The
5H-pyrido[4,3-b]indole,
11H-indolo[3,2-c]quinoline,
5H-benzo[f]pyrido[4,3-b]indole,
and 13H-benz[5,6]indolo[3,2-c]quinoline
heteroaromatic nuclei have been synthesized by the
Graebe−Ullmann method by classical heating or under microwave irradiation.
These tri-, tetra-, and
pentacyclic compounds were transformed into the corresponding cationic
derivatives by N-alkylation,
and the DNA-binding properties of the resulting cationic systems were
examined using UV−vis
spectroscopy, viscometric determinations, and molecular modeling
techniques. The tetracyclic
cations were transformed into bis-salts by means of a diethyl
bispiperidine rigid chain and a more
flexible polyamide linker, but the low solubility of these bis-salts
made the study of their
bisintercalating properties difficult.
On the basis of both efficacy and cost, intermittent bolus injections should be discontinued and replaced by continuous intravenous infusion in hospitalized patients requiring treatment with histamine H2-receptor antagonists. If ranitidine is used, either 150 mg or 300 mg administered as a 24-hour continuous infusion is most effective.
NBPU patients had the highest prevalence of H. pylori by PCR. It seems unlikely that either H. pylori or the cagA-positive gene act as significant risk factors for bleeding in peptic ulcers. The lower prevalence of the microorganism among patients who bleed cannot be explained as an artificial finding.
Human gastric bicarbonate secretion has been measured by back-titration, from pH and pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO2) determinations (using the Henderson-Hasselbalch formula), and from equations based on gastric juice osmolality and [H+] (osmolality-[H+] method). Since these methods show large quantitative differences in their estimations of gastric bicarbonate secretion, we examined each to define the reasons for these discrepancies and establish guidelines for future work in this area. Bicarbonate recovery from 'non-parietal' secretions (0 to 80 mM HCO3) reacting with 'pure parietal secretion' (160 mM HCl) was studied both in vitro and in the pylorus-occluded healthy human stomach during acid suppression, exogenous acidification, and pentagastrin stimulation. The pH/PCO2 method estimated HCO3- accurately under anaerobic conditions in vitro, whereas the osmolality-[H+] method (with correction factors for osmolality incorporated by us) was accurate under aerobic conditions. In the acid-suppressed stomach back-titration was significantly more accurate than the pH/PCO2 method. In the exogenously acidified and pentagastrin-stimulated stomachs the pH/PCO2 method underestimated bicarbonates, and the osmolality-[H+] method was spuriously elevated in the low range and diminished at high bicarbonate concentrations. Estimates of 'basal' bicarbonate secretion (at zero added bicarbonate) were severalfold higher by the osmolality-[H+] method (5.26 +/- 0.33 mmol/h) than by the pH/PCO2 method (1.20 +/- 0.23 mmol/h) or back-titration (0.65 +/- 0.14 mmol/h). In conclusion, gastric bicarbonate was determined most correctly by back-titration in the acid-suppressed stomach, whereas measurement of bicarbonate in the acid-secreting stomach was not accurate with any method.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.