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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
is associated with facial flushing after alcohol in patients on chlorpropamide (chlorpropamide alcohol flushing, C.P.A.F.) especially when there is a family history of
diabetes
. C.P.A.F. in three subjects (two diabetics, one non-diabetic) was blocked by the specific opiate antagonist naloxone. In nine subjects (six diabetics) C.P.A.F. was reproduced by the enkephalin analogue with opiate-like activity [D-Ala2, MePhe4,
Met
(O)-ol] enkephalin (DAMME). C.P.A.F. thus may be due to increased sensitivity to endogenous opiates. DAMME and other substances with opiate-like activity, such as morphine and beta-endorphin, affect carbohydrate metabolism and insulin secretion. Increased sensitivity to endogenous opiates such as enkephalin may thus give rise to non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
associated with C.P.A.F.
...
PMID:Sensitivity to enkephalin as a cause of non-insulin dependent diabetes. 8 99
Alloxane
diabetes
decreases the intensity of [3H]
methionine
incorporation into total proteins of the liver cells polyribosomes and cytosol. Administration of hydrocortisone for seven days aggravate this disturbances and insulin injections level them. A combined administration of both hormones weakens the negative effect of hydrocortisone on the intensity of the amino acid incorporation and the glucose level in blood.
...
PMID:[Effect of hydrocortisone on intensity of (3H)methionine incorporation into rat polyribosome and cytosol proteins in alloxan diabetes]. 45 29
A rapid automated method for the determination of serum
methionine
is presented for use with the Technicon AutoAnalyzer system. It is based on the decolorisation of halide platinates by organic sulphides, including
methionine
. The 5--95% reference range from 249 sera from hospital patients (excluding those with liver and renal diseases and
diabetes
) was 20--60 mumol/l, mean 35 mumol/l. The S.D. of the method for 40 duplicate samples was 2.2 mumol/l. Recoveries ranged from 101--105%. This measurement facilitates the clinical evaluation of liver disease, especially acute liver failure, kidney disease and
diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Serum methionine: its rapid determination by continuous-flow colorimetry. 69 22
The amino acid pattern following total hip replacement is characterized by increases in muscle of the branched chain amino acids (leucine, isoleucine and valine), the aromatics (phenylalanine and tyrosine) as well as
methionine
. The nonessential amino acids in muscle tend to decline, glutamine having the most marked change. Plasma levels of the essential amino acids increase while the nonessentials tend to decrease. This pattern differs from that observed in other catabolic states (uremia, starvation, untreated
diabetes
) and is significantly different from the effects of inactivity and starvation combined. This suggests that injury can be characterized by a unique pattern of muscle and plasma amino acids.
...
PMID:Muscle and plasma amino acids after injury: the role of inactivity. 73 57
Twenty days after the onset of alloxan-induced
diabetes
, a villous hyperplasia has developed in the intestines of rats having free access to food. The transformation is characterised by a considerable increase in the area of the villous surface, caused by an enhanced mitotic activity in the crypts. The absorption of glucose or
methionine
by jejunal loops, whether expressed in terms of serosal area or villous area, is unchanged at this stage. On the other hand, the specific activity of certain disaccharidases and dipeptidases in crude mucosal homogenates is greater in diabetic animals, but quantitative histochemistry revealed no changes in the activities of alkaline phosphatase, leucine amino-peptidase and non-specific esterase in the individual enterocytes. Thus the biochemical changes may simply reflect the hyperplasia of the mucosa. The blood sugar level does not appear to be directly responsible for the mucosal transformation; however, the positive correlation between the daily food intake and the villus height suggests a role of hyperphagia and consequent increased luminal nutrition in the development of the hyperplasia.
...
PMID:Structural and functional studies on the transformation of the intestinal mucosa in rats with experimental diabetes. 88 18
The content of the following 10 amino acids was investigated by means of a microbiological method (with the use of auxotrophic E. coli mutants) in 23 patients with
diabetes mellitus
with fatty infiltration of the liver and in 27 patients without it: histidine, proline,
methionine
, cystine, tryptophane, leucine, arginine, tyrosine, lysine, and phenylalanine. Results of study of the amino acid balance were compared with the morphological changes in the liver (the material was obtained by biopsy). All the diabetic patients displayed an increase in the proline, tryptophane, tyrosine, leucine, and cystine content, and a reduction of phenylalanine and lysine level. Fatty hepatocyte infiltration was also accompanied by a significant elevation of
methionine
and a reduction of arginine content. A tendency to normalization of leucine and lysine only was seen after the treatment of diabetic patients with fatty hepatocyte infiltration; diabetic patients without any fatty infiltration showed normalization in the tyrosine, lysine content and a tendency to the normalization of the cystine, tryptophane level, but no change in the
methionine
content.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of the amino acid spectrum of blood serum in diabetes mellitus]. 88 34
Glomerular basement membrane (GBM) and tubular basement membrane (TBM) were prepared from human kidneys of diabetics and non-diabetics, and their chemical composition was compared. GBM from diabetics contained a larger amount of hydroxyproline than that from non-diabetics, and smaller amounts of half-cystine, glucose, mannose and sialic acid. On the other hand, TBM from diabetics contained larger amounts of hydroxylysine,
methionine
, galactose, hexosamine and phospholipid phosphorus than non-diabetics, and smaller amounts of half-cystine, valine, leucine, lysine and histidine. No significant difference was observed in the contents of other components examined in this study between the corresponding membrane obtained from diabetics and non-diabetics. The observed changes may be due to alteration of the tissues in
diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Comparison of the chemical composition of glomerular and tubular basement membranes obtained from human kidneys of diabetics and non-diabetics. 113 45
Effects of histidine or
methionine
imbalance and dietary levels (3-50%) of casein on food intake and preference of young, adult, and diabetic (2.5 month old) rats were examined. Depressions in food intake and growth caused by ingestion of the imbalanced diet were greatest in young rats and least or absent in diabetic rats. Alloxan
diabetes
induced hyperphagia and elevated concentrations of plasma branched-chain amino acids and decreased concentrations of tryptophan and tyrosine. The diabetic rats fed the imbalanced diet for 9 days had a higher concentration of the limiting amino acid in the plasma than the adult normal rats fed the same diet. The diabetic rats preferred the imbalanced diet over a protein-free diet when they were fed these diets concurrently. Ingestion of the imbalanced diet by normal rats caused greater changes in plasma and brain amino acid patterns than did the protein-free diet. Unlike the diabetic rats, the normal rats, especially the young rats, strongly preferred the protein-free diet over the imbalanced diet. The normal rats also preferred a 10% casein diet supplemented with L-
methionine
over a low or high casein diet. It seemed that young rats were able to select a protein diet that supported maximal growth when proportions of dietary amino acids were balanced. It also seemed that the susceptibility of the rats to amino acid imbalance varied directly with the status of overall protein synthesis of the animals.
...
PMID:Effects of amino acid imbalance and protein content of diets on food intake and preference of young, adult, and diabetic rats. 119 6
Incorporation of radiolabeled precursors into muscle proteins was studied in isolated rat hemidiaphragms. A mixture of three branched-chain amino acids (0.3 mM each) added to media containing glucose stimulated the incorporation of [14C]lysine into proteins. When tested separately, valine was ineffective, isoleucine was inhibitory, but 0.5 mM leucine increased the specific activity of muscle proteins during incubation with [14C]lysine or [14C]acetate in hemidiaphragms from fed or fasted rats incubated with or without insulin. Preincubation with 0.5 mM leucine increased the specific activity of muscle proteins during a subsequent 30- or 60-min incubation with [14C]lysine or [14C]pyruvate without leucine. Preincubation with other amino acids (glutamate, histidine,
methionine
, phenylalanine, or tryptophan) did not exert this effect. When hemidiaphragms were incubated with a mixture of amino acids at concentrations found in rat serum and a [14C]lysine tracer, the specific activity of muscle proteins increased when leucine in the medium was raised from 0.1 to 0.5 mM. Experiments with actinomycin D and cycloheximide suggested that neither RNA synthesis nor protein synthesis are required for the initiation of the leucine effect. Leucine was not effective when added after 1 h preincubation without leucine. The concentration of lysine in the tissue water of diaphragms decreased during incubation with 0.5 mM leucine in the presence or absence of cycloheximide, suggesting that leucine inhibited protein degradation. During incubation with [3h]tyrosine (0.35 mM) the addition of 0.5 mM leucine increased the specific activity of muscle proteins, while the specific activity of intracellular tyrosine remained constant and its concentration decreased, suggesting that leucine also promoted protein synthesis. The concentration of leucine in muscle cells or a compartment thereof may play a role in regulating the turnover of muscle proteins and influence the transition to negative nitrogen balance during fasting, uncontrolled
diabetes
, and the posttraumatic state. Leucine may play a pivotal role in the protein-sparing effect of amino aicds.
...
PMID:Leucine. A possible regulator of protein turnover in muscle. 123 98
Some neurochemical changes in the gut of rats after five weeks of alloxan-induced
diabetes
were investigated. It was found that at this stage of
diabetes
the changes were restricted mainly to the small intestine with a special selectivity for the duodenum. No changes were found in the most part of the large intestine and rectum. The
methionine
-enkephalin content was markedly reduced throughout the small intestine, while vasoactive intestinal polypeptide was increased in duodenum, ileum and caecum. Substance P content was unaffected, while at later stages of the disease it was significantly reduced in the entire small intestine. Sympathetic noradrenaline and intrinsic serotonin contents were significantly increased in the duodenum and unchanged throughout the rest of the intestine. These data suggest that the small intestine and caecum might be the early target of diabetic autonomic neuropathy, that might involve progressively the rest of the large intestine at later stages as recent results have suggested. It is likely that the gastrointestinal dysfunctions, often present in diabetic patients, might also be due to the combined pre-synaptic alterations, and to the functional imbalance between Gs and Gi/Go transduction proteins recently reported. Insulin therapy, begun seven days after alloxan treatment, reduced drastically the hyperglycaemia, restored normal body growth and prevented all the gut neurochemical changes associated with alloxan-induced
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Early neurochemical changes in the autonomic neuropathy of the gut in experimental diabetes. 128 97
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