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Disease
Symptom
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three cases of severe anorexia are reported. It results in a strong protein malabsorption with
hepatic steatosis
and in a syndrome of mental
depression
which needed the re-establishment of the intestinal-continuity. Although a mild post-operative anorexia is regular and contributes to the weight loss, massive anorexia must be considered as a new and redoubtable unpredictible complication of the surgical treatment for obesity, which may hinder the intestinal adaptation and increase the protein malabsorption.
...
PMID:[Anorexia: a redoubtable complication of the surgical treatment for obesity after jejuno ileal by-pass (author's transl)]. 9 23
In liver homogenates of rats fed a low-level diet of Wheat-Rice- or Miyazaki-pattern amino acid mixture, some enzymes such as glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, ATP citrate lyase, fatty acid-synthesizing enzymes, malic enzyme and L-alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, whose activities are indicators of lipogenesis have been determined from the viewpoint of the mechanisms producing
fatty liver
. In the early experimental period, malic enzyme activity increased more markedly in rats fed low amino acid mixture diets than in the control group, and L-alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase activity in the liver increased slightly. Conversely, ATP citrate lyase and fatty acid-synthesizing enzyme activities remained almost at control levels, or glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity tended to decrease. These results suggest that some other associated factors, such as
depression
of the lipid transfer system in the liver rather than accelerated lipogenesis itself, may be the main cause of the fatty livers produced under these nutritional conditions.
...
PMID:Some lipogenic enzyme activities in rat livers in which an excessive fat accumulation occurred due to feeding low-level amino acid mixture diets. 50 52
Rats fed a special liquid fat diet had a higher level of liver triglycerides than rats fed a normal solid chow diet. The ingestion of ethanol induces a concomitant increase in hepatic triglycerides and a
depression
of ATP levels. Pure adenine base administered orally produces a significant reduction of hepatic triglycerdies and partially restores ATP levels in the chronic ethanol treated rat. Comparable doses of oral ATP are not effective. Pure guanine base and GTP failed to inhibit the ethanol-induced
fatty liver
and ATP
depression
.
...
PMID:The effect of purine bases and nucleotides on ethanol-induced fatty liver syndrome. 67 63
Dose-response relationships, biochemical mechanisms, and sex differences in the experimental
fatty liver
induced by tetracycline were studied in the intact rat and with the isolated perfused rat liver in vitro. In the intact male and female rat, no direct relationship was observed between dose of tetracycline and hepatic accumulation of triglyceride. With provision of adequate oleic acid as a substrate for the isolated perfused liver, a direct relationship was observed between dose of tetracycline and both accumulation of triglyceride in the liver and
depression
of output of triglyceride by livers from male and female rats. Marked differences were observed between female and male rats with regard to base line (control) hepatic concentration of triglyceride and output of triglyceride. Accumulation of hepatic triglyceride, as a per cent of control values, in response to graded doses of tetracycline, did not differ significantly between male, female and pregnant rat livers. However, livers from female, and especially pregnant female rats, were strikingly resistant to the effects of tetracycline on
depression
of output of triglyceride under these experimental conditions. These differences between the sexes could not be related to altered disposition of tetracycline or altered uptake of oleic acid. Depressed hepatic secretion of triglyceride accounted only for 30 to 50% of accumulated hepatic triglyceride, indicating that additional mechanisms must be involved in the production of the triglyceride-rich
fatty liver
in response to tetracycline.
...
PMID:Fatty liver induced by tetracycline in the rat. Dose-response relationships and effect of sex. 115 89
Depression
in feed intake during the final week before calving was hypothesized to be a major factor in the etiology of
fatty liver
development near parturition. Eleven cows were allowed to eat for ad libitum intake prior to calving (control), and 11 cows were maintained at the same level of DMI recorded during d 21 to 17 prior to calving by force feeding the feed refusals via rumen cannulas. Feed intake by control cows decreased 28% during the final 17 d prior to calving. Lipid triglyceride increased 227 and 75% for control and force-fed cows between d 17 prior to parturition and d 1 following calving. Dry matter intake prior to calving was correlated negatively with liver triglyceride immediately after calving (r = -.80). Plasma glucose concentrations for control and force-fed cows were 63 and 76 mg/dl 2 d prior to calving and also were related closely to liver triglyceride immediately after calving (r = -.50). By d 28 after calving, there were no differences in liver triglyceride between treatments. Cows that were force-fed prior to calving tended to yield milk with greater fat percentage (4.22 vs. 3.88%) and to yield more 3.5% FCM (46.1 vs. 41.7 kg/d) during the first 28 d postpartum.
...
PMID:Effect of prepartum dry matter intake on liver triglyceride concentration and early lactation. 150 May 87
1. Male Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) liver activates CCl4 to free radicals that bind covalently to cellular components (CB) and stimulate a lipid peroxidation (LP) process to a larger extent than the rat liver. 2. CCl4 administration results in a less intense necrogenic effect in gerbils than in rats and does not cause
fatty liver
. 3. CCl4 causes less intense effects on liver ultrastructure or calcium metabolism but more marked
depression
of glucose 6 phosphatase activity (G6P-ase) in gerbils than in rats. 4. Results suggest that a better ability of gerbil liver to keep calcium homeostasis than rat liver might be the cause of their relative resistance to necrosis. Higher intensity of CB and LP in gerbils than in rats might explain more intense effects on G6P-ase.
...
PMID:Carbon tetrachloride-induced liver cell injury in the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus). 257 75
A micro-technique was developed to measure fatty acid oxidation in vitro and to investigate its possible derangement in alcoholic fatty liver disease. Percutaneous liver biopsy specimens were obtained from nine control subjects and 28 alcoholic patients with mild to severe
fatty liver
. Fresh tissue (10-15 mg) was incubated at 37 degrees C for 90 min in a sealed reaction flask containing 1.92 mmol/l [1-14C]palmitic acid (1-2 microCi) and 1% essentially fatty acid free albumin in Krebs-Henseleit buffer, pH 7.4. Radiolabelled CO2 and perchloric acid-soluble ketone bodies were isolated and counted. CO2 production was markedly reduced in alcoholic patients with mild and severe
fatty liver
compared with controls. This
depression
was reversed by the addition of malate to the reaction flask but not by carnitine or coenzyme A. Ketone body production was similar in controls and patients with mild and severe
fatty liver
. After the incubation in vitro, the tissue was extracted with chloroform/methanol and the triglyceride fraction isolated by thin layer chromatography and counted for radioactivity. The rate of palmitic acid incorporation into triglyceride was higher in alcoholic patients, particularly those with severe fatty infiltration, compared with controls. It is suggested that alcoholic fatty liver is accompanied by a progressive reduction in palmitic acid oxidation with the major defect occurring in the tricarboxylic acid cycle. In contrast, the rate of palmitic acid esterification into triglyceride is enhanced.
...
PMID:Palmitic acid oxidation and incorporation into triglyceride by needle liver biopsy specimens from control subjects and patients with alcoholic fatty liver disease. 309 34
Alcohol has at least two actions on essential fatty acid (EFA) and Prostaglandin (PG) metabolism. It enhances the conversion of dihomogammalinolenic acid (DGLA) to PGE1 but it blocks the activity of the delta-6-desaturase, an enzyme necessary for replenishment of DGLA stores from dietary precursors. The acute effect of ethanol is therefore an increased production of PGE1 but chronic consumption will lead to depletion of DGLA and PGE1. Withdrawal from alcohol will lead to a precipitous fall in PGE1. PGE1 is known to have profound effects on the nervous system and behaviour. Patients with mania produce more PGE1 than normal while those with
depression
make less. Alcoholics may drink to maintain a normal PGE1 level, something which will require more and more ethanol as DGLA is depleted. In both animals and humans PGE1 or its precursor, gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) have been shown to attenuate the acute withdrawal syndrome. PGE1 injections prevent the development of
fatty liver
in alcohol-treated animals. Defective EFA and PGE1 metabolism are known to lead to increased fibrosis, reproductive failure, cardiomyopathy, cardiovascular disorders, gastritis and pancreatitis and could therefore be the basis for these disorders in alcoholics. A PGE1 deficiency could also be responsible for the fetal alcohol syndrome. Three other agents are known to produce constellations of fetal defects very similar to those found in the alcohol syndrome. These other factors are dihphenylhydantoin, lithium, and a deficiency of zinc. These three factors and excessive alcohol consumption all lead to PGE1 deficiency by different routes. If this concept is correct, the key to the management of alcoholism and its medical complications lies in the provision of GLA or DGLA, fatty acids which by-pass the alcohol blocked step and which are unfortunately unlikely to be present in any normal diet. Unlike many concepts of alcoholism and alcohol damage, the EFA/PGE1 idea is very readily testable and already has considerable experimental support.
...
PMID:A biochemical basis for alcoholism and alcohol-induced damage including the fetal alcohol syndrome and cirrhosis: interference with essential fatty acid and prostaglandin metabolism. 625 73
The relationship between liver fat content and haematology was investigated in 369 cows from eight herds sampled in the second week after calving. High levels of fat in the liver were associated with a
depression
in total white cell count and in neutrophils, eosinophils and lymphocytes. There was no correlation between liver fat content and the percentage of E rosetting lymphocytes, packed cell volume or haemoglobin concentration. The changes in peripheral white cell counts may be related to the increased incidence of post parturient disease in cows with
fatty liver
.
...
PMID:Haematology of subclinical fatty liver in dairy cows. 647 16
The chronic ingestion of ethanol results in liver-cell damage, and characteristic features of this injury are the marked alterations in both the functions and morphology of the mitochondria. Morphologically, the changes observed in human alcoholics and experimental animals appear similar. Bizarrely shaped mitochondria and megamitochondria are detected at the
fatty liver
stage and persist as the disease progresses. As yet, however, no correlation has been found between the severity of these morphological changes and the development of cirrhosis. Analysis of the mitochondrial membranes indicates that ethanol consumption produces changes in both the protein and lipid composition of the membrane. Profound decreases in the components of the respiratory chain have been detected, and these changes are associated with marked depressions in the activity of NAD+-linked dehydrogenases, cytochrome oxidase, and the ATP synthetase complex. On the other hand, no consistent pattern has emerged as to the effect of chronic ethanol consumption on the composition of the membrane phospholipids. Many of the changes appear to be dependent on the sex of the animal, the dietary status, and the duration of ethanol intake, and are suggestive of changes in fatty acid desaturase activity. Mitochondria isolated from ethanol-fed rats displayed impaired respiration and a lowered steady-state rate of ATP synthesis. Whether or not these functional changes are directly related to alterations in the physical properties of the membranes remains to be resolved. This marked
depression
of respiratory functions in isolated mitochondria was not reflected by a significant decrease in O2 consumption by the livers of ethanol-fed animals.
...
PMID:Alcohol-induced mitochondrial changes in the liver. 672 59
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