4 research outputs found

    Electroresection followed by neodymium-YAG laser photocoagulation of the dog prostate for establishment of safety parameters

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    Electroresection of the prostate followed by Nd-YAG laser coagulation of residual prostate was carried out in eight dogs. All dogs voided spontaneously without significant bleeding in the immediate postoperative period. At the time of sacrifice in 6 to 8 weeks, no damage to adjacent tissue was seen in microscopic examination. Re-epithelization had occurred. This study suggests that the addition of neodymium-YAG coagulation to residual tissue after TURP in humans can be done safely

    The effects of chronic exposure to carbon monoxide on the cardiovascular and hematologic systems in dogs with experimental myocardial infarction

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    12 normal and 12 infarcted animals were continuously exposed (23 hrs/day) to 115 mg/cu m carbon monoxide for 14 weeks; 6 normal and 6 infarcted animals were allowed to breath ambient air. Blood was drawn weekly for hematologic studies, and the ECG was also recorded. The general well being of the animals was assessed by alertness, food and water intake, stool consistency, respiratory and heart rates, body weight, and rectal temperature. At the conclusion of the exposure period the animals were sacrificed for gross and microscopic observation of the heart and other tissues. Throughout the exposure period the animals remained in clinically good health. No obvious untoward signs were noted which could be interpreted as carbon monoxide induced: serum enzymes (CPK, GOT, LDH) or ECG were not characteristically altered; hematologic parameters (Hct, Hb, WBC, RBC, platelets, MCH, MCHC, MCV, and fibrin split products) did not change significantly. COHb averaged 14% in animals exposed to carbon monoxide, and 1.3% in air breathing animals. © 1972 Springer-Verlag
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