The Role of Chemistry in History

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Entries Tagged as 'Nitric Oxide'

Nitric Oxide and the Past

April 22nd, 2008 · Comments Off on Nitric Oxide and the Past

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Nitric Oxide has become one  of the world’s most researched molecules ever since three scientists won the Nobel Prize in  1998 for discovering Nitric Oxide’s role in cell signaling, which is a “complex system of communication that governs basic cellular activities and coordinates cell actions.” It is also an extremely studied medical topic. This “miracle molecule” as it is often called, came from a very meek beginning as a toxic gas and air pollutant.

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Nitric Oxide and the Future

April 22nd, 2008 · Comments Off on Nitric Oxide and the Future

 

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NO has been found to cause schizophrenia if an imbalance occurs. Rats in Sweden with characteristics of schizophrenia have regained normal brain functions if they receive drugs to reduce production of Nitric Oxide. This will be able to spark a completely new treatment for schizophrenics. The drug to give these rats the schizophrenic brain functions is called phencyclidine and the NO dropping treatment caused rats to become resistant to phencyclidine’s effects.

“In the future it is possible that drugs that affect the regulation of nitric oxide in the brain can be used to supplement currently existing anti-psychotic agents. The hope is that nitric oxide inhibiting drugs will alleviate the cognitive disturbances that also lie behind the impairments of social function, significantly improving the chances of a good life for schizophrenic patients,” says Caroline Wass.

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Nitric Oxide Use 2

April 22nd, 2008 · Comments Off on Nitric Oxide Use 2

 

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When NO mixes with Oxygen, it can cause capillary and pulmonary dilation. It is used to treat Primary Pulmonary Hypertension in neonatal patients and other relations to birth defects. “It can provide cardiac and respiratory support oxygen to patients whose hearts and lungs are so severely diseased that they can no longer function.”

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Nitric Oxide Use 1

April 22nd, 2008 · 1 Comment

Introduction

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NO supplies blood to organs when they call for it. When they need this blood supply, whether it is for movement or warmth, our brain tells the blood vessels to release Nitric Oxide. When we eat, NO is sent to our stomach to digest food. When it is there, it can control our blood pressure, and give our body more blood flow or less blood flow depending on our activity level. It also is released into the heart to dilate blood vessels and relieve chest pain.

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Nitric Oxide Discovery

April 22nd, 2008 · 19 Comments

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Joseph Priestly

Nitric Oxide was discovered in 1772 by a British man named Joseph Priestly, who referred to it as “nitrous air.” When he discovered this, it was a colorless and gas and a toxic gas. Nitric Oxide continued to recieve the label of being a toxic gas and an air pollutant until over two hundred years later, in 1987, when it was proven to be naturally produced by the body of mammals, including humans.

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Categories: Nitric Oxide

Introduction

April 22nd, 2008 · Comments Off on Introduction

Introduction

Discovery 

Uses 1 

Uses 2 

Past  

Future 

 

 

Nitric oxide or Nitrogen monoxide is a compound with formula NO. Nitric Oxide is extremely important to the body of humans as a signaling molecule. It is a toxic air pollutant, which is often produced by automobiles and power plants and is important to the chemical industry as well.

NO is often confused with nitrous oxide, which is a general anesthetic and also NO2 (Nitrogen Dioxide), which is extremely poisonous. NO is a molecule with unpaired electrons, which causes its high reactivity. When it reacts with ozone, it becomes a reddish-brown color formed nitrogen dioxide.

Nitric Oxide is a very simple molecule, but is also a key molecule in neuroscience, physiology, and immunology. In fact, it is so key that it won the 1992 “Molecule of the Year.”

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