In a double-blind, randomised multicentre study buflomedil, a vasoactive substance, was compared with placebo in the treatment of 93 patients with chronic arterial occlusive disease. After a run-in period of four weeks the patients received either buflomedil (600 mg daily) or placebo over 12 weeks. The pain-free and the total walking distances improved significantly in both groups. However, the differences in the improvement between the two groups were highly significant and in favour of buflomedil: for the pain-free walking distance p less than 0.001 and for the total walking distance p less than 0.01. The results indicate that buflomedil has a beneficial effect on the symptoms and lengthens the walking distance in patients with arterial occlusive disease.
The haemodynamic effects of angiotensin II and noradrenaline were studied in the rat kidney. These pressors were given by intravenous infusion in stepwise increasing doses. Intrarenal haemodynamics were analyzed by the 133xenon washout technique, 85krypton autoradiography and silastic casting of the renal vascular tree. Angiotensin II induced significant changes in intrarenal haemodynamics before any changes in systemic blood pressure were detected. The decrease in mean renal blood flow (2.91 ml.min-1.g-1 in controls, 1.76 ml.min-1.g-1 in rats given 50 mug of angiotensin II.kg-1.h-1) reflects a reduction in component I blood flow rate (from 3.9 to 2.9 ml.min-1.g-1) as well as a decrease in the fraction of total renal blood flow supplied to component I of the washout curve (from 84% to 62%). With noradrenaline an increase in total renal resistance occurred simultaneously with the elevation of mean arterial blood pressure. The resulting reduction in mean renal blood flow (from 2.76 ml.min-1.g-1 in controls to 1.55 ml.min-1.g-1 in rats given 1000 mug of noradrenaline kg-1.h-1) reflects a decrease in component I blood flow rate with lower infusion rates and a drop in component I flow fraction (from 82% to 52%) whith higher doses. In contrast to canine kidneys, no evidence for a patchy cortical vasoconstriction was found in the rat. Using autoradiography it was possible to attribute component I to the renal cortex and subcortical area of the kidney.
The APS Journal Legacy Content is the corpus of 100 years of historical scientific research from the American Physiological Society research journals. This package goes back to the first issue of each of the APS journals including the American Journal of Physiology, first published in 1898. The full text scanned images of the printed pages are easily searchable. Downloads quickly in PDF format.
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.