Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0003969 (vitamin C deficiency)
625 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In vivo incubations of Hgb SC erythrocytes showed significantly more sickling in anterior chambers characterized by high concentrations of ascorbic acid than in anterior chambers with low concentrations of ascorbic acid (normal guinea pigs compared with scorbutic guinea pigs and normal guinea pigs compared with normal rats). Low concentrations of ascorbic acid, however, did not completely eliminate intracameral sickling. Because acetazolamide raises the concentration of aqueous humor ascorbate, it should be used with considerable discretion when treating hyphema and secondary glaucoma caused by sickle cells. Methazolamide may be more desirable.
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PMID:Sickled erythrocytes, hyphema, and secondary glaucoma: V. The effect of vitamin C on erythrocyte sickling in aqueous humor. 46 Aug 17

Depressed aqueous humor glucose and ascorbic acid levels returned to control values within 14 days following a 20 sec, 6 mm. diameter, 1N sodium hydroxide burn of the rabbit cornea. These corneas did not ulcerate or perforate. After a 20 sec., 12 mm. diameter, 1N sodium hydroxide burn, aqueous humor glucose levels returned to normal values, but ascorbic acid levels remained significantly depressed for up to 30 days. These corneas became markedly ulcerated in about 60 per cent of animals and frequently perforated. Following 12 mm. alkali burns, rabbits treated daily with 1.5 Gm. of subcutaneous ascorbic acid rarely developed corneal ulcerations and the corneas did not perforate. It is suggested that exogenous maintenance of adequate aqueous humor levels of ascorbic acid overcomes the relatively scorbutic state of the anterior segment induced by a 12 mm. alkali burn, thereby impairing the development of corneal ulceration and perforation. Elevated aqueous humor levels of ascorbic acid had no influence on corneal epithelial cell migration patterns following alkali burns.
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PMID:Ascorbic acid prevents corneal ulceration and perforation following experimental alkali burns. 99 63

It was reported previously that dietary ascorbate (ASC) delays the development of galactose-induced cataract in guinea pigs compared to the rate which is observed in ASC-deficient animals. Experiments were conducted to explore the possible mechanism of this phenomenon. Guinea pigs were fed for a period of up to 4 weeks either a normal diet (1 g ASC/kg diet) or a scorbutic diet (< 0.04 g ASC/kg diet) combined with 10% galactose in the drinking water. After 2 weeks, levels of ASC in animals on the scorbutic diet decreased by 95% in the aqueous humor and by 78% in the lens. Slit lamp examination showed that galactose-induced vacuoles in the lens equator formed at a significantly faster rate in the scorbutic animals. However, examination of biochemical parameters in whole lenses of the two groups of animals after 2 weeks showed no significant differences with regard to accumulation of galactose and galactitol, decreases in the levels of myoinositol, taurine and GSH or changes in cation concentrations. In order to examine possible regional changes in the lenses, various parameters were studied in the lens capsule-epithelium. On day 4, the capsule epithelia of scorbutic animals on a galactose diet had a content of galactitol two-and-a-half times higher than that of normal galactose-fed animals. Scorbutic conditions also intensified the loss of Na(+)-K+ ATPase activity in the lens capsule-epithelium caused by galactose feeding. Oxidized glutathione was not detectable in the lens capsule epithelia of any of the animals studied. Hexose monophosphate shunt activity was elevated in lenses of normal galactose-fed animals during the first hour of culture after death whereas lenses of scorbutic galactose-fed animals were not. Consistent with the in vivo findings, galactitol accumulation in dog lens epithelial cells exposed to 30 mM galactose was significantly inhibited by the presence of either ASC or dehydroascorbate (DHA) in the medium. Hexose monophosphate shunt activity in the cells was stimulated to two-and-a-half times its initial level by either 1 mM DHA or 30 mM galactose and slightly more than three-fold by a combination of the two challenges. The results suggest that decreased polyol accumulation in the lens epithelium of the normal galactose-fed guinea pig, which has a high level of ASC in the aqueous humor, accounts for the delay in onset of cataract compared to that for the ASC-deficient animal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:A physiological level of ascorbate inhibits galactose cataract in guinea pigs by decreasing polyol accumulation in the lens epithelium: a dehydroascorbate-linked mechanism. 815 13

We examined whether short-term ascorbic acid deficiency impairs antioxidant status in the lens of guinea pigs. Male guinea pigs aged 4 wk were given a scorbutic diet (20 g/animal per day) with and without ascorbic acid (400 mg/animal per day) in drinking water for 3 wk. The ascorbic acid-deficient group showed no lens opacity. The ascorbic acid-deficient group had 14% of serum ascorbic acid concentration, 6% of aqueous humor ascorbic acid concentration, and 18% of lens ascorbic acid content in the ascorbic acid-adequate group. There were no differences in the contents of lens reduced glutathione and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, an index of lipid peroxidation, between the ascorbic acid-deficient and adequate groups, while the deficient group had higher lens vitamin E content than the adequate group. The ascorbic acid-deficient group had higher serum vitamin E concentration than the ascorbic acid adequate group, while there were no differences in the concentrations of serum reduced glutathione and tiobarbituric acid reactive substances between the deficient and adequate groups. These results indicate that short-term ascorbic acid deficiency does not impair antioxidant status in the lens of guinea pigs despite induction of severe ascorbic acid depletion in the tissue, which may result in no cataract formation.
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PMID:Short-term ascorbic acid deficiency does not impair antioxidant status in lens of guinea pigs. 1524 20