نتایج جستجو برای: sodium salicylate

تعداد نتایج: 190194  

Journal: :Gut 1988
S Ota M Razandi S Sekhon W J Krause A Terano H Hiraishi K J Ivey

Aspirin, acetyl salicylic acid, damages gastric mucosal cells. This effect is considered related to its inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis. On the other hand, sodium salicylate has been reported to be cytoprotective against drug damage to gastric mucosa in vivo. One reason for this difference is that salicylic acid, unlike acetyl salicylic acid does not inhibit prostaglandin synthesis by gas...

Journal: :Gut 1982
S J Konturek T Brzozowski I Piastucki T Radecki

Paracetamol or sodium salicylate given intragastrically 30 minutes before the administration of absolute ethanol or acidified aspirin dose-dependently reduced the formation of mucosal lesions. The generation of gastric mucosal prostaglandin-like activity increased with ethanol and was completely suppressed by acidified aspirin. Paracetamol or sodium salicylate given alone increased the generati...

Journal: :Journal of the American Medical Association 1916

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism 2009
Changting Xiao Adria Giacca Gary F Lewis

Prolonged elevation of plasma nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) induces insulin resistance and impairs pancreatic β-cell adaptation to insulin resistance. Studies in rodents suggest that inflammation may play a role in this "lipotoxicity." We studied the effects of sodium salicylate, an anti-inflammatory agent, on lipid-induced alterations in β-cell function and insulin sensitivity in six overwe...

Journal: :Blood 1995
S C Gautam K R Pindolia C J Noth N Janakiraman Y X Xu R A Chapman

Chemotactic cytokines, chemokines, have been shown to influence the proliferation of hematopoietic progenitor cells. Thus, regulation of chemokine production by bone marrow accessory cells is a critical aspect of stromal cell regulation of hematopoiesis. We have previously reported that monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1 or MCP-1/JE) and interferon inducible protein 10 kD (IP-10) are both in...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2006
Mathieu Derouet Luke Thomas Dale A Moulding Cahit Akgul Andrew Cross Robert J Moots Steven W Edwards

Mcl-1 is an antiapoptotic member of the Bcl-2 family of proteins that plays a central role in cell survival of neutrophils and other cells. The protein is unusual among family members in that it has a very short half-life of 2-3 h. In this report, we show that sodium salicylate (at 10 mM) greatly enhances the rate at which neutrophils undergo apoptosis and, in parallel, greatly accelerates the ...

Journal: :Hearing research 1993
A Didier J M Miller A L Nuttall

Drugs of the salicylate family (aspirin-like drugs) are reversibly ototoxic. Electrophysiologic and ultrastructural evidence suggests an impairment of the sensory hair cells of the cochlea following salicylate treatment. In addition, since these drugs can cause vasoconstriction, the ototoxicity of salicylates may also involve an impairment of the blood circulation in inner ear. However, a vascu...

Journal: :Clinical science 1971
A G Morgan A Polak

1. The renal clearance of salicylate has been measured in two groups of patients undergoing treatment by alkaline diuresis for salicylate poisoning. One group received mannitol and sodium lactate, the other acetazolamide and sodium bicarbonate. 2. The relationship between urine pH and salicylate clearance was found to be the same in both groups and similar to that shown at non-toxic concentrati...

Journal: :Cancer research 2004
Zhen Fan Yang Ronnie T Poon Jensen To David W Ho Sheung Tat Fan

This study investigates the possible molecular basis leading to failure in a treatment that is composed of hypoxia and chemotherapy in a rat orthotopic hepatoma model. Hypoxia was induced by hepatic artery ligation, whereas chemotherapeutic effect was achieved by intraportal injection of cisplatin. High-dose sodium salicylate was administered to achieve transcriptional blockade. Significant pro...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2003
Homer F. Swift

1. Rabbits treated with sodium salicylate in daily doses of from 0.16 to 0.2 gm. per kilo of body weight and at the same time immunized with intravenous injections of Streptococcus viridans, both living and in the form of vaccines, and also with washed sheep red blood cells, showed diminished complement-fixing antibodies, agglutinins, and hemolysins when compared with controls similarly immuniz...

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