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)
1. Gastric emptying, gastric acid and
pepsinogen
secretion were assessed simultaneously in the conscious calf using the test meal and duodenal perfusion technique (Bell & Mostaghni, 1975).2. When 60 mM-HCl was infused into the duodenum, gastric emptying was arrested but both acid and
pepsinogen
secretion continued at a low level. Duodenal infusion with isotonic NaHCO(3) caused rapid exponential emptying of the test meal and acid and
pepsinogen
output was more than doubled.3. Duodenal infusion of amino acids in isotonic NaHCO(3) did not affect the rapid emptying, except infusion with tryptophan, which caused a measureable degree of inhibition of emptying, with concomitant effects on acid and
pepsinogen
secretion4. Tryptamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) incorporated in low concentration into isotonic NaHCO(3) also produced
depression
of gastric emptying, acid and
pepsinogen
levels comparable to the response initiated by acid infusate. Tryptophan was effective only in non-physiological amounts while 5-HT and tryptamine were active in smaller doses.5. Our results suggest that the inhibition of gastric emptying following duodenal infusion of tryptophan noted by Stephens, Woolson & Cooke (1975) may be due to the duodenal synthesis of its biogenic amine derivatives tryptamine and 5-HT.6. The level of activity of the three gastric functions, emptying, acid secretion and
pepsinogen
secretion appears to be linked. A single stimulus, therefore, could evoke a duodenal receptor or receptors to mediate or suppress activity of the gastric smooth muscle and secretory cells through interrelated mechanisms. The effect of some duodenal infusates, however, produces some variability in response which suggests differential activation of different receptors with consequent variable motor activity on effector cells.
...
PMID:Gastric emptying and secretion in the calf on duodenal infusion of tryptophan, tryptamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine. 48 Feb 33
The possible development of type-1 hypersensitivity reactions in the abomasal mucosa caused by soluble L3 products of Ostertagia ostertagi was studied in 4-month-old calves sensitized by repeated exposure to L3 over a 50-day period followed by anthelmintic treatment. Four groups each of 4 calves were used. Group 1 served as nonsensitized controls and group 2 as sensitized controls, group 3 was challenge exposed at 2-week intervals beginning at week 10 with a soluble L3 product (OAG), and group 4 was challenge exposed at 2-week intervals with an oral dose of L3, followed by anthelmintic treatment 3 days later. All calves infected with L3 became sensitized, as indicated by a positive reaction to an intradermal skin test. However, a passive cutaneous anaphylaxis was only partly effective in indicating the presence of homocytotropic antibody in the infected calves. Sensitized calves had significantly (P less than 0.05) higher eosinophil counts and plasma
pepsinogen
values for the entire 14 weeks than uninfected controls. Globule leukocyte and mast cell counts from the abomasal mucosa were also significantly (P less than 0.05) higher. Studies for possible immunomodulation revealed that lymphocyte counts decreased between every 2-week challenge-exposure period for groups-3 and -4 calves. A transient
depression
of blood lymphocyte (BL) responses to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), a T-cell mitogen, was observed over the first 8 weeks in the infected calves. Increases in BL responses to OAG were also observed. Differences were not observed in BL responses to pokeweed mitogen, a T- and B-cell mitogen. Blood lymphocyte responses to PHA in group-3 calves were low following the initial challenge exposure with OAG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Adverse immune reactions and the pathogenesis of Ostertagia ostertagi infections in calves. 233 87
The cell-free translation method has shown that
pepsinogen
mRNA is a predominant fraction in the total poly(A)+ RNA from human gastric mucosa. The
pepsinogen
protein with the molecular weight of 45 kDa has been identified. The level of
pepsinogen
mRNA decreased in tumours as compared with normal mucosa but in most cases
pepsinogen
mRNA synthesis
depression
was not total.
...
PMID:[Pepsinogen messenger RNA of human gastric mucosa and stomach cancer]. 245 81
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.
...
PMID:Ostertagia ostertagi infection in the calf: effects of a trickle challenge on the hormonal control of digestive and metabolic function. 259 87
We examined in a controlled study whether psychologic disturbances in men with peptic ulcer disease were related to other potential ulcer "risk factors" (serum
pepsinogen
concentrations, cigarette smoking, and intake of alcohol, aspirin, or coffee). Psychopathology in general, personality features of hostility, irritability, and hypersensitivity, and impaired coping ability (low ego strength) each correlated significantly with serum
pepsinogen
concentration in ulcer patients (p less than or equal to 0.005). Cigarette smoking and intake of alcohol and aspirin were increased in ulcer patients but unrelated to psychopathology.
Depression
was the variable that best discriminated ulcer patients from nonulcer controls; a negative perception of life events, number of relatives with ulcer, and serum
pepsinogen
I concentration also had a major, unique discriminating value, whereas smoking played a relatively minor role independent of the other variables examined. Our study supports the concept that several interacting factors (psychologic, behavioral, and genetic/physiologic) are likely involved in peptic ulcer disease. Emotional stress may predispose to ulcers by producing gastric hypersecretion, as manifested by hyperpepsinogenemia.
...
PMID:Life events stress and psychosocial factors in men with peptic ulcer disease. II. Relationships with serum pepsinogen concentrations and behavioral risk factors. 333 9
The study investigated the relationships between specific demographic, psychosocial, and physiological variables and the severity of duodenal ulcer disease in a population of patients with proved duodenal ulcer. Intercorrelations between psychosocial and physiological variables were also studied. The study design was cross sectional and retrospectively assessed life change units and DUD severity during the previous 6 months in 39 male ulcer clinic outpatients. Anxiety,
depression
, life change units, the family environment, ABO blood type, secretor status, serum
pepsinogen
, and serum fasting gastrin were evaluated. A DUD severity score was calculated from self-reported ulcer pain symptoms and ulcer complications. Gastrin levels correlated significantly with three Family Environment Scale (FES) subscales, including: (a) independence, (b) achievement orientation, and (c) expressiveness. Duodenal ulcer disease severity scores correlated with Zung SDS scores, but not with state or trait anxiety, life change units, or the FES.
...
PMID:Serum gastrin and the family environment in duodenal ulcer disease. 697 85
To investigate the mechanism of the anti-peptic action of ecabet sodium (TA-2711) observed in pylorous-ligated rats, effects of this drug on the peptic activity of rat gastric juice, purified hog pepsin and
pepsinogen
were studied in vitro. After incubation with or without ecabet at acidic pH, the reaction mixture was centrifuged, and the peptic activity of the supernatant was measured. Ecabet depressed the peptic activity of pepsin and
pepsinogen
in parallel with a decrease in the protein concentration of the respective supernatant.
Depression
was greatest with
pepsinogen
(97% at 2.5 mg/ml of the drug) followed by gastric juice (about 60% at 10 mg/ml), and inhibition of the peptic activity of pepsin was weakest (about 10% at 10 mg/ml). When a fraction of the rat gastric juice containing substances with molecular weights below 10,000 was added to the pepsin solution, the anti-peptic activity of ecabet was potentiated. These results suggest that oral dosing of ecabet reduces the peptic activity of gastric juice by precipitating pepsin, which is facilitated by an unknown component(s) of gastric juice, and that the inactivation of
pepsinogen
may also contribute to the anti-peptic activity of ecabet.
...
PMID:Effects of the new anti-ulcer drug ecabet sodium (TA-2711) on pepsin activity. I. Inactivation of enzyme protein. 837 15
We investigated psychologic influences on duodenal ulcer by examining the effect of personality, stress, and mood, measured at diagnosis, on subsequent ulcer healing. Stressful life events, psychopathology (assessed using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory), anxiety,
depression
, smoking, alcohol consumption, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug use, and serum
pepsinogen
I levels were determined immediately after endoscopy showed duodenal ulcer craters in 70 patients with recent onset of symptoms. Endoscopy was repeated following 6 weeks of ranitidine therapy. Six ulcers (8.6%) persisted, and the duodenum remained inflamed in an additional five cases, for a total of 16% with incomplete healing. The only baseline characteristic significantly associated with poor healing was anxiety (p = 0.03 for ulcer persistence, p = 0.02 for incomplete healing). Being in the highest anxiety tertile was associated with a more than fourfold elevation in the risk of incomplete healing (p = 0.02). The association between anxiety and poor healing was not changed by modification of the anxiety score to eliminate gastrointestinal symptom items or by adjustment for serum
pepsinogen
, sex, or cigarette smoking. Anxiety inhibits the healing of duodenal ulcers treated with adequate antisecretory therapy.
...
PMID:Psychologic predictors of duodenal ulcer healing. 883 14
Seventy-five patients with recent-onset dyspepsia and endoscopically visible duodenal ulcer underwent psychological evaluation. Following ranitidine treatment, they were reinterviewed periodically for 12 to 76 months (mean 38.6). Ulcer symptoms were present during a mean of 14.9% of follow-up months. Patients did significantly worse if they had a low-status occupation, low education,
depression
, stressful life events, or abnormal Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory at baseline. Of patients recalling premorbid life stress, those with a normal MMPI had a particularly benign course, whereas those with an abnormal MMPI did particularly poorly (6% versus 29% of months symptomatic: p < 0.04). Age, gender, smoking, drinking, antiinflammatory drugs,
pepsinogen
, Helicobacter pylori titers, and initial healing had no prognostic effect. Low socioeconomic status, life stress,
depression
, and psychopathology each predict a relatively poor symptom outcome for duodenal ulcer treated with antisecretory therapy, but psychologically stable individuals who develop an ulcer under stress have an excellent long-term prognosis.
...
PMID:Long-term symptom patterns in duodenal ulcer: psychosocial factors. 903 10
Infection with gastrointestinal nematodes, particularly Ostertagia species in domestic ruminants, continues to represent an important cause of impaired productivity in temperate parts of the world. The mechanisms responsible for such losses include changes in feed intake, gastrointestinal function, protein, energy and mineral metabolism, and body composition, and were described in detail at the last Ostertagia Workshop (Fox, M.T. 1993. Pathophysiology of infection with Ostertagia ostertagi in cattle. Vet. Parasitol. 46, 143-158). Since then, research into the pathophysiology of infection has focused on three main areas: mechanisms of appetite
depression
; changes in gastrointestinal function; and alterations in protein metabolism. Studies on the mechanisms responsible for appetite
depression
in Ostertagia-infected cattle have continued to support a close association between impaired feed intake and elevated blood gastrin concentrations. Alternative explanations will have to be sought, however, to account for the drop in feed intake associated with intestinal parasitism in which blood gastrin levels normally remain unaltered. Such work in sheep, and more recently in laboratory animals, has shown that central satiety signals are associated with inappetance accompanying intestinal infections, rather than changes in peripheral peptide levels. Changes in gastrointestinal function have also attracted attention, particularly the mechanisms responsible for increases in certain gut secretions, notably
pepsinogen
and gastrin. Elegant experimental studies have established that the gradient in
pepsinogen
concentration between abomasal mucosa and local capillaries could alone account for the increase in blood concentrations seen in Type 1 ostertagiosis. Additional factors, such as increases in capillary permeability and in surface area, probably contribute to such responses in cases of Type 2 disease. The increase in blood gastrin concentrations that accompanies Ostertagia infections in cattle is associated with the concurrent rise in abomasal pH. However, in sheep, additional factors appear to contribute to the hypergastrinaemia which may occur independent of parasite-induced changes in gastric pH. Alterations in protein metabolism have been well documented in ruminants harbouring monospecific infections with either abomasal or intestinal nematodes. More recently, however, the effects of dual abomasal and intestinal infections have been investigated and demonstrated that the host is able to compensate for impaired abomasal digestion provided that the intestinal parasite burden does not occupy the main site of digestion and absorption in the latter organ. An alternative method of improving the host's protein balance, dietary supplementation, has been shown not only to improve productivity, but also to enhance the innate resistance of susceptible breeds of sheep to Haemonchus and to accelerate the development of immunity to Ostertagia in lambs.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of infection with gastrointestinal nematodes in domestic ruminants: recent developments. 946 Feb 3
1
2
Next >>