CONCLUSIONS1. Terramycin proved to be an effective agent in the treatment of 18 patients with lobar pneumonia due to a typed pneumococcus and 7 patients with primary atypical (virus) pneumonia.2. The response to terramycin therapy was consid¬ ered excellent in every case, and there were no cases in which the treatment failed.3. The only untoward side effects attributable to the terramycin therapy were symptoms of gastrointestinal irritation. These resembled the symptoms seen after the administration of aureomycin, but seemed less severe.
Diaspirin cross-linked hemoglobin (DCLHbTM; Baxter Healthcare Corp., Round Lake, IL, USA) is undergoing clinical trials as a blood substitute. Administration of DCLHb is associated with an increase of mean arterial pressure in vivo and contraction of selected adult isolated blood vessels of from certain species in vitro. The mechanisms of these pressor effects may be due to scavenging of the endothelium derived relaxing factor, nitric oxide (NO), by hemoglobin. Unlike adult blood vessels, prostacyclin (PGI2) rather than EDNO is the important relaxing agent in human umbilical vessels. In this study, we examined if DCLHb had vasoconstrictor effects on isolated human umbilical vessels. Human umbilical veins and arteries were excised, cut into rings and placed in organ chambers filled with 25 ml Krebs-Ringer solution (37 degrees C). 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, 0.01-10 microM) increased the tension of human umbilical arteries (HUA, from 0.4 +/- 0.2 g to 2.6 +/- 0.4g) and veins (HUV, from 0.8 +/- 0.4g to 2.5 +/- 0.4g) in a dose-dependent manner. DCLHb (0.01-10 microM) did not have a significant effect on HUA and HUV. Substance P (1 microM, via prostanoid synthesis) and nitroglycerin (NG, 1 microM) but not acetylcholine (ACh, 1 microM) caused relaxation of both HUA and HUV. The NO synthase inhibitor L-NA did not have significant effects on HUA and HUV. DCLHb did not alter 5-HT preconstricted tension of HUA and HUV. The basal cGMP contents of HUA and HUV were low. These results support our previous finding that DCLHb-induced vasoconstriction in isolated vessels is dependent primarily on the binding of NO by hemoglobin.
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