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Query: UMLS:C0003123 (
anorexia
)
13,794
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Current belief that vitamin B6 deficiency causes depletion of muscle phosphorylase in animals appears to be erroneous. We present evidence that vitamin B6 deficiency is ineffective in reducing total phosphorylase in gasttocnemius muscle of young rats over a period of at least 8 weeks. Rats that had accumulated high levels of muscle phosphorylase while ingesting diets containing normal or excess amounts of the vitamin retained their phosphorylase after transfer to a vitamin B6 deficient diet. Prolonged deficiency did ultimately lead to enzyme depletion but this was after
anorexia
had developed and weight loss had occurred. When rats were partially starved for 1 to 4 days (fed 10% of normal energy intake) they lost muscle phosphorylase while retaining
alanine
and aspartate aminotransferases. When totally starved, the rats lost more phosphorylase than during partial starvation, but completely retained alanine aminotransferase, and lost some aspartate aminotrasferase. We conclude that the behavior of muscle phosphorylase is consistent with the Krebs-Fischer proposal that it acts as a reservoir for vitamin B6 and that starvation, but not vitamin B6 deficiency per se, causes depletion of muscle phosphorylase. It appears that phosphorylase may function as an adjunct ot adipose tissue necessary for the animal to efficiently meet the exigencies of starvation.
...
PMID:The behavior of muscle phosphorylase as a reservoir for vitamin B6 in the rat. 63 54
In F344 rats bearing transplantable 3-methylcholanthrene (CAS: 56-49-5)-induced sarcomas, plasma concentrations of immunoreactive insulin were decreased following the development of mild or severe
anorexia
. Plasma levels of immunoreactive glucagon and lactate were elevated in severely anorectic tumor-bearing (TB) rats, while plasma glucose concentrations remained normal. Both groups of TB rats exhibited decreased plasma levels of serine, glutamine, citrulline, and tryptophan and increased concentrations of
alanine
. Plasma levels of proline and phenylalanine were also elevated in the severely anorectic TB rats. In a second experiment, 7 daily treatments with insulin corrected the
anorexia
for 6 days and increased body weights of TB rats. Plasma concentrations of lactate and immunoreactive glucagon were decreased, and the abnormal plasma concentrations of glutamine, proline, analine, and phenylalanine were altered toward normal following the insulin treatments. Therefore, these data are consistent with insulin treatments benefiting the TB host by increasing feeding, increasing body weight, reducing tumor glycolysis and metabolism, reducing gluconeogenesis, and reducing host catabolism, while not stimulating tumor growth. Thus insulin therapy may have potential benefits in cancer treatment by shifting glucose metabolism toward the host and away from the tumor.
...
PMID:Reversal of tumor-induced biochemical abnormalities by insulin treatment in rats. 352 58
Plasma amino acid concentrations were measured in fasting nontumor bearing (NTB) and tumor bearing (TB; methylcholanthrene induced sarcoma) male Fischer F344 rats during infusion of 0.9% NaCl solution or glucose at 3.72 or 13.05 mumol/100 g total body weight (TBW)/min. The animals were studied when the tumor comprised only 8% of the TBW at a time when decreased food intake and weight loss were not manifest. During 0.9% NaCl infusion there were no significant differences between NTB or TB animals in the concentration of
alanine
(NTB: 152.6 +/- 20.1; TB: 150.3 +/- 19.0 microM; mean +/- SD), branched chain amino acids (BCAA) (NTB: 343.3 +/- 48.7; TB: 344.2 +/- 20.5 microM), essential amino acids, aromatic amino acids, or total amino acids. During infusion of glucose at 3.72 mumol/100 g TBW/min the
alanine
levels rose (NTB: 283.6 +/- 33.4; TB: 286.7 +/- 43.3 microM), and the BCAA levels fell (NTB: 215.9 +/- 19.4; TB: 228.7 +/- 43.4 microM) to similar concentrations in both NTB and TB animals. Glucose infusion at 13.05 mumol/100 g TBW/min resulted in an additional increase in the
alanine
concentration (NTB: 344.5 +/- 28.7; TB: 382.8 +/- 116.6 microM), and a further decrease in the BCAA concentration (NTB: 166.4 +/- 30.8; TB: 160.7 +/- 30.5 microM) without significant differences between NTB and TB animals. Paired analysis for each animal prior to and during glucose infusion demonstrated a similar absolute micromolar change in
alanine
and BCAA concentration during both glucose infusion rates in both NTB and TB animals. The levels of aromatic amino acids and total amino acids were unchanged and the essential amino acid concentrations were decreased only at the higher glucose infusion rate in both NTB and TB groups. Basal amino acid metabolism appears similar in the NTB and TB animals, prior to the onset of
anorexia
and weight loss. During exogenous glucose infusion the reciprocal changes in the plasma
alanine
and BCAA concentrations support the concept of a glucose-
alanine
-BCAA cycle at the whole body level that appears to respond to a similar extent in NTB and TB animals.
...
PMID:Basal amino acid concentrations and the response to incremental glucose infusion in tumor bearing rats. 390 81
Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a chronic nonsuppurative, destructive cholangitis, whose etiology is unknown. Morbidity arises early from pruritus and later from hypercholesterolemia with xanthoma formation. Therapy is supportive and directed at the complications of cholestasis. Plasmapheresis has been reported to benefit patients with hyperlipidemia and PBC; thus a pilot study of plasmapheresis utilizing the Haemonetics Model 30 with replacement by albumin and saline was conducted. Five patients (four female and one male) with a mean age of 43 (range 29-58) and a mean duration of illness of 9.5 years (range 6-21) with marked jaundice, xanthomas, xanthelasma, hepatomegaly, fatigability,
anorexia
, and pruritus, as well as mild nausea were studied. Peripheral neuropathy was present in two patients. Two patients had splenomegaly. Two patients had an associated Sjogren syndrome. All patients had high serum bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and cholesterol levels and mild elevations in aspartate amino transferase and
alanine
amino transferase activities. Immune complexes measured in four patients were present. Antimitochondrial antibody titers were significant in all patients. Patients underwent a mean of 63 plasmapheresis procedures over a mean of 112 weeks removing a mean of 94.7 liters of plasma. No serious toxicity was seen. All patients showed a reduction in pruritus, xanthomas, xanthelasmas, and serum cholesterol values. The two patients who had evidence of Sjogren syndrome noted subjective improvement. All patients who had fatigue,
anorexia
and nausea also noted moderate improvement. There was no change in hepatomegaly or splenomegaly in patients demonstrating such organomegaly. Liver function did not change significantly. Overall, four patients had improvement in their condition and one patient achieved stability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The clinical effectiveness and safety of chronic plasmapheresis in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. 403 Jul 9
Mouse fibrosarcoma cells were grown in vitro and incubated with L-2,4 diaminobuturic acid, a non-metabolizable amino acid. The tumor cells were irreversibly and totally damaged by incubation with 10 mM DAB for 24 h at 37 degrees C. The cell-destructive effect by DAB was probably due to an osmotic lysis induced by the non-saturated intracellular accumulation of DAB. The harmful effect of DAB could be abolished by concomitant incubation with L-
alanine
and L-methionine, that compete with DAB for the same transport system, while the D-forms of the same amino acids as well as sarcosine had a weak effect. The fibrosarcoma cells were also transplanted s.c. into mice that were subsequently treated with i.p. injections of an isotonic 0.1 M DAB solution. The neoplastic cells were transplanted into totally 90 animals. The mean tumor weight of 42 treated animals was 1.16 g (+/- 0.77 g) compared with the corresponding figures of the 27 untreated mice, that were 2.05 g (+/- 1.22 g), i.e., a 43.4% reduction of tumor growth. There were, however, 17 drug-related deaths. Treatment with DAB generally resulted in weight reduction, at least partly due to
loss of appetite
, in animals. In addition, neurological symptoms of a specific character could develop among several of the treated animals. The side effects apparently restrict the usefulness of DAB alone as an anti-tumor agent, but since the principle of action of DAB is unique and not shared by other known chemotherapeutics it might offer new possibilities in the combined treatment of neoplastic growth.
...
PMID:Antitumor activity of L-2,4 diaminobuturic acid against mouse fibrosarcoma cells in vitro and in vivo. 743 Feb 41
To study the possible role of several amino acids on feeding in the
anorexia
of aging, we have measured plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of 22 amino acids in 14 elderly persons with idiopathic
anorexia
and 10 healthy subjects with normal weight in a similar age range. Plasma and CSF amino acid concentrations and CSF homovanillic acid (HVA) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) levels were all measured by HPLC methods. Elderly anorectic subjects had significantly lower levels of glutamic acid but increased concentrations of glutamine in both plasma and CSF compared to controls. Likewise, a significant increase of histidine, threonine,
alanine
, arginine, valine, methionine, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, ornithine and lysine was found in CSF, but not in plasma, from patients with
anorexia
. Besides, the CSF histidine/LNAA (large neutral amino acids) and tryptophan/LNAA ratios were elevated in anorectic patients as compared with controls of similar age. In addition, we found higher CSF concentrations of HVA and 5-HIAA, as well as a positive correlation between CSF LNAA and either HVA (r = 0.74, p = 0.002) or 5-HIAA (r = 0.61, p = 0.020) concentrations in elderly anorectics. CSF tryptophan correlated positively with 5-HIAA levels (r = 0.59, p = 0.026) and CSF tyrosine with HVA levels (r = 0.77, p = 0.002). Our results suggest that changes in the CSF concentration of amino acids could contribute to an increased biogenic amine metabolism in the central nervous system of elderly anorectic subjects, possibly increasing the synaptic liberation of biogenic amines involved in the appetite regulation.
...
PMID:Altered cerebrospinal fluid amino acid pattern in the anorexia of aging: relationship with biogenic amine metabolism. 769 27
Trichuris suis, the whipworm of swine, causes anemia, weight loss,
anorexia
, mucohemorrhagic diarrhea, and death in heavy infections. A zinc metalloprotease has been suggested to play a role in the severe enteric pathology associated with infection and the infiltration of opportunistic bacteria into deeper tissues in the swine colon. In this study, a thiol protease from gut extracts of adult T. suis and from excretory/secretory components (E/S) of adult worms was characterized using fluorogenic peptide substrates and protein substrate gels. The protease cleaved the fluorogenic substrate Z-Phe-Arg-AMC, and this cleavage was completely inhibited by the thiol protease inhibitors E-64, leupeptin, Z-Phe-
Ala
-CH2F, and Z-Phe-Arg-CH2F. Gelatin substrate gels and fluorescence assays using both the gut and the stichosome extracts and E/S revealed enhanced activity when 2 mM dithiothreitol or 5 mM cysteine was included in the incubation buffer, and optimal activity was seen over a pH range of 5.5 to 8.5. Incubation of gut extracts or E/S material with inhibitors of aspartic, serine, or metalloproteases had no effect on the cleavage of Z-Phe-Arg-AMC. Thiol protease activity was found in extracts of gut tissue but not in the extracts of stichocytes of adult worms. N-terminal amino acid sequencing of the protease revealed sequence homologies with cathepsin B-like thiol protease identified from parasitic and free-living nematodes.
...
PMID:Trichuris suis: thiol protease activity from adult worms. 902 2
Ten muskrats (Ondatra zibethicus) each were infected with 17,000 eggs (long-term study) and eight muskrats each were infected with 8,000 eggs (short-term study) of Capillaria hepatica (Nematoda). Food intake, body weight, and selected clinicopathological parameters were measured every 2 days for 28 days in the short-term study and every 14 days for 184 days in the long-term study. Muskrats in the short-term study had moderate to severe necrotizing granulomatous hepatitis associated with mild
anorexia
and weight loss, varying degrees of leukocytosis with eosinophilia and elevation of serum
alanine
and aspartate aminotransferases. No significant changes in packed cell volume, hemoglobin, total plasma protein, albumin, blood urea nitrogen, bilirubin, lactate dehydrogenase or alkaline phosphatase were found among animals from the short-term study. Muskrats in the long-term study had severe necrotizing granulomatous hepatitis associated with marked
anorexia
, weight loss and 60% mortality over 39 days post-inoculation (PI); animals that survived for 184 days did not return to pre-inoculation body weights despite returning to normal food intake. Hepatic lesions at 184 days PI consisted of minimal to severe liver replacement by C. hepatica eggs. No statistically significant differences in values of clinical parameters between inoculated animals and a non-inoculated control group from the long term study were found.
...
PMID:Clinicopathological features and histopathology of experimental hepatic capillariasis in muskrats (Ondatra zibethicus). 902 99
1. Glutathione concentrations in liver and lung fall when food intake or sulphur amino acid intake is inadequate. However, concentrations may be restored during inflammation, despite
anorexia
, provided that prior sulphur amino acid intake is adequate. 2. We studied the mechanisms of these changes by measuring the effect of sulphur amino acid and protein intake on hepatic glutathione synthesis and gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activity, hepatic and lung glutathione concentrations, glutathione reductase and glutathione peroxidase activities in young rats given an inflammatory challenge by intraperitoneal injection of tumour necrosis factor-alpha or endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide). 3. Diets containing 200 g of casein and 8 g of L-cysteine/kg (normal-protein diet), or 80 g of casein and 8 g of L-cysteine, or isonitrogenous amounts of L-methionine or L-
alanine
(low-protein diets) were fed ad libitum to young Wistar rats for 8 days. Dietary groups were subdivided into three: one subgroup continued feeding ad libitum, a second was given tumour necrosis factor or lipopolysaccharide and killed 24 h thereafter, while the third was pair-fed to the intakes of the second subgroup for 24 h before being killed. 4. Glutathione concentrations in liver and lung were reduced in rats fed the low-protein diet containing
alanine
, and in all dietary groups when food intake was restricted. The inflammatory challenges restored hepatic glutathione concentrations in all groups but the diet supplemented with
alanine
, which had an inadequate sulphur amino acid content. In lung, restoration occurred only in animals fed the normal-protein diet. 5. The activity of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, which is rate limiting for glutathione synthesis, was unaffected by dietary or sulphur amino acid intake or by the inflammatory response. Substrate supply may therefore be a major determinant in glutathione synthesis in vivo. 6. Total hepatic glutathione synthesis was affected by food intake, the type and amount of sulphur amino acids in the diet and by inflammation. Total synthesis was 207, 137, 421 and 90 mumol/day for animals fed ad libitum the normal-protein diet, or low-protein diets supplemented with cysteine, methionine or
alanine
respectively, ad libitum. Pair-feeding resulted in values of 76, 31, 71, and 0 mumol/day respectively. After lipopolysaccharide injection, rates increased to 200, 117, 151 and 56 mumol/day respectively. 8. Reductase and peroxidase activities increased in liver and lung, when low-protein diets which contained supplemental methionine or
alanine
were consumed ad libitum. A reduction in food intake resulted in enzyme activity changes, which suggested that recycling of glutathione increased in lung and decreased in liver. Injection of tumour necrosis factor reversed this effect. 9. The restoration of glutathione concentrations in liver after an inflammatory challenge is closely associated with an enhanced rate of synthesis and increased recycling. The former is impaired when inadequate sulphur amino acid is consumed before the challenge. In lung, increased recycling of glutathione may help maintain concentrations when food intake is restricted, but not during inflammation.
...
PMID:Dietary sulphur amino acid adequacy influences glutathione synthesis and glutathione-dependent enzymes during the inflammatory response to endotoxin and tumour necrosis factor-alpha in rats. 909 11
A prospective observational study was conducted to identify early indicators of acute dengue virus infection. Children with fever for <72 h without obvious cause were studied at hospitals in Bangkok and Kamphaeng Phet, Thailand, until resolution of fever. Of 172 evaluable subjects (91% of enrollees), 60 (35%) had dengue, including 32 with dengue fever (DF) and 28 with dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). At enrollment, children with dengue were more likely than children with other febrile illnesses (OFI) to report
anorexia
, nausea, and vomiting and to have a positive tourniquet test, and they had lower total white blood cell counts, absolute neutrophil and absolute monocyte counts, and higher plasma
alanine
and aspartate (AST) aminotransferase levels than children with OFI. Plasma AST levels were higher in children who developed DHF than in those with DF. These data identify simple clinical and laboratory parameters that help to identify children with DF or DHF.
...
PMID:Early clinical and laboratory indicators of acute dengue illness. 923 95
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