Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 4 dogs injected intravenously (i.v.) with 125I labeled fibrinogen, 51Cr labeled platelets and 99mTc labeled
albumin
, and subjected to successively increasing amounts of i.v. infused monomethylmethacrylate, doses corresponding to the amounts released into the blood stream following implantation of acrylic cement during total hip replacements did not affect the clotting mechanism, did not cause trapping of platelets and fibrin in the lungs, did not generate fat emboli, and did not cause
depression
of the arterial oxygen tension or blood pressure. Monomethylmethacrylate in whole blood was associated with both blood cells and plasma.
...
PMID:Effects of graded infusions of monomethylmethacrylate on coagulation, blood lipids, respiration and circulation. An experimental study in dogs. 0 Jan 68
After combined injuries, much more pronounced changes in the protein composition of serum develop than simply after skin wounding or irradiation. A decrease was found in the prealbumin,
albumin
, alpha1-globulin and gamma-globulin fractions while the alpha2-globulin and beta-globulin fractions increased. If skin wounds were inflicted prior or almost simultaneously to irradiation, the serum protein changes as induced by irradiation become normalized earlier. I1 skin wounds were inflicted after irradiation they caused very pronounced alteration in the protein picture which develops in a course parallel to the increasing lethality. Only if the skin wounds were inflicted 21 days after irradiation, that they appeared to have nearly no influence in the form of augmenting protein changes. The gamma-globulin content increased considerably after the 14th day after irradiation. An additional skin wound, however, caused a
depression
of the gamma-globulins; but the values were still significantly higher than normal.
...
PMID:[Studies on combined lesions. 22. Studies on serum proteins by means of CAF-electrophoresis in mice, treated with whole body radiation and with open skin wounds]. 5 23
For development of an animal model of virus-induced anergy, the effect of canine distemper virus (CDV) upon cell-mediated immunity in dogs was investigated. First, canine cutaneous reactions and in vitro lymphocyte responses to soluble protein antigens were characterized. Dogs immunized with picryl guinea pig
albumin
and with keyhole limpet hemocyanin (both in complete Freund's adjuvant) responded reproducibly to intracutaneous challenge with these antigens. Reactivity peaked in 20-40 days (maximal induration, 6-50 mm). Lymphocytes from these animals responded in vitro to stimulation with keyhole limpet hemocyanin or purified protein derivative. This stimulation was antigen-specific and was maximal on day 6 of culture. Infection with CDV depressed cutaneous reactivity and lymphocyte response in vitro to antigens and mitogens. This effect was transient in animals previously vaccinated with attenuated CDV; however, gnotobiotic puppies (susceptible to CDV) had prolonged
depression
of cell-mediated immunity and lymphopenia. Some of these animals developed neurologic symptoms and died. The findings indicate that CDV infection is a potentially useful model for study of virus-induced
depression
of T (thymus)-cell responses and support the hypothesis that there is more than one mechanism responsible for this phenomenon.
...
PMID:A canine distemper model of virus-induced anergy. 5 99
An automated immunoprecipitin system has been utilized to quantitate the concentration of 10 specific proteins in the plasma of man. Values obtained by this technique are in agreement with the published concentrations for these specific plasma proteins. This technique was utilized to determine the sequential change s in 10 individual plasma proteins of volunteers exposed to Salmonella typhi. In those volunteers who developed typical typhoid fever, plasma concentrations of the acute phase proteins, alpha1-acid glycoprotein, alpha1-antitrypsin, and haptoglobin, as well as C3 complement were significantly increased with the onset of febrile illness. In contrast, the concentration of plasma
albumin
and tranferrin were depressed while plasma IgM became elevated during early convalescence from this infection. No significant changes were observed in the plasma concentrations of alpha2-macroglobulin, IgG, or IgA. In the exposed volunteers who did not become ill, the only significant change was a brief
depression
of alpha1-antitrypsin. During typhoid fever the patterns of change for individual plasma acute-phase globulins were different from those reported for patients with hepatitis, myocaridal infarction, or surgery.
...
PMID:Sequential changes in the concentration of specific serum proteins during typhoid fever infection in man. 5 49
An experimental model resembling so-called tropical sprue has been produced in young, growing rhesus monkeys kept on a protein-deficient diet. At a 2% level of protein intake, the animals became frankly diseased after two months, but at a 5% protein intake the symptoms appeared after five months. The animals lost weight, their skin became brittle, the fur lost luster, and facial edema appeared. The hematocrit, and serum folate, protein and
albumin
were significantly decreased, and intestinal absorption of fat, D-xylose, radioactive vitamin B12 and folic acid showed marked
depression
. The jejunal mucosa showed moderate villous atrophy. Histochemical and electron microscopy changes were consistent with those seen in the human tropical sprue syndrome. It appears, therefore, that protein malnutrition plays an important role in the experimental tropical-sprue-like syndrome in monkeys.
...
PMID:Primate model of sprue-like syndrome. 10 18
Neutrophils from healthy volunteers were isolated and incubated with varying concentrations of
albumin
-bound long chain free fatty acids. Standard in vitro function tests including phagocytosis, bactericidal activity, and chemotaxis were performed after the incubation. It was found that unsaturated fatty acid (oleic acid) caused no changes in bactericidal activity and only moderate decreases in phagocytosis and chemotaxis at very high concentrations. Saturated fatty acid (palmitic acid) produced, at high concentrations, virtually complete inhibition of chemotaxis and moderate
depression
of phagocytosis and bactericidal ability. Most significantly, lower concentrations of saturated free fatty acids, within the range reported clinically in various diseases, caused a marked inhibition of chemotaxis. These functional disturbances were associated with ultrastructural alterations. Neutrophils treated with oleic acid contained numerous cytoplasmic neutral lipid droplets. Neutrophils incubated with palmitic acid showed elongated cleftlike dilations of the endoplasmic reticulum and degenerative degranulated cytoplasmic areas. It is postulated that these represent crystallization of excess saturated free fatty acids or triglyceride which interfere with chemotaxis, either mechanically or by causing cell injury.
...
PMID:The effects of long chain free fatty acids on human neutrophil function and structure. 17 17
The extended theory about a dysfunction of the serotoninergic system in
depression
and schizophrenia includes the hypothesis of a disturbance in the transport systems of tryptophan and tyrosine from blood to brain. It would be interesting to know if blood cells may be used as a model for the central transport mechanisms of these amino acids. After an oral load, the in vivo distribution of L-tryptophan (50 mg/kg) was studied in the blood plasma, in the different blood cells and its binding to plasma
albumin
, in six healthy, seven schizophrenic and two depressive subjects. In all the compartments studied, tryptophan reached a peak, 1--2 hours after the load. Before and after the load, the variation of the tryptophan concentration in the erythrocytes was parallel to the plasma free tryptophan, whereas the uptake of this amino acid was higher in leukocytes and thrombocytes than in erythrocytes. However, this model does not show differences between schizophrenic and normal subjects with regard to the transport of tryptophan and tyrosine in these cells.
...
PMID:Distribution of tryptophan in erythrocytes, leukocytes and thrombocytes, and its binding to plasma albumin. 29 Jul 55
Cell-mediated immunity (CMI) was compared in professional and voluntary blood donors. Depressed CMI in professional donors was revealed by the presence of significantly lower numbers of positive delayed reactive hypersensitivity responses to Candida albicans, streptokinase and streptodornase, as well as a decrease in lymphoblast transformation response to phytohaemagglutinin. Furthermore, the serum protein and
albumin
levels in professional donors did not correlate with the
depression
in CMI. The blood of professional blood donors should be considered to be a poor source of therapeutic immune cell fractions.
...
PMID:Cell-mediated immunity in professional and voluntary blood donors. 35 87
Thirty-eight obese patients, resistant to conventional diet therapy, agreed to consume a 1.09 MJ (260 kcal)/day semi-synthetic diet consisting of 25 g egg
albumin
, 40 g oligosaccharides, vitamins and minerals, and were seen weekly as outpatients for eight weeks. At the beginning, the semi-synthetic diet was given with either the anorectic drug, mazindol (2 mg/day) or a placebo for four weeks and then changed over for the remaining four weeks; the study being conducted on a double-blind basis. The final treatment was a 4.2 MJ (1000 KCAL) conventional diet for a further four weeks without drug or placebo. Twenty-five patients completed the first eight weeks and 21 patients the final four weeks of the trial. The total mean weight losses were as follows: week 4, 9.3 kg; week 8, 13.7 kg; week 12, 12.2 kg. There was no significant difference in weight loss between mazindol treatment and placebo but the former group reported feeling less hungry. The chief side-effects observed were dizziness, nausea, dry mouth, insomnia and
depression
which were more frequent with mazindol. Six patients had to stop mazindol because of side-effects, but were able to continue the diet alone. It is concluded that a semi-synthetic diet containing 1.09 MJ (260 kcal) daily can be successfully employed in the treatment of obese outpatients, and is a practical therapeutic alternative to admission to hospital. There is no clinical advantage to be gained by the additional use of the anorectic drug, mazindol.
...
PMID:A double-blind trial of mazindol using a very low calorie formula diet. 36 31
Prospective sequential studies of the antibacterial function of neutrophils, lymphocyte responsiveness, opsonic capacity of serum and serum levels of C3(B), properdin, factor B, IgG, and
albumin
were made in 32 patients with severe burn injury (greater than or equal to 45%), 21 patients with severe multisystem traumatic injury, 20 high-risk, infected patients, and 22 renal transplant patients. Fifty-five episodes of bacteremia occurred in 37 of the 95 patients. Abnormal neutrophil function was clearly associated as a predisposing factor to these episodes, whereas there was no association between bacteremia and low serum levels of C3, IgG, factor B, or properdin. C3, factor B, and IgG usually rose following bacteremia as acute phase proteins, but there was evidence of a consumptive opsoninopathy in 11% of episodes. Defective opsonization was associated with a high risk of bacteremia only when there was a coexisting abnormality of neutrophil function (88% of such patients became bacteremic). None of 27 nonburned patients tested with delayed hypersensitivity antigens responded normally, and there was regularly
depression
of lymphocyte responsiveness to phytohemagglutinin-A and concanavalin-A in a whole blood assay related to serum immunosuppressive factors, but poor responsiveness was not associated with bacteremia.
...
PMID:A comparison of immunologic profiles and their influence on bacteremia in surgical patients with a high risk of infection. 37 44
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