Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum somatomedin activity (SM-act) and cartilage metabolism were compared in acutely fasted, marasmic (M), and marasmic kwashiorkor (MK) rats. SM-act was estimated in the porcine bioassay. In vitro uptake of [35S]sulfate and [3H]methylthymidine in costal cartilage of the experimental animals during an incubation in medium immediately after sacrifice, called endogenous activity, and the effect of incubation in 20% normal human plasma after a preincubation of 22 h in medium only, called plasma responsiveness", were determined. Acutely fasted rats had lowered SM-act and a circulating heat-labile inhibitor. Endogenous activity and responsiveness of cartilage were depressed. MK rats (fed ad libitum a 0.5% casein, isocaloric food) showed a profound depression of growth and cartilage endogenous activity despite only partially reduced SM-act and increased responsiveness. M rats received normal food and were pair-fed with MK rats, consuming approximately 0.08 g/g BW . day. They showed very depressed SM-act and low endogenous activity, and responsiveness was increased, though less than in the MK rats. On refeeding M rats, SM-act and cartilage responsiveness increased, followed by an increase of endogenous activity. Catch-up growth was best related to [3H]methylthymidine incorporation by cartilage (endogenous activity). In conclusion, these two types of experimental chronic malnutrition induce a more diversified pattern than does acute fasting. During malnutrition, cartilage metabolism does not reflect bioassayable SM-act of serum but rather the other effects of the nutritional insult. On refeeding, the expected relationship of SM-act and cartilage metabolism is rapidly restored.
...
PMID:Serum somatomedin activity and cartilage metabolism in acutely fasted, chronically malnourished, and refed rats. 46 43

Young male rats (100-130 g) were fed diets of equal energy content containing o.5, 1,2,3,5, and 18% lactalbumin consumed either freely or in restricted amounts. The rats receiving low protein diets failed to grow and mature. Those consuming the 0.5 and1% protein diets given freely developed the characteristic features of kwashiorkor including edema, while those receiving the diets in restricted amounts developed the characteristic features of marasmus. The rats fed low protein diets had low plasma levels of essential amino acids; however, the lysine level was well maintained. The plasma levels of nonessential amino acids, especially glycine, alanine, and aspartic and glutamic acids were raised in marasmic rats but were reduced in rats fed low protein diets ad libitum. Young and severly malnourished rats appeared to have limited ability to synthesize urea. Therefore, they excreted more ammonia and other nitrogenous substances such as ethanolamine, and when given an amino acid load, intermediary metabolites of the ingested amino acids. Rats fed low protein diets showed diminution of total liver DNA, RNA, and protein. In addition to the reduction of protein synthesis resulting from decreased cellular RNA, ribosomes from the livers of protein-deficient rats had reduced ability to synthesize proteins. This defect was associated with the detatchment of the ribosomes from endoplasmic reticulum membrane and the elevation of the proportion of monosomes to polyribosomes. Malnutrition did not produce any change in the turnover rate of liver RNA. Protein deficiency caused significant depression of serum insulin, thyroxine, and corticosterone levels. Theoverall conclusion is that mammalian metabolism is well adapted to dietary intake and that this adaptation is achieved through dietary control of synthesis and release of key metabolic hormones.
...
PMID:Experimental protein and energy in the rat. 80 70

The Tropical Metabolism Research Unit at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica made anthropometric measurements of 46 13-month-old male infants to assess changes in bone resorption during malnutrition by measuring the urinary excretion rate of pyridinoline (PYD) and deoxypyridinoline (DPD) and to determine whether bone turnover is associated with recovery. Unit staff used standard methods to treat the malnourished boys, including an energy dense diet (cow's milk formulated from Perlargon and corn or coconut oil). Before treatment, their height-for-age stood at -3.6 Z-score and their weight-for-height was -2.4 Z-score. The rate of excretion of PYD and DPD in malnourished children was only about 33% of that after they recovered (11.2 nmol per hour per sq. meter vs. 32.2 nmol per hour per sq. meter and 2.6 nmol vs. 7.5 nmol per hour per sq. meter, respectively; p .001). Therefore, cartilage and bone turnover was considerably lower in the children when they were malnourished than when they recovered. Recovery did not alter the ratio of these 2 cross-link amino acids, however, suggesting that changes in endochondral growth relative to bone remodelling did not occur. The extent of depression in bone turnover was basically the same between children with marasmus, marasmic-kwashiorkor, or kwashiorkor. The rate of height gain of the children during recovery from malnutrition was significantly associated with age (p .001), PYD excretion at admission (p = .003), and weight-for-height at admission (p = .01), all 3 of which explained 44% of the variance in the rate of height gain of the children. Since this study demonstrated that PYD and DPD are associated with longitudinal growth in children recovering from malnutrition, more research on the effect of dietary manipulation on longitudinal growth should be done, which should define requirements for longitudinal growth and identify needed steps to prevent stunting.
...
PMID:Bone turnover in malnourished children. 136 95

One hundred children in the age group 6 months to 5 years were investigated for cell-mediated immune response in relation to their nutrition. The nutritional status was assessed by the Wellcome classification. The majority (54 per cent) of children had marasmus. Absolute lymphocyte count was found to be significantly low (P less than 0.01) in all malnourished groups except in mild forms of undernutrition. Small lymphocytes were also found to be significantly decreased (P less than 0.001) in malnourished children. A significant depression (P less than 0.001) was observed in the percentage and absolute T cells in all the malnourished children with kwashiorkor who showed the maximum depression of counts. All the control children showed DNCB skin reactions above grade 2+ while only 39 per cent of malnourished children showed reaction of this grade. After 4-6 weeks of dietary therapy, T cell counts were comparable with control values and DNCB skin test returned to normal in more than 75 per cent of cases.
...
PMID:Cell-mediated immune responses in malnourished host. 250 30

Burn injury-induced changes at the neuromuscular junction include muscle weakness and altered response to neuromuscular blocking drugs. Protein malnutrition and sepsis can concomitantly occur with burn trauma. The role of pure malnutrition or sepsis, in the absence of burn injury, in inducing neuromuscular changes was studied in the mouse gastrocnemius muscle. Additionally, cAMP levels in muscle were evaluated to reflect metabolic activity. Sepsis was studied using doses of endotoxin at one-fourth or one-third the dose evoking 50% lethality. Diets of 5% protein and 5% protein + 35% fiber achieved protein and protein/calorie malnutrition, respectively. In each model neuromuscular function was evaluated by maximal tension developed. Pharmacologic responses were measured through effective dose to paralyze active tension by either 50 or 95%. Protein and protein/calorie malnutrition leading to an approximate 8% body weight loss caused a depression of maximal tension developed; this depression in tension was associated with a 10-fold increase in cAMP levels. Effective doses of d-tubocurarine for twitch inhibition during malnutrition were not significantly different from controls. Sepsis at 2 weeks caused an approximate 8% body weight loss, a significant decrease in maximal tension and at least a 3- to 5-fold shift to the right in dose-response curves to d-tubocurarine. In contrast to malnutrition, cAMP levels were significantly decreased (P less than .001) in sepsis to 1/400 of controls. The altered neuromuscular function and pharmacology observed in sepsis are similar to changes observed in burn injury. Protein malnutrition common to these two states may be important in functional but not pharmacological changes at the neuromuscular junction.
...
PMID:Intraperitoneal endotoxin but not protein malnutrition shifts d-tubocurarine dose-response curves in mouse gastrocnemius muscle. 254 58

T-lymphocyte subpopulations were measured in the two major types of adult malnutrition, adult marasmus and kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic malnutrition. The population of T-cells (T3) and the percentage of both helper (T4) and suppressor (T8) T-cells were significantly (P less than .05) decreased in patients with kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic malnutrition, but did not differ from control values in patients with adult marasmus. The ratio of helper T-cell (T4), to suppressor T-cells (T8) (range 1.2-1.6) did not vary from control values in either type of malnutrition. One week of nutritional support was not associated with a significant increase in any of the T lymphocyte subpopulations in either type of malnutrition. These T-cell subpopulation changes are consistent with the greater depression of cellular immune function seen in patients with metabolic stresses associated with kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic malnutrition. With the increasing frequency in which abnormalities of T-cell subpopulations are being reported in various diseases, the coexistence of kwashiorkor-like hypoalbuminemic malnutrition should be noted for its potentially confounding effect.
...
PMID:The effect of nutritional support on T-lymphocyte subpopulations in protein calorie malnutrition. 294 50

After a brief look at the clinical descriptions of marasmus and kwashiorkor, and a summary of the physiopathological concepts of these protein calorie malnutritions (PCM), the author looks at arguments which suggest there is a change in the mother-child relationship at the onset of PCM, excluding, however, those malnutritions which appear in conditions of famine or catastrophe. These arguments are drawn principally from studies done in Africa, and are based on clinical, sociological, and ethnopsychiatric data. The contributing factor of maternal depression and that of relational characteristics of the child are considered, and an analysis is made of how these factors might converge at the onset of PCM. The author attempts to demonstrate the important role of a psychomotor retardation in the tableau of psychological troubles which present themselves during the course of Kwashiorkor. The role and importance of weaning, of the separation and the psychomotor retardation in the genesis of the "situation of malnutrition" are discussed. Finally, a parallel is established between PCM and early psychosomatic syndromes observed in the west, principally the anorexias and insomnias during the first year of life. The point in common between these situations and PCM is perhaps the onset of conditions having an upsetting and distorting effect on the mother-child relationship. The family and the entourage use certain collective representations in Africa ("Nit-KuBon", "Tjid-a-Paxer") to try and explain the onset of PCM. The description of these traditional representations is utilized as a materialization, by the mother and the social group, of an alteration of the mother-child relationship, and can be compared to representations which play the same role in the west.
...
PMID:[Psychosomatic aspects of protein-calorie malnutrition in early childhood in a tropical environment. Facts and hypotheses]. 309 57

The influence of dietary protein on the efficiency with which mice could be immunized against infection with the nematode Heligomosomoides polygyrus was investigated. Immunization with irradiated larvae did not protect outbred mice fed synthetic diets containing 2% or 4% protein against a challenge infection, while animals fed a diet containing 8% protein were significantly resistant. In further experiments with high-responder NIH mice, protein malnutrition was again found to cause a significant depression in immunity. Immunization primed all mice for an intense production of antibody against larval worms in a challenge infection, and although a slightly higher titre of antibody was detected in the plasma of mice fed a 16% compared with a 2% protein diet it seemed unlikely that this was sufficient to account for the reduced resistance of the malnourished mice. The development of eosinophilia in the blood of immunized mice was significantly delayed in malnourished animals following challenge, and it is suggested that a reduction in the number of granulocytes attacking larval worms contributed to the low level of resistance observed in these animals. Protein malnutrition thus markedly suppresses the effectiveness of immunization of mice against an intestinal nematode, and it is suggested that this result may be of general significance with regard to the potential for widespread immunization of people against infections of this type.
...
PMID:The influence of protein deficiency on immunity to Heligmosomoides polygyrus (Nematoda) in mice. 319 48

Natural killer (NK) cell activity and responsiveness to interferon (IFN) were measured in the peripheral blood of infants having kwashiorkor or marasmus and of nutritionally recovered malnourished children. Depression of NK activity in the peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) of the malnourished children was noted, while normal levels of activity were observed in the nutritionally recovered infants. Addition of exogeneous interferon in vitro potentiated the NK levels of PBLs from well-nourished and nutritionally recovered infants, but had either a nonsignificant impact on cells from the marasmic infants or a suppressive effect on the cells from infants with kwashiorkor. The success of exogenous interferon to potentiate the NK levels of PBLs from nutritionally recovered infants suggests that nutritional repletion corrects the impaired cellular responsiveness in these patients.
...
PMID:Depressed natural killer cell activity in children with protein--calorie malnutrition. II. Correction of the impaired activity after nutritional recovery. 641 85

Aflatoxins are common environmental hazards in all the underdeveloped countries of the tropics where they commonly contaminate food. They are toxic to most species of animals and are among the most powerful carcinogenic agents known. The liver is the principal target for toxicity. Metabolic derangements caused by aflatoxins include depression of protein and enzyme synthesis, disorder of lipid metabolism and immunological suppression. The aetiology and pathogenesis of kwashiorkor remains somewhat obscure. Similarities in the geographical and climatic prevalence of kwashiorkor and aflatoxins and similarities in the metabolic derangements caused by aflatoxins and those observed in kwashiorkor, prompted investigation of the relationship between aflatoxin and kwashiorkor in the Sudan and elsewhere in Africa. Analysis of foods from markets and in homes revealed widespread aflatoxin contamination. Aflatoxins were found more frequently and at higher concentrations in the serum of children with kwashiorkor than in those with other types of malnutrition or in normal children. Aflatoxicol, a metabolite of aflatoxin B1 was detected in serum in kwashiorkor and marasmic kwashiorkor but not in normally nourished children and only once in marasmus. Autopsy liver samples from West and Southern Africa have shown aflatoxins in all cases of kwashiorkor but not in marasmus. These findings establish relationships between aflatoxin and kwashiorkor the nature of which remains obscure but includes the possibility of a causal association.
...
PMID:The influence of aflatoxins on child health in the tropics with particular reference to kwashiorkor. 643 91


1 2 Next >>