Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0015695 (fatty liver)
13,941 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

6 duplicate floor pens with 20-day-old commercial broiler chicks each, were fed practical-type broiler diet with maize-palm kernel meal, supplemented with graded levels of biotin so that the rations had 40, 80, 120, 160, 200, and 240 micrograms of the vitamin per kg of feed. This treatment was maintained for 6 weeks. Estimation of the body weight, feed intake, blood glucose concentration, and lipid contents of liver, kidney and blood showed that dietary biotin of 120 micrograms/kg feed is a minimum requirement. 160 micrograms/kg feed was required for the prevention of dermatitis, mortality due to fatty liver and kidney syndrome (FLKS) and leg deformities.
...
PMID:The biotin requirement of broilers feed maize-palm kernel meal based ration. 166 30

Intraperitoneal and subcutaneous routes of administration for diabetics on CAPD were compared. The comparison included: (1) Control of blood glucose concentration: both methods can provide satisfactory glycemic control for most patients. Changing the method of insulin administration is warranted when one method fails. (2) Effect on plasma insulin levels: intraperitoneal administration can produce a plasma insulin profile similar to the normal profile. This is unusual with subcutaneous administration. Consequences of hyperinsulinemia (hyperlipidemia, hypertension) seem, however, to be similar between the two methods of insulin administration. (3) Effect on peritoneal permeability: permeability characteristics are maintained unchanged, usually, with either method after long-term CAPD. However, insulin is mitogenic in vitro. Theoretically, intraperitoneal insulin could lead to peritoneal fibrosis. (4) Effect on infectious complications of CAPD: a difference in the rate of peritonitis or overall PD catheter-related infections has not been convincingly demonstrated between the two methods of insulin administration. Exit site and tunnel infections with staphylococcus aureus may be more frequent in diabetics receiving insulin subcutaneously. (5) Effect on hepatic structure and function: subcapsular hepatic steatosis was described in diabetics receiving insulin intraperitoneally. The clinical significance of this finding remains to be demonstrated. We conclude that both methods can be applied for insulin administration in diabetics on CAPD. The intraperitoneal method should be tried first in most instances. Prospective studies comparing the two methods are needed.
...
PMID:Subcutaneous versus intraperitoneal insulin in the management of diabetics on CAPD: a review. 168 Apr 63

Most rodents that spontaneously develop non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus are obese. The exception is the BHE rat. This rat develops abnormal glucose tolerance by 300 days of age, is lipemic, has a fatty liver, and yet is not obese. The strain has existed for at least 40 years and almost 100 research papers have been published describing its metabolic characteristics and responses to diet manipulation. A subline that has a higher percentage of diabetic animals has been produced. These animals may be useful in the study of mild diabetes that exists in the absence of obesity. Berdanier, C.D. The BHE rat: an animal model for the study of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:The BHE rat: an animal model for the study of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 202 12

Since the original description 26 years ago, of the hepatic glycogen synthetase deficiency, only one more case was reported in 1977. We present the studies carried out on an Argentine boy of Italian ancestry who at age 21 months, showed signs of hepatic deficiency with mild clinical symptoms which contrasted with a remarkable fatty liver degeneration. A totally atypic reaction to fructose overload (Table 1, Fig. 1) was the first key to the diagnosis. Glucose levels were not significantly modified by glucagon after 12-hours fasting, but it did increase the glycemia, with decrease of lactate and alanine 3 hours after-meal (Fig. 2a, b). The 24-hours metabolic profile showed fasting hypoglycemia, hyperketonemia, low alanine concentrations and mild lactatemia and hyperglycemia and a net post-prandial increase of lactate (Fig. 3). This profile when reduced to 14 hours, 12-fasting hours and 2-postprandial hours (Fig. 4), revealed similar alterations in an asymptomatic younger brother. The development of the investigation led to a second hepatic biopsy which confirmed hepatic steatosis and to an ultrastructural study, which showed subcellular alterations in the liver and also in muscle (Fig. 5). Moreover low content of hepatic glycogen was observed along with glycogen synthetase activity between 20-25% that of controls, being normal the enzyme activity in muscle and fibroblasts cultured from a skin biopsy (Table 2). The clinical pattern mainly without hypoglycemia, convulsions and/or mental retardation and a normal height and body mass development, allowed us to postulate that this Argentine report would be a mild variant of the disease formerly described and would be correlated with a partial deficiency of the hepatic glycogen synthetase.
...
PMID:[Hepatic glycogen synthetase deficiency or glycogen storage disease-zero. Mild phenotype with partial enzymatic defect]. 213 Feb 23

The response to major trauma is characterized by a significant erosion of the body cell mass. Intensive nutritional support can decrease morbidity and mortality. Preservation and restoration of the body cell mass involves amino acid synthesis into protein, and this process requires nutrient energy. Newer methods of assessing energy expenditure have revised traditional concepts about energy requirements following trauma. The use of fat to meet some of the caloric requirements may obviate problems with ventilatory distress, glucose intolerance, and hepatic steatosis that occur with glucose-based nutritional regimens. Selection of the delivery method for intensive nutritional support should consider gastrointestinal integrity, physiologic tolerance, and cost. Enteral nutrition is superior to parenteral nutrition in maintaining gastrointestinal mucosal integrity, hormonal balance, and nutrient utilization. Furthermore, it is safer, more convenient, and more economical than parenteral nutrition.
...
PMID:Postoperative nutritional support of patients with abdominal trauma. 219 Mar 43

Fatty liver is a common disease in Taiwan. In this study, we tried to evaluate the validity of predicting the presence of fatty liver from clinical data instead of liver biopsy or sonography. From a community survey in Putai, a total of 873 adults older than 30 years and quantified as to triglyceride level, body height, body weight, and the results of the oral glucose tolerance test and upper abdominal sonography were recruited for analysis. Using a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, the best 'cutoff values' for determination of fatty liver were predicted from body weight index and serum triglyceride level in 8 clusters grouped by sex, age and presence or absence of diabetes mellitus. The best cutoff values of triglyceride in the 8 clusters varied from 100 to 170 mg/dl with worse validity. Most of the values were 130 and 140 mg/dl. The cutoff values of body weight index were constant in all clusters and showed greater validity than those for triglyceride. They were 115% or 120%. Their accuracy for the prediction of fatty liver was positively correlated with its prevalence. However, their accuracy was lower than 70% in non-diabetic females. We conclude that body weight index is a good parameter for prediction of fatty liver especially in the high risk groups and we recommend that health-determining cutoff values of serum triglyceride and body weight index should be set at 130 mg/dl and 115%, respectively.
...
PMID:Prediction of fatty liver from serum triglyceride levels and body weight indexes. 219 19

The possibility that postprandial hyperinsulinemia could play a role in the development of hepatic lipid disturbances during convalescence from influenza B infection was explored in the ferret as a possible model of the steatosis of Reye's syndrome. Postprandial hyperinsulinemia was produced by feeding young ferrets glucose/water and a regular diet (glucose-treated group), as reflected by the mean serum insulin levels attained, which were 57 and 135 microU/ml during control and postinfluenza periods, respectively. By comparison, ferrets fed water and a regular diet (untreated group) had mean insulin levels of 19 and 22 microU/ml, while postprandial glucose levels were comparable in the two groups of animals for each period. In contrast to untreated animals, grossly visible fatty livers were found in glucose-treated ferrets during convalescence. The total lipid content of these livers had doubled compared with preinfection samples and compared with livers of untreated ferrets. By electron microscopy hepatic mitochondria showed striking changes with diminution of matrix density and reduction in cristae surface area only in convalescent samples from glucose-treated animals. Serum free fatty acid (FFA) levels were considerably higher in the glucose-treated animals during fasting before influenza and also after feeding during convalescence. Serum triglyceride (TG) levels were also high during convalescence in the glucose-treated group. Adipose tissue lipoprotein lipase activities were similar between groups, but hormone-sensitive lipase activity was twelvefold higher in glucose-treated ferrets before and after influenza B. These findings indicate that for a given stimulus, glucose-treated ferrets would mobilize more FFA than untreated ferrets. The total capacity for beta-oxidation of FA by the mitochondrial pathway was identical in all groups of animals. Total carnitine palmitoyl transferase (CPT) activity was the same in both control groups, but was significantly diminished in glucose-treated animals during convalescence. As CPT regulates the entry of FA into the mitochondrial matrix, its reduction in response to higher insulin concentrations would limit the oxidation of FA and stimulate TG accumulation. Therefore, the accumulation of lipid in the liver in this model is regarded to have been caused by the simultaneous occurrence of increased lipolysis and increased hepatic TG synthesis owing, in part, to diversion of activated FA by CPT, which is reduced in activity due to the regulatory action of insulin. These findings may have pathophysiologic relevance for the lipid changes that occur in Reye's syndrome and to fatty liver formation in hyperinsulinemic states.
...
PMID:Hepatic steatosis during convalescence from influenza B infection in ferrets with postprandial hyperinsulinemia. 220 96

Steatohepatitis (fatty liver hepatitis), histologically identical to alcoholic disease, occurs in some obese patients after jejunoileal bypass. A similar lesion occurs rarely in obese patients without bypass surgery, but the risk factors are poorly understood. Hepatic steatosis, steatohepatitis and fibrosis were sought in 351 apparently nonalcoholic patients at autopsy and various risk factors were evaluated. Incidence of steatosis and steatohepatitis correlated with the degree of obesity. Steatohepatitis was found in 18.5% of markedly obese patients and 2.7% of lean patients. Additional risk factors for steatohepatitis were type II diabetes, weight loss in the preterminal period shortly before death and intravenous glucose therapy in the last week of life. Severe fibrosis was found in 13.8% of markedly obese patients and in 6.6% of lean patients; this difference was largely explained by the higher prevalence of diabetes in obese groups. The risk factors defined in this study are known to be associated with abnormalities of free fatty acid metabolism. Obesity, type II diabetes and intravenous glucose therapy are associated with hyperinsulinemia, which may inhibit fatty acid oxidation. Obesity and weight loss increase the presentation of fatty acids to the liver. Similar metabolic changes may occur in obese patients after jejunoileal bypass surgery. Thus this study supports the hypothesis that fatty acids have a role in the hepatocellular necrosis found in some obese individuals.
...
PMID:Fatty liver hepatitis (steatohepatitis) and obesity: an autopsy study with analysis of risk factors. 222 7

Infusion of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) with excess carbohydrate calories leads to hepatic steatosis in rats that is associated with an elevated portal insulin/glucagon molar ratio. Previously we have shown that adding glucagon to TPN prevents hepatic steatosis in rats. In this study we attempted to reverse the steatosis by adding glucagon to TPN after 1 week of TPN alone. Adult rats (n = 28) received internal jugular catheters: Group 1 (n = 7), saline (3 cc/h) and chow ad libitum; Group 2 (n = 7), 25% dextrose base TPN solution for 1 week; Group 3 (n = 7), 25% dextrose base TPN for 2 weeks; Group 4 (n = 7), 25% dextrose base TPN for 1 week and then glucagon (15 micrograms/100 g/day) added to TPN for the second week. The infusion rate of TPN was 1.2 ml/100 g/hr (40% kcal greater than control). At 7 days (Group 2) and 14 days (Groups 1, 3, and 4) portal and peripheral venous blood levels were drawn for insulin and glucagon radioimmunoassay, blood glucose determination, and liver function tests; livers were removed for histology and lipid content determination. Blood glucose was equivalent among all groups. Liver function tests were within normal limits. Panlobular vacuolization of the hepatocytes was noted on histology in Groups 2 and 3. Hepatic lipid content was significantly elevated in Group 3. The portal insulin/glucagon molar ratio was increased because of excessive portal venous insulin in Groups 2 and 3 (P less than 0.05 by ANOVA). In contrast, portal venous insulin and the insulin/glucagon molar ratio did not increase in Group 4 and hepatic lipid infiltration was absent when glucagon was added to the TPN solution after 1 week of TPN solution alone. The results suggest that the addition of glucagon to hypertonic dextrose TPN is not only protective in preventing hepatic steatosis, but may reverse steatosis, possibly by increasing hepatic lipid export.
...
PMID:Reversal of hepatic steatosis in rats by addition of glucagon to total parenteral nutrition (TPN). 249 33

We evaluated the effects of phenobarbital, an inducer, on plasma glucose and serum immunoreactive insulin levels and on hepatic glucose and drug metabolism using an animal model of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. Genetically obese (ob/ob) mice, characterized by hyperglycaemia, hyperinsulinaemia, fatty liver and obesity were selected. The impairment of diabetic state with age was associated with increased activities of NADPH producing enzymes, whereas mixed function oxidase system remained unaltered. Phenobarbital reduced serum immunoreactive insulin and plasma glucose levels and decreased gluconeogenesis. Hepatic glucose phosphorylating enzyme activity increased and glucose releasing enzyme activity decreased. The demand for NADPH in drug oxidation reactions, caused by the induction phenomenon, was reflected in the elevated activities of the NADPH producing enzymes in pentose phosphate pathway and in the activities of isocitrate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme from mitochondrial oxidation reactions. Glucose metabolism of lean littermates indicated that phenobarbital induction normalizes impaired intracellular glucose handling but leaves normal glucose metabolism unaltered. Hepatic glucose production rate was related to plasma glucose, NADPH producing enzyme activities and cytochrome P450 content in the obese and lean mice.
...
PMID:Effects of enzyme induction therapy on glucose and drug metabolism in obese mice model of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. 250 Oct 61


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>