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

The objective of this study was to determine the minimum dosage of recombinant bovine somatotropin (bST) required to elicit maximum depression in plasma urea nitrogen (PUN), an indicator of anabolic activity. Twenty-four steers (389 kg) were blocked by weight into six pens. Six steers were placed on each of the following bST doses: 0, 8, 16 and 32 mg bST/d. Treatments were administered once daily via subcutaneous injections for 21 d. Steers were weighed and jugular blood samples were taken on d 0, 1, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16 and 21 at 1400, approximately 4 h after feeding. Delta PUN (DPUN) was calculated as PUN - d 0 PUN. There was no dose x time interaction (P = .94) in DPUN. Maximum reduction in DPUN with bST occurred by d 7 (P less than .05). Linear (P less than .01) and quadratic (P less than .05) orthogonal contrasts indicated that DPUN depression increased with bST administration, with maximal reduction calculated to occur with 23 mg (59 micrograms/kg) bST/d. There was no further decrease in DPUN with 32 than with 16 mg bST, indicating that the minimum daily dose is at least 16 mg but no more than 23 mg. A similar dose response was observed in daily gain. Results from this study indicate that bST reduced PUN in a dose-dependent manner and that 41 to 64 micrograms/kg body weight maximized the anabolic effect of bST in growing steers.
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PMID:Titration of the recombinant bovine somatotropin dosage that maximizes the anabolic response in feedlot steers. 228 53

The causes, extent, and quantification of depression in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients have been a concern of psychologists and physicians. To assess depression and its possible causes, 57 patients with ESRD treated with hemodialysis (HD, n = 43) or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD, n = 14) and 16 patients with chronic renal insufficiency (CRI) were interviewed and completed the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the Illness Effects Questionnaire (IEQ). An ESRD severity coefficient was used to measure chronic illness severity in the patients treated with dialysis, and blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine levels were used to assess severity of renal disease and adequacy of treatment. A cognitive item subset of the BDI (CDI) was used as a measure of depression. When patients treated with HD and CAPD were compared, CAPD patients were younger, had a shorter duration of dialysis treatment, and less severe medical illness, but the groups did not differ on the IEQ, BDI, or CDI. The IEQ did not correlate with age or disease variables. Both the CDI and the total BDI scores correlated with the IEQ. Perception of illness (IEQ) correlated significantly with cognitive depression for the CAPD and HD patients. For CAPD patients only, a significant correlation between the IEQ and severity of medical illness was obtained. Perception of illness and creatinine concentration were strongly correlated with cognitive depression in the patients with CRI as well. For all renal patients, level of depression was more strongly related to perception of illness than physical illness variables.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Perception of illness and depression in chronic renal disease. 229 31

Grey seal pups (Halichoerus grypus) were collected at the time of weaning (mid-October) and fasted for 52 days at thermoneutrality in separate cages. Body weight decreased exponentially, while metabolic rate dropped 45% from an average of 2.95 +/- 0.15 (SEM) W kg-1 at day 2 of fasting to a stable level of 1.62 +/- 0.06 (SEM) W kg-1 from day 10 to day 47 of fasting. Respiratory quotient was low, indicating extensive catabolism of triglycerides, while plasma cortisol was fairly stable at 110 +/- 8 (SEM) nmol l-1 throughout the fasting period. Daily urinary output decreased from 236 +/- 20 (SEM) ml day-1 at day 2 to a stable value of 87 +/- 6 (SEM) ml day-1 between days 8 and 50 of fasting. The urine was analysed for urea, uric acid, creatinine, ammonia, total nitrogen and osmolality. Urea was always the principal excretory end-product, amounting to between 70 and 80% of the total excreted nitrogen. The urine was moderately concentrated (range 770-1300 mosmol kg-1). Total excreted urinary nitrogen decreased by 68% from 3.7 +/- 0.7 (SEM) g day-1 to 1.2 +/- 0.4 (SEM) g day-1 between days 2 and 50. The urinary nitrogen was used to calculate the daily amount of protein being oxidized and its energy content was compared with the measured basal metabolic rate of individual animals. Approximately 6% of the energy expended by grey seal pups during the post-weaning fast is derived from oxidation of protein. It is concluded that a rapid depression of basal metabolic rate and extensive blubber catabolism enable grey seal pups to endure prolonged periods of fasting without any apparent signs of discomfort or stress.
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PMID:Depressed metabolism and low protein catabolism in fasting grey seal pups. 236 22

1. We have investigated the influence of environmental temperature, anaesthesia and route of administration on rectal temperature and other metabolic responses to two preparations of bacterial endotoxin in male adult Wistar rats. 2. Urethane anaesthesia, environmental temperatures of 20 and 28 degrees C, subcutaneous (S.C.) and intraperitoneal (I.P.) routes of administration and butanol and trichloroacetic acid (TCA) extracts of E. coli endotoxin (1.2 mg/kg) were used. 3. In addition to rectal temperature, serum zinc, albumin and urea concentrations and liver protein, RNA and zinc contents were measured. 4. Fevers were produced by injections of both endotoxins, by either route at 28 degrees C. Butanol-extracted endotoxin produced a more rapid response than the TCA extract via the I.P. route whereas the TCA extract produced a higher temperature than the butanol extract when the S.C. route was used. 5. Fevers were inhibited at an environmental temperature of 20 degrees C and by anaesthesia, while the former had no effect on compositional changes the latter inhibited the fall in serum zinc in response to subcutaneous doses of either endotoxin and the increase in liver zinc content in response to the butanol extract of endotoxin. 6. At 20 degrees C a marked fall in rectal temperature occurred in conscious rats 2 h after receiving the TCA but not the butanol extract of endotoxin. Temperature depression was more severe when endotoxin was administered by the I.P. route. 7. Serum urea was elevated in conscious rats by the TCA extract of endotoxin via both routes but only by the I.P. route for the butanol extract of endotoxin. In anaesthetized animals only the TCA extract of endotoxin raised serum urea concentration when given intraperitoneally. 8. Serum albumin and liver protein and RNA were unaffected by endotoxin injections over the 7 h time course of the study. 9. Rectal temperature responses to endotoxins were influenced in direction and magnitude by all variables employed in the study, while compositional changes were unaffected by environmental temperature but influenced to varying degrees by urethane anaesthesia and the route of administration employed.
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PMID:Effects of urethane, ambient temperature and injection route on rat body temperature and metabolism due to endotoxins. 247 10

Mechanism of methylmercury cytotoxicity was investigated with special reference to its preferential action on microtubules and protein biosynthesis in cultured cells. The tubulin synthesis analyzed by autoradiography of two-dimensional electropherogram using 35S-methionine was inhibited by 50-70% in mouse glioma cells exposed to 5 x 10(-6) M methylmercury for 3 h, which almost completely depolymerized microtubules. Total protein synthesis monitored by incorporation of labeled methionine into acid insoluble fraction was decreased slightly but significantly and the protein bands other than tubulin on gradient urea-PAGE gel appeared to remain unchanged under the experimental condition used. These results suggest that the inhibition of protein synthesis observed on exposure to methylmercury can be ascribed, at least partly, to a possible autoregulatory depression in tubulin synthesis owing to the increase in the pool of tubulin subunits resulted from microtubule depolymerization by methylmercury.
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PMID:Mechanism of cytotoxicity of methylmercury. With special reference to microtubule disruption. 248 6

A 5-year-old mixed breed dog was presented with a history of depression and anorexia. Physical examination revealed a pharyngeal tumour and a neurological examination indicated the presence of a possible space-occupying lesion in the brain. Investigative procedures included a bloodsmear, impression smears and cytology of the pharyngeal tumour, haematology, chemical pathology, faecal analysis, urinalysis, electrocardiography, cerebrospinal fluid analysis, hormone assays and a computerised axial tomography scan. Results of these investigations revealed a round cell tumour in the pharynx, hypergammaglobulinaemia (34 g l-1), azotaemia (urea 8.6 mmol l-1 and creatinine 170 mumol l-1), hypoalbuminaemia (20 g l-1), proteinuria, sinus bradycardia (heart rate 60 beats per min), increased concentration of protein in the CSF (1.1 g l-1), hypoadrenocorticism (base line cortisol less than 55 nmol l-1) and hypothyroidism (T4 less than 13 nmol l-1). The computerised axial tomography scan revealed a brain tumour in the region of the hypophysis. The dog was euthanased and a post mortem examination confirmed the presence of a pharyngeal tumour with apparent direct extension of the tumour into the brain. Both tumours were confirmed histologically as mastocytomas.
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PMID:An expansile secondary hypophyseal mastocytoma in a dog. 251 66

The harmful effect of iron excess was studied in an experiment using fifteen adult sheep. The animals were divided into three groups of 5 each. The sheep of the group I were kept as controls, those of the group II and III were supplemented with iron in doses of 80 and 40 mg/kg body weight (BW)/24 h respectively. The animals of group II died after a period of 3-7 weeks showing anorexia, loss of weight, diarrhoea, depression and symptoms of circulatory and respiratory failure. From the animals of group III one died after 13 weeks, with symptoms of pulmonary oedema, while the other 4 survived for 22 weeks, together with the animals of the control group. The iron-supplemented animals presented increased values of Serum Iron (SI), Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC), percent Transferring Saturation (% SAT), Alanino aminotransferase (ALT), serum Alkalin Phosphatase (SAP), Serum Urea Nitrogen (SUN) Creatinine, Phosphorus and decreased values of serum Copper concentration. These parameters were greater in group II. The iron concentration in the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys was also much higher than in the controls. The histological examination revealed degeneration of the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys in both groups, while cells overloaded with hemosiderin were seen in the third group only. In conclusion, it was shown that chronic intoxication may occur in sheep overdosed with iron. The toxic dose of iron ranged between 40 and 80 (mg/Kg body weight) per day and was close to 40 mg, when iron was administered in the soluble from FeCl3.6H2O.
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PMID:Iron toxicity in sheep. 253 32

Metabolic effects of a trickle challenge with the equivalent of 10,000 infective Ostertagia ostertagi larvae per day were investigated in 12 calves allocated to infected, pair-fed control or ad libitum-fed control groups. Changes in hormone levels reflecting abomasal, pituitary and pancreatic function were monitored using radioimmunoassay techniques previously validated for use in cattle. A range of metabolic profile parameters and blood metabolites was also measured. Feed intake of the infected calves began to decline as blood gastrin and pepsinogen levels reached a peak. The depression in appetite recorded in this group was responsible for significant increases in plasma urea and non-esterified fatty acid levels and associated with an increase in growth hormone/insulin ratio. No significant difference in glucagon levels was recorded between groups. A decline in blood albumin values was also shown in the infected group and associated with a drop in nitrogen digestibility. A significant depression in circulating calcium levels was related to either the hypoalbuminaemia or impaired mineral absorption in the intestine. A decrease in plasma cholesterol values in the infected group was associated with changes in digestive function.
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PMID:Ostertagia ostertagi infection in the calf: effects of a trickle challenge on the hormonal control of digestive and metabolic function. 259 87

Maleic acid (MA), a known nephrotoxicant in experimental animals, and its chlorinated derivative dichloromaleic acid (DCMA) are present in urban drinking water supplies as by-products of the chlorination process. This study was designed to characterize the effects of simultaneous exposure of subtoxic doses of DCMA and MA on renal function in both sexes of the Sprague-Dawley rat. Urine was collected at 24-h intervals from rats housed individually in stainless steel metabolism cages. Subcutaneous administration of MA at a dose of 150 mg/kg had no effect on several parameters of renal function in either sex at 24 h and only modest effects at 48 h. Renal slice studies showed that treatment of both male and female rats with DCMA (300 mg/kg) reduced p-aminohippurate (PAH) accumulation at 24 h with no effect on the uptake of tetraethylammonium ion (TEA). The combination of MA + DCMA caused a depression of TEA accumulation by slices from the female. Also, changes in urinary glucose excretion and blood urea nitrogen, although additive in the male following coexposure, appeared synergistic or potentiated in the female. These results suggest an enhanced susceptibility of the female rate to the nephrotoxic action of combined exposure to MA and DCMA.
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PMID:Alterations in the renal function of male and female rats exposed to maleic acid, dichloromaleic acid, and both compounds. 273 4

The effect of the calcium antagonist, diltiazem, was examined in gentamicin-induced nephrotoxicity states in rats. Animals were injected for 5 days with diltiazem intraperitoneally (40 mg/kg/day), or gentamicin subcutaneously (100 mg/kg/day) or simultaneously with both preparations using the same doses. At the time of sacrifice, the urea and creatinine clearances, as well as urine osmolality were determined and the renal tissues were processed for examination by light microscopy. Gentamicin-injected rats demonstrated the typical pattern of aminoglycoside nephrotoxicity characterized by poliuric renal failure and necrosis of the proximal tubular epithelium. Rats injected with diltiazem revealed only mild depression of urine osmolality. There was no elevation of blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine or depression of urea and creatinine clearances, and no focal tubular cell necrosis was detected. However, concomitant administration of both compounds considerably increased nephrotoxicity by according both histological indications and renal function measurements. Thus, we conclude that the combination of diltiazem and gentamicin must be used carefully in human clinical practice.
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PMID:Diltiazem enhances gentamicin nephrotoxicity in rats. 275 19


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