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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Diabetic rats were used as a source of brown-adipose-tissue mitochondria 2 days after a single subcutaneous injection of streptozotocin (100 mg/kg). Diabetes caused an 80% decrease in carnitine-dependent oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA and a 50-60% decrease in overt carnitine palmitoyltransferase activity. An additional lesion in brown-adipose-tissue mitochondrial oxidative capacity was also indicated, since diabetes increased by 30-50% the rate of oxidation under uncoupled conditions of several respiratory substrates (i.e. malate + palmitoylcarnitine, malate + pyruvate, succinate, NNN'N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine + ascorbate). This decrease in mitochondrial function was accompanied by an approx. 30% decrease in the abundance of cytochromes (a + a3) and total cytochromes b.
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PMID:Changes in brown-adipose-tissue mitochondrial processes in streptozotocin-diabetes. 342 7

A cytochrome has been detected in secretory granules prepared from anglerfish islets of Langerhans. The heme moiety was determined to be of the b type, and the dithionite-reduced cytochrome exhibited an alpha-band maximum at 561 nm with an extinction coefficient of 13.8 mM-1 X cm-1. The protein was present at a concentration of 40 +/- 4 pmol/mg of secretory granule protein. The cytochrome was found to be an integral membrane protein and to be reduced by ascorbic acid but not by NADH, NADPH, reduced glutathione (GSH), or succinate. Because of the similarity to previously characterized secretory granule cytochrome b561's from neuroendocrine tissues, this cytochrome is also referred to as cytochrome b561. Although its function has not yet been elucidated, the apparent specificity for ascorbate suggests that it may be a component of the ascorbate-dependent peptidyl-glycine alpha-amidating monooxygenase system that functions in the amidation of islet hormones.
Diabetes 1986 Aug
PMID:Islet secretory granules contain cytochrome b561. 352 85

Although no absolute certainty exists about the role of nutrition in the etiology of cancer, many facts in favor of the relationship became available during the last decades. Correlation studies, experimental work and to a lesser extent case-control studies made it possible to clarify the role of certain nutrients and foods in carcinogenesis. The most important cancer sites where nutrition could play a role are esophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, prostate and breast. Esophageal cancer is of a very complex etiology, in which alcohol intake plays an important role, at least in western countries. The cancer-promoting properties of alcohol intake are enhanced by smoking. Three factors from nutrition are probably related to stomach cancer, namely salt, nitrate/nitrite and vitamin C. Salt is caustic to the stomach mucosa, resulting in atrophic gastritis. Salt is also co-carcinogenic and stomach cancer-promoting in experimental animals. Nitrate is probably important at the stage of atrophic gastritis, where bacterial overgrowth, due to the high pH, converts nitrates in nitrites, making the loco synthesis possible of potent nitrosocarcinogens. Vitamin C inhibits the latter step. The epidemiological evidence for the role of those factors is provided. The most important among them is the strong and consistent association of stomach cancer mortality with stroke. Rectum, colon, prostate and breast cancer are related in some way to fat intake. They all seem positively related to saturated fat intake, whereas breast cancer is probably also promoted by polyunsaturated fat intake. However, polyunsaturated fat seems to be without effect on rectum cancer. Colon and prostate cancer are probably also influenced by polyunsaturated fat but to a lesser degree than breast cancer. An important argument for this are the positive ecological correlations between changes in rectum, colon and breast cancer mortality from 1968 on, and changes occurring in coronary heart diseases, stroke and diabetes mortality. Those six types of mortality are decreasing, or only slightly increasing in the USA, Belgium, France, the Netherlands, etc. They are strongly increasing in East European countries. The intake of saturated fat has generally decreased in the first group of countries, and has markedly increased in the second group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Nutrition and cancer. 353 16

In vitro studies have suggested that ascorbate or dehydroascorbate share with glucose the same tissue-transport carrier. To determine if ascorbic acid or its oxidized form can inhibit tissue uptake of glucose, the brain uptake index (BUI) and muscle uptake index of glucose were determined by single arterial injection tissue-sampling technique. The injectate was either buffered Ringer's solution with varying concentrations of ascorbate, dehydroascorbate (pH 7.4), or 70% serum from individuals on vitamin C supplements. Ascorbic acid over a wide range of concentrations (0-10,000 mg/L) did not reduce the BUI. Ascorbic acid reduced BUI from the control value of 33 +/- 3.2 to 20.1 +/- 2.2% (P less than .01) only at 100,000 mg/L; this effect was probably secondary to osmotic disruption of blood-brain barrier. In contrast, dehydroascorbate inhibited the BUI of glucose from baseline value of 32.8 +/- 1.1 to 10.7 +/- 0.67%, with an estimated Ki of 13.0 mM. Masseter muscle glucose uptake was not significantly altered over a wide range of ascorbate or dehydroascorbate concentrations in the injectate. Dehydroascorbate (7500 mg/L) did not significantly reduce the BUI of [14C]phenylalanine (55.2 +/- 4.4 vs. 62.1 +/- 4.2% in controls). When serum from six individuals on calcium ascorbate (3-5 g/day) was compared with that of nine controls, the BUI was not different (19.3 +/- 1.7 vs. 19.3 +/- 1.1%). Similarly, supplementing the diet of eight healthy volunteers with 1 g calcium ascorbate for 8 days did not alter the BUI of glucose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes 1987 Sep
PMID:Effect of ascorbate and dehydroascorbate on tissue uptake of glucose. 360 94

Vitamin C concentrations have been measured in the plasma of 200 mothers and their newborns as well as in amniotic fluid and breastmilk. Out of this group 19 mother-infant-pairs were taken as normal control group with no risk factors, complications or diseases during pregnancy or delivery or in the newborn infant. Vitamin C concentrations in plasma showed great variability. This is true for both the entire study group and the normal control group. A positive correlation was found between the vitamin C concentrations in maternal plasma at the time of admission to the obstetric unit and that in the second stage of labor immediately before delivery. Cord blood and newborn plasma vitamin C concentrations were nearly twice as high compared to maternal concentrations. They too correlate with the concentrations in the maternal plasma. A further correlation was found between maternal plasma and amniotic fluid at the time of delivery (ratio about 1:3). No more significant correlations of vitamin C concentrations have been found in the normal control group. Various diseases or risk factors in mother and/or child were shown to be associated with lower vitamin C concentrations. Vitamin C concentrations were considerably lower in all biological fluids in smokers and mothers with diabetes. Other statistical correlations will be shown and possible casualties will be discussed. In this study vitamin C concentrations in groups with abnormal states are documented only with small numbers of cases and are therefore considered as a basis for further more specific investigations.
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PMID:[Vitamin C concentrations in maternal plasma, amniotic fluid, umbilical cord blood, the plasma of newborn infants, colostrum and transitory and mature breast milk]. 361 50

Currently used test strip methods for the detection of glucose in urine are influenced by ascorbate and may thus give false negative results, e.g. in screening for diabetes. Six different test strips for urine glucose were evaluated for interference by ascorbate in vitro. Interference by ascorbate varied markedly, being highest at low glucose concentrations. Interference coefficients for the individual tests were calculated to serve as an approximate index of interference by ascorbate. A new test (BM 33.071, Boehringer Mannheim GmbH, currently used in Combur-9-Test/Chemstrip-9 and other multiple test strips of Boehringer Mannheim) was clearly much less influenced as no urine containing 5.5 mmol/l glucose was read as negative even at very high ascorbate concentration. Readability of test strips differed due to patchy colour reactions. Precision was good within-test strip and within-urine but markedly less between urines.
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PMID:Ascorbate interference in the estimation of urinary glucose by test strips. 370 Dec 72

The frequent association of various reproductive anomalies with maternal diabetes is explained by a theory that predicts such defects will occur even in transient moderate hyperglycemia in non-diabetic gravidae. A first test of this hypothesis produced strongly supportive results in a mouse model. Thirteen C57BL/6J dams on a grain (control) diet produced (in the 4th week after first mating) 64 pups, 62 surviving to maturity. In the same time interval on a high sucrose diet, fourteen isogenic dams produced only 5 pups, none surviving 5 days (p much less than .001). Additional ongoing studies of the underlying glucose-ascorbate antagonism and of early vs. perinatal hyperglycemia are described briefly.
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PMID:Hyperglycemia and reproductive defects in non-diabetic gravidas: a mouse model test of a new theory. 377 37

A review of the literature relating to possible clinical implications of ascorbic acid (AA) supplementation was conducted. Factors requiring a higher AA intake include smoking, alcohol ingestion, stress, diabetes mellitus, pregnancy, and certain drugs, including oral contraceptives, some antibiotics, acetylsalicylate and anti-inflammatory medications. AA has been found to significantly increase wound healing, reduce the inflammatory response, lessen respiratory distress, enhance immune function and serve to benefit many common conditions including osteoarthritis. It is concluded that vitamin C supplementation could be utilized for many conditions seen by chiropractors.
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PMID:Vitamin C and chiropractic. 389 98

Alloxan diabetes was accompanied by an increase in ascorbate-NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation with a simultaneous decrease in content of cytochrome P-450 and in the rate aniline hydroxylation in rat liver microsomal fraction. Activation of lipid peroxidation, which led to impairment of the endoplasmic reticulum integrity as well as to destruction of cytochrome P-450, may be important in pathogenesis of alloxan diabetes.
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PMID:[Interrelation of the processes of lipid peroxidation and hydroxylation in the liver microsomal fraction of white rats with alloxan diabetes]. 400 60

Dietary intakes of essential nutrients were measured as part of a population-based investigation of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors in Mexican-Americans and Anglo-Americans in San Antonio, Texas. Twenty-four hour dietary recalls were conducted on 2134 individuals residing in three socioeconomically distinct neighborhoods: low-income, middle-income, and upper-income. Mean intakes of calcium, vitamin A and vitamin C were significantly lower among Mexican-Americans than among Anglos. Intake of vitamin C was most affected by socioeconomic status. Females of both ethnic groups consumed less than their RDA for calcium and iron. Intakes of B vitamins, phosphorus, and potassium were adequate, with few ethnic or socioeconomic differences.
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PMID:Dietary intakes of essential nutrients among Mexican-Americans and Anglo-Americans: the San Antonio Heart Study. 402


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