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:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors studied whether the fatiguing effects of eating lunch are greater for carbohydrate-rich meals than for other meals, and related the time course of behavioral change to plasma glucose,
insulin
, and amino acids. On different occasions, in counterbalanced order, normal women (N = 7) fasted overnight, ate a standard breakfast, and at lunch either continued to fast or ate a high-carbohydrate, low-protein meal; a hedonically similar meal containing both carbohydrate and protein; or a high-protein, low-carbohydrate meal. Meals were isocaloric and equated for fat content. Only the carbohydrate meal significantly increased
fatigue
, which could not be attributed to hypoglycemia because plasma glucose remained elevated.
Fatigue
began approximately, when the carbohydrate meal elevated the plasma tryptophan ratio but ended even though the ratio remained elevated.
Fatigue
after a high-carbohydrate lunch could not be explained by reactive hypoglycemia or sweet taste, and could partially be explained by the hypothesis that
fatigue
parallels an elevation of the tryptophan ratio.
...
PMID:Psychobiological effects of carbohydrates. 256 98
The uremic syndrome is multifactorial, and affects most tissues and organs. Disturbances in protein and amino acid metabolism may play important roles, especially in chronic uremia, either directly or by production of toxic metabolites, with resultant negative nitrogen (N) balance, muscle wasting, reduced protein synthesis, and characteristically abnormal intracellular free amino acid concentrations. There are also grossly abnormal amino acid levels in the plasma of uremic patients, e.g., increases in conjugated amino acids, high levels of several nonessential and low levels of essential amino acids. The ratios of tyrosine/phenylalanine and of valine/glycine are decreased. The low tryptophan levels may contribute to encephalopathy as a result of an imbalance in neurotransmitter synthesis. Citrulline is found in excess; the explanation is unresolved. There are elevated concentrations of the sulfur-containing amino acids: cystine, taurine, cystathionine, and homocysteine. Excess of the latter is implicated in the atherogenesis of renal failure. Disturbed metabolism and interorgan exchange of amino acids in the uremic state explains some of the abnormalities in tissue and plasma concentrations of individual amino acids. Enzymatic defects are involved in the disturbed metabolism of branched chain amino acids (BCAA), with possible antagonism among them, which impairs growth and amino acid utilization. Carbohydrate intolerance, associated with insensitivity of peripheral tissues to
insulin
and hyperinsulinemia, elicits decreased plasma BCAA. Protein synthesis rates in normal and pathological conditions are more closely related to the intracellular amino acid pool than to plasma amino acid levels. Concentrations of individual amino acids in the plasma pool are poor indicators of their intracellular concentrations. Muscle contains the largest pool of protein and free amino acids in the body. In chronic renal failure patients, the intracellular concentrations of valine, threonine, lysine, and carnosine are low. With low protein diets and in hemodialysis, serine, tyrosine, and taurine often are also low. The low taurine may be related to
fatigue
and to uremic cardiomyopathies. The commonly used amino acid supplements generally fail to correct the intracellular amino acid deficits. A "New Formula" has been developed to correct these intracellular amino acid abnormalities, and to supplement a low protein diet. It provides more valine than leucine, increased tyrosine and threonine, and less histidine, leucine, isoleucine, lysine, methionine, and phenylalanine than in formulas customarily used for patients with chronic renal failure. It is uncertain whether other ap
...
PMID:Amino acid metabolism in uremia. 267 58
357 IDMs and 20 healthy newborns of non-diabetic mothers were examined at term for body measurements, red blood cell count, serum bilirubin, cord blood
insulin
and blood glucose during the first postnatal week. The stage of maternal diabetes did not influence the course of neonatal bilirubin levels, but the IDMs had prolonged and higher bilirubinaemia compared with the controls. Hyperbilirubinaemia was found to be most prominent in newborns with an increased birthweight/length ratio and was not simply related to macrosomia (LGA). These infants had significantly lower blood glucose concentrations immediately after birth, whereas cord blood
insulin
was found to be identical between the IDM sub-groups. Bilirubinaemia in heavy for length infants was slightly correlated to haematocrit. For the pathogenesis of hyperbilirubinaemia in IDMs induction of heme oxygenase (due to a
lack of energy
provision following a phosphorylation disorder) is discussed. Nutritional support (early feeding, glucose infusions) does not affect the course of bilirubinaemia.
...
PMID:Neonatal jaundice in infants of diabetic mothers. 270 15
We reported a case of halothane-induced fulminant hepatitis with acute renal failure which developed 6 days after reexposure to halothane. The patient was a 58-year-old female. She had a history of liver dysfunction after exposure to halothane 6 years previously. She had surgical treatment of clubfoot under halothane anesthesia in other hospital. Preoperative physical examination and laboratory data were normal. On the 6th post-operative day she abruptly developed high fever and general
fatigue
. Next day, she was transferred to our hospital. At admission, fulminant hepatitis complicated with acute renal failure was diagnosed with severe liver and renal damage. She was immediately treated with plasma exchange, glucose-
insulin
therapy, and hemodialysis. Serum transaminase level returned to normal value within a week. However, despite repeated hemodialysis, renal function did not improve, and she died of P. aeruginosa sepsis on 28th day after the operation. It may be suggested that in this patient hypersensitivity to halothane has persisted during the six years.
...
PMID:[A case of fulminant hepatitis after reexposure to halothane six years later]. 281 Jul 19
Six patients (four females, two males; aged 18-65 years), previously treated by external pituitary irradiation (2000-4000 cGY in 8-15 fractions over 10-20 days) for pituitary tumours, presented with the symptoms of excessive and inappropriate
tiredness
suggestive of ACTH deficiency, despite a normal peak cortisol response to an
insulin
tolerance test (four cases) or to a glucagon stimulation test (two cases). These six patients were found to have significantly lower mean 24 h urinary free cortisol levels (100 +/- 40 nmol; mean +/- SD) compared with the mean value of 31 normal controls (210 +/- 70.8 nmol; P less than 0.01). In addition serum cortisol profiles based on a series of four timed samples between 0900-2300 h were subnormal (mean 130 nmol/l) in comparison with profiles obtained from 12 normal controls (mean 270 nmol/l) (P less than 0.001). Glucocorticoid replacement therapy promptly abolished their symptoms. These results suggest that a discordance between ACTH secretion under basal circumstances and ACTH response to pharmacological tests may exist in patients with ACTH deficiency. We speculate that defective endogenous corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRF) secretion, due to radiation-induced damage at hypothalamic level, is one cause of this phenomenon.
...
PMID:Adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) deficiency undetected by standard dynamic tests of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. 284 48
Coxsackievirus B infection is common in children and young adults, usually causing mild symptoms in the gastrointestinal or upper respiratory tract. However, some patients develop pleurodynia, carditis or aseptic meningitis. This viral infection can be serious in the fetus and fatal in the newborn. Coxsackievirus B infection may cause a postviral
fatigue
syndrome, juvenile-onset
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus and other chronic diseases.
...
PMID:Complications following coxsackievirus B infection. 284 20
Subjective feeling of
fatigue
was quantified before and 20 days after elective uncomplicated abdominal surgery in 16 otherwise-healthy patients and compared with changes in heart rate and various hormonal and substrate responses to a 10-minute bicycle exercise (65% of preoperative maximal work capacity) preoperatively and postoperatively. Postoperatively,
fatigue
increased (p less than 0.001) from 3.0 +/- 0.5 to 5.3 +/- 0.5 arbitrary units (mean +/- SEM). Heart rate, plasma catecholamines, and serum growth hormone, lactate, alanine, and glycerol values always increased, whereas serum
insulin
values decreased in response to exercise (p less than 0.01). During exercise, only heart rate (p less than 0.01) and lactate (p less than 0.05) values were higher postoperatively compared with preoperatively. Increase in
fatigue
postoperatively correlated significantly to increase in heart rate (p less than 0.01) and correlated positively, but not significantly, to increase in plasma levels of noradrenaline (p = 0.08), growth hormone (p = 0.09), and alanine (p = 0.08) during exercise, but not to increase in serum lactate values (p greater than 0.8). Thus, after uncomplicated surgery, there was increased
fatigue
and amplified metabolic and cardiovascular response to a given absolute work load. These findings are similar to those observed during detraining and suggest a therapeutic role of exercise in the treatment of postoperative
fatigue
.
...
PMID:Fatigue and cardiac and endocrine metabolic response to exercise after abdominal surgery. 291 3
To determine whether a single carbohydrate feeding could rapidly restore and maintain plasma glucose availability late in exercise, six trained cyclists were studied on two occasions during exercise to
fatigue
at 70 +/- 1% of VO2max. After 135 min of exercise, the men were fed either an artificially sweetened placebo or glucose polymers (3 g.kg-1 in a 50% solution). Prolonged exercise led to a decline in plasma glucose from 4.6 +/- 0.1 mM at rest to 3.9 +/- 0.2 mM after 135 min (P less than 0.05). Plasma glucose decreased further (P less than 0.05) to 3.2 +/- 2.0 mM at
fatigue
following placebo ingestion but increased (P less than 0.05) and was then maintained at 4.5-4.9 mM following carbohydrate ingestion. Respiratory exchange ratio (R) fell gradually during the placebo trial from 0.88 +/- 0.01 after 10 min of exercise to 0.81 +/- 0.01 at
fatigue
(P less than 0.01). R also reached a minimum of 0.81-0.82 in each subject after 135-180 min of exercise during the carbohydrate feeding trial but increased again to 0.84-0.86 as plasma glucose rose following the carbohydrate feeding. Exercise time to
fatigue
was 21% longer (205 +/- 17 vs 169 +/- 12 min; P less than 0.01) during the carbohydrate ingestion trial. Plasma
insulin
did not increase significantly, whereas plasma free fatty acids and blood glycerol plateaued following carbohydrate ingestion. These data indicate that a single carbohydrate feeding late in exercise can supply sufficient carbohydrate to restore euglycemia and increase carbohydrate oxidation, thereby delaying
fatigue
.
...
PMID:Metabolism and performance following carbohydrate ingestion late in exercise. 292 2
The concentrations of free fatty acids (FFAs) in the neostriatum of control rats and rats subjected to unilateral cortical ablation were measured during and following severe
insulin
-induced hypoglycemia. The total FFA concentration in the caudate nucleus contralateral to the lesion increased to approximately 1.5 and 3 times the control level after 5 and 30 min of isoelectricity, respectively, and was similar to the control value following 1 h of recovery. After 5 min of isoelectricity, the total FFA pool was significantly smaller in the decorticated striatum. No difference between hemispheres was noted after 30 min of isoelectricity. After 5 min of isoelectricity the levels of stearic and arachidonic acid were selectively increased whereas palmitic acid and oleic acid remained at control levels. In the decorticated striatum of lesioned animals the arachidonic acid concentration was significantly lower, whereas the level of stearic acid was not significantly different from the control value. After 30 min of isoelectricity the levels of all four FFA species were increased. Apart from a significantly lower level of oleic acid on the decorticated side, there were no interhemispheric differences in the FFA levels. Since the early interhemispheric differences in the FFA levels. Since the early interhemispheric hemispheric differences in the levels of arachidonic and stearic acids coincide with a selective decrease in the levels of glutamate and a
decreased energy
utilization on the decorticated side, the results suggest that glutamate release during hypoglycemia induces an early receptor-mediated degradation of phospholipids, presumably via the phosphatidylinositol cycle.
...
PMID:Lesions to the corticostriatal pathways ameliorate hypoglycemia-induced arachidonic acid release. 309 37
Fifty-nine patients with both clinical evidence of thyroid dysfunction and patent diabetes mellitus were investigated in our diabetology department. Patients with euthyroid goitre and iatrogenic or pituitary hypothyroidism were excluded from the study. Among the 45 diabetics with hyperthyroidism, 32 had Graves' disease and 13 had toxic adenoma; 71% were
insulin
-treated. Hyperthyroidism had passed unnoticed in 7 of these 32 patients because
fatigue
and loss of weight, which initially were the predominant or sole symptoms, are extremely frequent in uncontrolled diabetes. These symptoms, as well as polyuria, polyphagia and even sweating are common to both diseases. Considerable deterioration in the control of glycaemia was observed in 63% of the
insulin
-treated patients when hyperthyroidism developed, with a 17 to 212% (mean 82%) increase in
insulin
dosage in 53%. There was no correlation between the degree of hyperthyroidism and the loss of control. Following treatment of the hyperthyroidism, control was improved in 63%, with an 11-83% (mean 44%) decrease in
insulin
dosage in 59% of them.
Insulin
therapy could be withdrawn in only one of the 32
insulin
-treated patients. Non-iatrogenic primary hypothyroidism was found in 0.2% of the diabetics investigated. This incidence was significantly higher than the calculated probability of the two diseases occurring by chance in the same patient. Eleven out of 14 patients were
insulin
-treated. When hypothyroidism developed, 73% of them had their
insulin
dosage reduced, with a high frequency of hypoglycaemic disorders: repeated "malaise" in 55% and coma in 27%. A higher proportion of vitiligo was also noted: 14% in the total patient population reported, and 18% in
insulin
-treated patients.
...
PMID:[Effect of clinical hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism on patent diabetes. 59 cases]. 315 40
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>