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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of insulin administration of the reduction on food intake which follows a meal of corn oil was examined in normal and streptozotocin-diabetic rats. In the first experiment, a single injection of long-acting, protamine zinc insulin (3 IU) curtailed the decrease in 24-hr food intake that occurred in normal and diabetic rats after ingestion of 2.0 ml of oil. In a second experiment, injection of short-acting, regular insulin (0.5 IU) prevented the depression of food intake which occurred 6-24 hr after ingestion of 1.5 ml of corn oil, but not at earlier time intervals. In a third experiment, the short-term suppression of food intake in diabetic rats that occurred within 6 hr after a 1.5 ml meal of oil was reduced by chronic administration of insulin (3 IU/day) via a subcutaneously implanted osmotic pump. The results indicate that a relatively long-lasting effect of insulin counteracts the satiation from ingested fat and suggest that insulin's role in the control of food intake may depend on the composition of the diet.
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PMID:Insulin counteracts the satiating effect of a fat meal in rats. 331 49

The effect of dietary zinc deficiency on patterns of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of rat erythrocyte membrane proteins and erythrocyte filterability was examined. Weanling male Wistar rats were fed an egg white-based diet containing less than 1.1 mg zinc/kg diet ad libitum for 3 wk. Control rats were either pair-fed or ad libitum-fed the basal diet supplemented with 100 mg zinc/kg diet. Net phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of erythrocyte membrane proteins were carried out by an in vitro assay utilizing [gamma-32P]ATP. The membrane proteins were subsequently separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the 32P content of gel slices was counted by Cerenkov counting. Erythrocyte filterability was measured as the filtration time of suspensions of erythrocytes, both untreated and preincubated with diamide, under constant pressure. Erythrocyte ghosts from zinc-deficient rats demonstrated greater dephosphorylation of protein bands R1 plus R2 and R7 than pair-fed rats and greater net phosphorylation of band R2.2 than pair-fed or ad libitum-fed control rats (P less than 0.05). Erythrocytes from ad libitum-fed control rats showed significantly longer filtration times than those from zinc-deficient or pair-fed control rats. In conclusion, dietary zinc deficiency alters in vitro patterns of erythrocyte membrane protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, whereas the depression in food intake associated with the zinc deficiency increases erythrocyte filterability.
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PMID:Effect of dietary zinc deficiency on the endogenous phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of rat erythrocyte membrane. 332 Feb 89

Zinc deficiency was diagnosed in a sheep farm in Khartoum Province; the young sheep and lambs were mostly affected. Skin lesions, depression, wool eating, flexed knees and a markedly stiff gait were observed. Histopathology of the skin revealed mainly hyperkeratosis accompanied sometimes by parakeratosis. The animals responded rapidly to oral administration of zinc oxide.
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PMID:Zinc deficiency in sheep: field cases. 335 59

Splenic T-cells and macrophages (adherent cells) from zinc-deficient (ZD) mice and pair-fed (PF) control mice were isolated, purified and recombined in defined proportions to evaluate the contribution of each cell type to impaired mitogenesis. The results of cell crossover experiments revealed that the observed depression in T-cell proliferation in the ZD mice was indirect and due to a primary defect in the macrophage population that could be overcome by increasing the proportion of macrophages in culture. In contrast, the proliferative capacity of purified T-cells from ZD mice was not different from control levels when the cells were combined with macrophages from PF control mice. Similar results were obtained in neonatally thymectomized ZD and PF mice, suggesting that long-lived T-cells may have been processed normally through the thymus before the 6 wk of dietary zinc deprivation. After 12 wk of zinc depletion, however, the proliferative capacity of T-cells from ZD mice was significantly depressed, suggesting a direct effect on the maintenance or maturational state of T-cell subpopulations when the period of deficiency approached the half-life of these cells. These results emphasize the continuum of immunologic alteration with progressive nutritional intervention, which may vary depending on the age of induction and the duration of depletion.
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PMID:Macrophage-mediated depression of T-cell proliferation in zinc-deficient mice. 350 Feb 92

A case of prolonged diarrhoea following Escherichia coli 0111 gastroenteritis is reported. Electron microscopy of the jejunal biopsy revealed effacement of the brush border and attachment of bacteria by pedestal formation. Specific activities of brush border enzymes showed marked depression of disaccharidases, zinc-resistant alpha-glucosidase, and alkaline phosphatase. In contrast, marker enzymes for basolateral membranes and endoplasmic reticulum were unaffected. The biochemical changes support the pathogenic mechanism suggested by ultrastructural studies previously reported.
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PMID:Ultrastructural and biochemical changes in human jejunal mucosa associated with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (0111) infection. 351 Dec 12

The effects of intra-articular injection of small amounts of E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into the intercarpal joint of 5 ponies were studied. The LPS induced predictable changes all of which were analogous to acute bacterial infection, except that the development of signs occurred sooner after the LPS injection, and subsided within 36 hours. Fever was monophasic and peaked at 5-7 hours. The ponies exhibited depression, reduced or absent appetite, increased pulse and respiration rates, and lameness. The lameness became evident between 1 and 2 hours after injection, at which time warmth, articular effusion, and resentment to palpation of joint flexion were evident. Hematological changes included neutrophilic leucocytosis, and changes in copper, iron and zinc serum concentrations. The synovial fluid total protein, leucocyte, and alkaline phosphatase levels increased within 2 hours. The mucin precipitation, total protein and leucocyte counts in synovial fluid remained elevated long after clinical and hematological changes had subsided. The model is useful for the study of some aspects of infectious joint disease.
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PMID:An induced synovitis disease model in ponies. 355 39

Sodium selenite was fed in the diet in concentrations of 3, 1 and 0.50 ppm to hybro-type chicks for 4 weeks from the age of 7 d. The chemical's effects on growth and tissues were investigated. One and 3 ppm dietary levels of selenium caused depression of growth, fatty change, focal necrosis, congestion of the sinusoids and slight fibroplasia in the liver, congestion and degeneration and/or necrosis of the cells of the proximal renal tubules and of the cardiac muscle fibers and hemorrhage in the thigh and breast. These changes were accompanied by an increase in the activity of sorbitol and glutamic dehydrogenases (SDH and GDH) and in the concentration of potassium, and a decrease in the levels of total protein, calcium and zinc in the serum. Susceptibility to hemorrhage and damage to kidneys and liver persisted for 3 weeks after the test diet was withdrawn. One-half of 1 ppm-selenite meal produced no adverse effects on the chicks.
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PMID:Effects of various levels of dietary selenium on hybro-type chicks. 370 35

Zinc and vitamin A concentrations in the serum were measured in 40 alcoholics (33 males and 7 females) and 35 healthy, age-matched subjects (31 males, 4 females). Liver zinc concentrations were measured in 15 alcoholics from specimens collected by liver biopsy and compared with the zinc concentrations in liver specimens taken at autopsy from victims of road-traffic accidents. Alcoholics had significantly lower serum concentrations of both zinc and vitamin A compared to the control group of healthy subjects. The depression of zinc and vitamin A levels was related to the severity of the hepatic lesions, the lowest levels being observed among cirrhotics. Liver zinc concentrations were similar in alcoholics and healthy subjects and were not related to plasma zinc concentrations. Serum zinc and vitamin A levels were positively correlated among cirrhotics, but not in other alcoholics or controls. Thus low levels of vitamin A in cirrhotics may have arisen as a result of impaired mobilisation from the liver due to zinc deficiency, or to non-availability of hepatic zinc. Female alcoholics were more severely affected than males with respect to their zinc and vitamin A levels, although they consumed lesser amounts of alcohol and had a shorter duration of alcohol intake. A strong positive relationship existed between zinc and albumin levels in all alcoholics but not in controls. It is possible that the decreased serum albumin levels may have limited the availability of albumin for the transport of zinc in the plasma and this in turn may have resulted in increased urinary excretion of zinc.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Zinc and vitamin A status of alcoholics in a medical unit in Sri Lanka. 376

delta-Aminolevulinate dehydratase (ALA-D:porphobilinogen synthase, 5-aminolevulinate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.24) activity was depressed markedly in red cells of rats exposed to 0.21 g/m3 styrene, a chemical widely used in commercial products. The depression was not restored in vitro after treatment with dithiothreitol and zinc. Consistent with this finding, radioimmunoassay of the enzyme protein demonstrated reduction in the enzyme concentration by styrene exposure. There was a good correlation between the decrease in enzyme activity and its concentration in the styrene-treated animals, suggesting that the depression of the enzyme activity was essentially due to the reduction in the enzyme content. Decrease in the enzyme content in bone marrow cells to almost the same extent as that in erythrocytes seems to indicate the decreased synthesis of ALA-D in the bone marrow. In vitro studies showed that styrene 7,8-oxide, the major intermediate of styrene metabolism, decreased the activity of purified ALA-D but that styrene, the parent compound itself, had no inhibitory effect. The activity and concentration of erythrocyte ALA-D in workers chronically exposed to styrene were also depressed significantly. These findings indicate that the styrene exposure-mediated decrease of ALA-D activity in erythrocytes was a reflection of reduction in the enzyme protein, which may have been the result of styrene 7,8-oxide action, and they suggest that a similar process may also be involved in the reduction of erythrocyte ALA-D in styrene-exposed workers.
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PMID:Decreased erythrocyte delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase activity after styrene exposure. 382 52

Thirty-six 56-day-old male Sprague-Dawley albino rats served as two groups of experimental animals. Group 1 was irradiated with 400 rads delivered as total-body radiation from a cesium source. Group 2 served as the control group and was not irradiated. Three weeks later, the dental microscope was used to facilitate various dental procedures in both groups of animals (cavity preparation filled with zinc oxide-eugenol, pulp exposure capped with zinc oxide-eugenol, and pulp exposure left open). Two animals for each procedure from Groups 1 and 2 were killed at time intervals of 2, 4, and 8 weeks. The results showed that (1) radiation at this dose resulted in a depression of the normal response of the dental pulp to the trauma and infection induced by pulpal exposure, (2) there were no pathologic changes in the untreated molars of the irradiated animals, and (3) the use of the dental microscope greatly facilitated cavity preparation in the molars of rats.
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PMID:The effect of radiation on the response of dental pulp to operative and endodontic procedures: an experimental study. 385 78


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