscle cells, was measured after three and seven days of administration. In this trial cinnarizine increased blood flow to the lower limb following exercise.
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- 1975
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3. Vascular Responses with Cinnarizine to Standard Exercise in Patients with Intermittent Claudication
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D E Hyams and F. G. Ellis
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cinnarizine ,business.industry ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,In patient ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Intermittent claudication ,medicine.drug ,Biomedical engineering - Published
- 1977
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4. Gastrointestinal problems in the old. II
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D E Hyams
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Liver Cirrhosis ,Abdominal pain ,Gastrointestinal Diseases ,Gastroenterology ,Hepatitis ,Crohn Disease ,Cholelithiasis ,Ischemia ,Intestine, Small ,Mesenteric Vascular Occlusion ,Cholecystitis ,General Environmental Science ,Abdomen, Acute ,Age Factors ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Gallstones ,Intestines ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diverticular disease ,Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury ,medicine.symptom ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,Research Article ,Peptic Ulcer ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Peptic ,Gallbladder disease ,Jaundice ,Diverticulum, Colon ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Intestinal Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Intestine, Large ,Aged ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,Appendicitis ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Surgery ,Diverticulum ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Abdomen ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,business ,Intestinal Obstruction - Abstract
Gastrointestinal symptoms and diseases increase with ageing, and the commonest lesions are carcinoma (of the stomach or large bowel), peptic ulc?ration, intestinal obstruction (herniae or diverticular disease of the colon), hiatus hernia, and gallstones. The first three of these caused most of the 20% of deaths directly due to lesions of the digestive system in Mc Keown's series of 1,500 necropsies in patients aged 70 or over.1 This incidence was second only to diseases of the cardiovascular system as causes of death, and numerically only a little less. Carcinomas of the gastrointestinal system made up nearly half of the total of fatal malignant disease, and half of these were in the large bowel. Disease of the biliary tract has been said to be the commonest pathological finding requiring abdominal sur gery in the aged.2 In elderly patients with abdominal pain, Ponka et al. found that gallbladder disease was the cause in 27-5%.3
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- 1974
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5. 3-methyl salicylic acid: A long acting salicylate which decreases free fatty acid mobilisation and plasma cholesterol
- Author
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Alan Howard, W. Everett, E. Veneroni, I.W. Jennings, A. Bizzi, D. E. Hyams, G.A. Gresham, Silvio Garattini, and T.A. Miettinen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Bile Acids and Salts ,Excretion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,medicine.artery ,biology.animal ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Glycerol ,Animals ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Aorta ,biology ,Cholesterol ,Fatty acid ,Hominidae ,Cold Temperature ,Disease Models, Animal ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Vomiting ,Diet, Atherogenic ,medicine.symptom ,Salicylic acid ,Baboon - Abstract
A comparative study has been made of the action of 3-methyl salicylic acid, a derivative which has a much longer half-life than salicylic acid in man, on free fatty acid mobilisation and plasma cholesterol in the rat, rabbit, baboon and man. 3-Methyl salicylic acid decreased plasma free fatty acids in rats exposed to conditions of increased mobilisation, such as fasting, cold, and treatment with noradrenaline and ACTH. Evidence was obtained that a dose equivalent to salicylic acid given shortly before test was more effective. As for salicylate, 3-methyl salicylate decreased the in vitro production of FFA and glycerol liberated in vitro by the incubated rat epididymal fat pad. Administration of 3-methyl salicylic acid (100 mg/kg, body weight) reduced plasma cholesterol from 7 to 45% in baboons given an atherogenic, cholesterol-containing diet for one month. In acute experiments, the drug caused a marked choleresis in which the volume and excretion of bile acids but not cholesterol was increased. In the rabbit, the drug (100 mg/kg) caused a decrease in fasting FFA for up to four hours, followed by a large elevation. Inclusion of the drug in the diet of animals given a semi-synthetic diet of low cholesterol content did not reduce hypercholesterolaemia or the extent and severity of atherosclerotic lesions in the aorta. Administration of 0.9 g orally to fasting patients caused a 50% reduction in elevated plasma FFA after four hours and even after twelve hours the values were still subnormal. A double-blind control trial of nine hypercholesterolaemic and eight normal patients was conducted over twelve to eighteen months. Subjects in the hypercholesterolaemic group on chronic dosage (0.9–1.8 g per day) showed a fall of 25% in the mean plasma cholesterol, but there was no change in normal patients. Side effects, the chief of which were drowsiness and vomiting precluded the use of 3-methyl salicylate as a therapeutic agent in man.
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- 1971
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6. The effect of 3-methyl salicylic (0-cresotinic) acid on plasma insulin and glucose tolerance in diabetic and non-diabetic subjects
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I. E. Evans, S. H. H. Davison, A. N. Howard, and D. E. Hyams
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glucose tolerance test ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Oral administration ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Plasma insulin ,business ,Salicylic acid ,media_common ,Non diabetic - Abstract
Oral administration of 3-methyl salicylic acid (3MS) to diabetic and non-diabetic patients in modest doses (0.9–1.8 g/day) over several months produced a significant increase in plasma insulin levels, one hour after a glucose load. In 2 diabetic subjects, acute doses had a similar effect. — Improvement in glucose tolerance after chronic administration of 3 MS to diabetic patients was inconsistent, and could not be conclusively related to the action of the drug. Although acute doses of 3 MS caused a fall in plasma FFA after 3–6h, chronic treatment gave no predictable change in fasting plasma FFA levels. — Because of side effects, 3 MS was not considered suitable for introduction as a therapeutic agent. The results, however, are of academic interest since it is the first demonstration of increased plasma insulin after an oral salicylate.
- Published
- 1971
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7. Inhibition of intestinal protein synthesis and lipid transport by ethionine
- Author
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Norton J. Greenberger, D. E. Hyams, Seymour M. Sabesin, and Kurt J. Isselbacher
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Biophysics ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Glycerides ,Jejunum ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Methionine ,Endocrinology ,Intestinal mucosa ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Protein biosynthesis ,Animals ,Ethionine ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Triglycerides ,Lipid Transport ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Biological Transport ,Small intestine ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Chylomicron - Abstract
Summary Ethionine inhibits protein synthesis in the intestinal mucosa of female rats and interferes with the intestinal transport of triglycerides containing long-chain fatty acids presumably by reducing chylomicron formation. The absorption of triglycerides containing medium-chain fatty acids is unaffected. In contrast to its effects on the liver, ethionine does not lead to decreases in intestinal ATP levels and administration of ATP to the animals does not protect against the inhibitory effects of ethionine. The intestinal activity of methionine-activating enzyme is about one-sixth that of liver. This may account for the failure of ethionine to reduce intestinal ATP concentrations since with low activating enzyme levels in the intestine relatively little adenine would be trapped in the form of S -adenosythionine. It is suggested that the inhibitory effect of ethionine on intestinal protein synthesis must involve a mechanism unrelated to reductions in cellular ATP levels.
- Published
- 1966
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8. Screening for carotid junction disease by spectral analysis of Doppler signals
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J. J. Baskett, R. G. Gosling, M. G. Beasley, D. E. Hyams, and G. J. Murphy
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Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Physiology ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Humans ,Ultrasonics ,Common carotid artery ,Systole ,Aged ,Ultrasonography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Doppler Effect ,Supraorbital artery ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Radiography ,Stenosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Carotid Arteries ,Regional Blood Flow ,Angiography ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Internal carotid artery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Blood Flow Velocity ,Artery - Abstract
The established test for disease in the internal carotid artery using continuous wave Doppler is to listen for flow velocity changes over the supraorbital artery with ipsilateral temporal (or facial) artery compression. This is only reliable when there is a reduction in mean pressure (and flow) distal to disease in the internal carotid artery, ie reduction of lumen diameter by more than 85%. In this study, 101 vessel segments (48 with disease at the carotid junction, 53 normal) were compared with the results of angiography. Seven gave a positive temporal artery occlusion test, all of which showed severe disease. However, spectral analysis of the Doppler signals from supraorbital and common carotid arteries showed sonagram changes both with ageing and with disease. In particular, the ratio of primary peak (A) to secondary peak (B) in systole falls, the A/B ratio being lower in disease than in health. At A/B ratios less than 1.05 there was an 88% probability of disease at the carotid junction. 36/48 (75%) diseased junctions were detected, including almost all major lesions. The method did not so reliably detect small lesions (less than 2 mm plaques, less than 60% lumen diameter stenosis, and 'minimal atheroma'). In 5/53 normal junctions the A/B ratio was in the disease range. Scanning the carotid junction for turbulence yielded additional information in some cases.
- Published
- 1977
9. Cerebral activating drugs
- Author
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D. E. Hyams
- Subjects
Cerebral circulation ,Cerebral blood flow ,business.industry ,Blood viscosity ,Cerebral function ,Medicine ,Cerebral microcirculation ,Vasodilation ,Cerebral metabolism ,Pharmacology ,Cellular level ,business - Abstract
The term ‘cerebral activating drugs’ is used for the title of this chapter as a convenient way to embrace a wide variety of drugs which have been used in attempts to improve cerebral function in old age. Such drugs include vasodilators, drugs influencing cerebral metabolism, stimulants and drugs which are claimed to improve the flow of blood in the cerebral microcirculation by virtue of actions on blood viscosity, red cell deformability, or one or more biochemical effects at the cellular level.
- Published
- 1980
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10. The Liver and Biliary System
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D. E. Hyams
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Bile duct ,Total body ,medicine.disease ,Liver weight ,Gastroenterology ,humanities ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Primary biliary cirrhosis ,Internal medicine ,Acute cholecystitis ,Medicine ,Obstructive jaundice ,business - Abstract
The liver loses weight from 50 years onwards (Bean 1926; Rossle and Roulet 1932; Boyd 1933; Meyer et al. 1964; Thompson and Williams 1965). Racial and environmental differences occur in this age-related loss of liver weight (Tauchi and Sato 1975). Liver weight correlates with total body weight (Thompson and Williams 1965).
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- 1983
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11. PREVENTION OF FATTY LIVER BY ADMINISTRATION OF ADENOSINE TRIPHOSPHATE
- Author
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Kurt J. Isselbacher and D. E. Hyams
- Subjects
CARBON TETRACHLORIDE POISONING ,Hypothermia ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,Hepatitis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,medicine ,Mineral Oil ,Azaserine ,Ethionine ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning ,Research ,Fatty liver ,Hepatitis A ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Fatty Liver ,Biochemistry ,Toxicity ,medicine.symptom ,Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury ,Adenosine triphosphate ,Alcoholic Intoxication ,medicine.drug - Abstract
IT has recently been shown that the fatty liver produced in rats by ethionine administration is associated with a decrease in hepatic adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels and that injections of ATP are able to prevent both the fatty liver and the drop in ATP1,2. We have observed that a variety of agents which produce a fatty liver lead to decreased ATP concentrations in the liver and that the protective effects of ATP administration are not limited to ethionine toxicity.
- Published
- 1964
12. Studies of the Mechanism of Prevention of Fatty Livers by the Administration of Adenosine Triphosphate
- Author
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A. Lietti, A. Bizzi, S. Garattini, and D. E. Hyams
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Fatty liver ,Fatty acid ,Adipose tissue ,CCL4 ,Hypothermia ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Toxicity ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Adenosine triphosphate ,Plasma free fatty acid - Abstract
Administration of large doses of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) can protect rats against the fatly liver produced by ethionine1,2,3 carbon tetrachloride3 (CCl4), azaserine3, ethanol4 and puromycin5. In considering the possible mechanisms involved in this protection, Hyams et al 3. suggested that suppression of free fatty acid (FFA) mobilisation was a major factor, but the possibility that hypothermia played a part, at least in the case of CCl4 toxicity, could not be excluded.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
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13. The Combined Use of Clofibrate and Anion Exchange in the Treatment of Hypercholesterolemia
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D. E. Hyams, R.J. Courtenay Evans, and A. N. Howard
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cholestyramine ,Clofibrate ,Bile acid ,Ion exchange ,medicine.drug_class ,Chemistry ,Cholesterol ,Excretion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Plasma cholesterol ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Ion-exchange resin ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The use of anion exchange resins for the treatment of type II hyperlipoproteinemia is now well established, and one such resin, cholestyramine, has received considerable attention (1, 2). This class of drug acts by preferentially binding bile acids in the intestine and facilitating their increased excretion. Since cholesterol is the precursor of bile acids in the liver, total body cholesterol decreases and there is a subsequent fall in plasma cholesterol. Cholestyramine is found to be only moderately effective because the liver compensates by synthesizing more cholesterol from acetate (3). Also, the proportion of bile acids sequestered in the intestine is small (about 5–10%) compared with the total available (4). For these reasons, effective treatment is obtained with only large doses (12–35 g/day) of the resin. In type II hypercholesterolemic patients even 32 g/day gives a mean decrease of only 22% (5).
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
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14. Combined use of clofibrate and cholestyramine or DEAE sephadex in hypercholesterolaemia
- Author
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D. E. Hyams and A. N. Howard
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Combined use ,Cholestyramine Resin ,Hypercholesterolemia ,DEAE Sephadex ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Plasma cholesterol ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Clofibrate ,Ion-exchange resin ,General Environmental Science ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Cholestyramine ,Cholesterol ,Anticholesteremic Agents ,General Engineering ,Dextrans ,Drug Synergism ,General Medicine ,Papers and Originals ,Endocrinology ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Sephadex ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Propionates ,Constipation ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A comparison was made of the effect of DEAE (diethylaminoethyl) Sephadex (an anion exchange resin) and cholestyramine (Questran) with and without the addition of clofibrate in normal and hypercholesterolaemic patients. DEAE Sephadex (12-15 g/day) alone appeared to be as effective as cholestyramine in lowering the plasma cholesterol by 12-15%. Clofibrate acted synergistically with DEAE Sephadex and increased the activity of the latter by over twofold. This combination proved superior to that of clofibrate and cholestyramine and has the greatest potential use in the treatment of type II pattern hyperlipoproteinaemia.
- Published
- 1971
15. Book Review: Geriatric Medicine
- Author
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D E Hyams
- Subjects
Geriatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,medicine ,business - Published
- 1975
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16. Book Review: Age Changes in the Neuromuscular System
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D E Hyams
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Age changes ,business.industry ,medicine ,business - Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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