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)

Plasma glucose concentration during late gestation was thought to be important for the development of fatty liver near parturition. Thirteen multiparous cows were given a 1-L oral drench of propylene glycol once daily beginning 10 +/- 3.6 d prepartum until parturition. Eleven control cows received a 1-L water drench. Plasma glucose increased following propylene glycol administration. Plasma NEFA concentration was 403 and 234 microM, and plasma insulin concentrations were .354 and .679 ng/ml, for control cows and cows treated with propylene glycol measured from 1 to 7 d prepartum. Plasma NEFA tended to be lower in cows treated with propylene glycol from 1 to 21 d postpartum. Prepartum propylene glycol administration reduced hepatic triglyceride accumulation by 32 and 42% at 1 and 21 d postpartum, respectively. Prepartum plasma BHBA was reduced during propylene glycol administration. Prepartum plasma glucose, NEFA, BHBA, and insulin were strongly correlated with liver triglyceride at 1 d postpartum (r = -.49, .45, .36, and -.49, respectively). Pre- and postpartum DMI were not affected by treatment. Milk production and composition measured through 21 d postpartum were not different between groups.
...
PMID:Effect of prepartum propylene glycol administration on periparturient fatty liver in dairy cows. 822 21

Android obesity is associated with metabolic disorders, but the causality of this relationship remains unclear. We investigated the association of body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) with hormones, glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, serum lipoproteins, and the serum activity of hepatic enzymes in 40 healthy premenopausal women (BMI 19.2-46.1, mean 32.6 +/- 1.3 kg/m2; WHR 0.68-1.01, mean 0.82 +/- 0.02). BMI correlated with WHR (r = 0.52, P < 0.01). After correction for WHR, BMI was negatively correlated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and positively with total and very low density lipoprotein triglycerides, insulin sensitivity, blood glucose, serum insulin and glucagon. After adjustment for BMI, WHR was significantly associated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, total and very low density lipoprotein triglycerides, and the serum activities of hepatic enzymes but not with insulin sensitivity, blood glucose, serum insulin, or glucagon. According to these results, body fat distribution assessed by WHR is related to hypertriglyceridemia and alterations in hepatic function such as a fatty liver. WHR is not primarily related to glucose metabolism in healthy premenopausal women without preexisting metabolic disorders such as glucose intolerance. Therefore the observable association between android obesity and manifest impairment in glucose metabolism may develop secondarily during persisting hyperinsulinemia, which itself is primarily related to obesity. Thus an android body fat distribution may rather be an accompanying feature than a predictor of impaired glucose tolerance and insulin resistance.
...
PMID:The waist-to-hip ratio corrected for body mass index is related to serum triglycerides and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol but not to parameters of glucose metabolism in healthy premenopausal women. 831 84

Gastroparesis, constipation, diarrhea, and fecal incontinence occur frequently in diabetics with long-standing and often poorly controlled insulin-dependent diabetes. These motor abnormalities of the gastrointestinal tract tend to be associated in these patients with evidence of autonomic neuropathy and other diabetes-related complications such as peripheral neuropathy, nephropathy, and retinopathy. The management of these derangements of motility is generally frustrating and very difficult. The prokinetic agents currently available have fewer side effects than previously used drugs, and have expanded the treatment options for diabetics with motility disorders of the gastrointestinal tract. The treatment of diabetic diarrhea remains aimed at the symptom because the cause is often unknown. The diagnosis of diabetic diarrhea depends on a careful and judicious assessment, which allows for the distinction of this condition from other causes of diarrhea. For example, celiac disease can occur in insulin-dependent diabetics, but it is specifically treated by the elimination of gluten from the diet. In recent years, we have also gained a better understanding of the liver and biliary tree abnormalities that occur in the diabetic. The most common hepatobiliary lesions found in these patients include excessive glycogen deposition, fatty liver, and gallstones. Cirrhosis of the liver can develop in diabetics as a result of progressive fatty steatosis, pericentral hepatic fibrosis, and, at times, central hyaline sclerosis. Future study of the underlying pathogenesis of diabetes may one day allow us to find common threads in the seemingly disparate gastrointestinal and hepatic complications of this disease.
...
PMID:The intestinal and liver complications of diabetes mellitus. 843 40

Abnormal liver tests, right upper quadrant pain and hepatomegaly occurring in an obese or in a diabetic patient may point to the presence of fat or of glycogen accumulation in the liver parenchymal cells. Marked hepatomegaly due to cytoplasmic glycogen deposition is mainly found in poorly controlled insulin-dependent diabetic patients. If accompanied by cushingoid features, growth retardation and by delayed puberty, a diagnosis of Mauriac syndrome can be made. Hyperglycaemia, insulin administration and increased concentrations of the counterregulatory hormone cortisol may all play a role in the glycogen deposition by their concerted actions on the glycogen phosphorylase and synthase enzymes, promoting the accumulation of glycogen. Hypercortisolism may be responsible for growth retardation and delayed puberty in Mauriac patients. Regression of hepatomegaly and of the associated clinical characteristics may be obtained by a better metabolic control due to the administration of long-acting insulin and the change from single to twice daily injections. Fatty liver is rare in insulin-dependent diabetic patients and is indicative of a poor diabetic control. This process is quickly reversible by adequate insulin treatment. Steatosis is frequently found in maturity-onset diabetics and in obese patients. The pathogenetic mechanisms leading to the accumulation of triglycerides and of fatty acids in the hepatocytes can easily be understood from the normal cycling of fatty acids between the adiopose tissue and the liver. Histologic features of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis can also be found in obese and in diabetic patients. Steatohepatitis may rarely evolve into cirrhosis. In general, there is no correlation between the degree of the biochemical alterations and the severity of the histological findings.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Liver disturbances in obesity and diabetes mellitus. 858 Oct 74

Generalized lipodystrophy is a rare condition which can be divided into congenital and acquired types, based on the age at presentation and pattern of inheritance. The congenital type of generalized lipodystrophy or Lawrence-Seip syndrome presents in first two years of life and is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern. The diagnosis is made on the basis of loss of body fat, muscular hypertrophy, acanthosis nigricans, hirsutism, hepatomegaly with fatty liver, hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia with insulin resistance. A 2 1/2-year-old Thai girl with the clinical features of Lawrence-Seip syndrome is reported. Abnormal platelet function was detected in this girl.
...
PMID:Congenital generalized lipodystrophy, a case report. 862 39

Thirty-nine multiparous Holstein cows were used to measure the effect of propylene glycol treatment around parturition on milk yield, reproductive efficiency and some hormone and metabolite concentrations. Cows were assigned randomly to control (n = 19) or propylene glycol treated (n = 20) groups. Propylene glycol (300 g) was administered directly mixed with the diet from day 10 prior to the expected calving date until parturition (day 0) and orally after dilution in 1 l water on days 3, 6, 9 and 12. Blood samples were collected on days -20, -5, 0, 3, 10, 25 and 50 while milk samples were taken weekly until 13 weeks post partum. Body condition scores, recorded on days -20, 15 and 50, were not affected by propylene glycol administration. Propylene glycol did not significantly affect milk yield or composition but linear somatic cell score measured from the first 13 weeks post partum was reduced by propylene glycol administration (P < 0.01). Moreover, propylene glycol reduced milk urea (-25 mg/l, P < 0.05), especially during the first 9 weeks post partum. Plasma insulin concentrations were similar in both groups during the experiment while insulin-like growth factor I (P < 0.05) and insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 3 (P < 0.001) levels were higher on days 10, 25 and 50 post partum in the propylene glycol group. Propylene glycol administration decreased plasma non-esterified fatty acid concentrations (P < 0.05 to P < 0.01) but increased total cholesterol levels (P < 0.01) after parturition while 3-hydroxybutyrate levels were unaffected by the treatment. Changes in the hormone and metabolic concentrations after propylene glycol administration in the last few days of gestation and the first week of lactation seem to indicate that energy balance in the treated group was probably more positive than in the control group. There was also evidence that propylene glycol administration prevented fatty liver syndrome and hastened the resumption of oestrous cycles (P < 0.001).
...
PMID:Effect of propylene glycol supplementation around parturition on milk yield, reproduction performance and some hormonal and metabolic characteristics in dairy cows. 865 35

C57BL/KsJ mice carrying homozygous db/db mutation (db/db mice) are characterized by extreme obesity and early onset of hyperglycemia. In an attempt to rectify diabetes of these mice, a pancreatic beta cell line MIN6, which retains glucose-inducible insulin secretion, was transplanted subcutaneously into the back of the mice. Glucose and insulin levels of individual mice were examined biweekly and their weight gain weekly. All mice were sacrificed at 100 days after the transplantation of MIN6 cells. In db/db mice that had received MIN6 cells, blood insulin levels were restored and blood glucose levels were reduced to those of non-diabetic mice, although they remained obese. Glucose tolerance test suggested that transplanted MIN6 cells responded to loaded glucose as beta cells of non-diabetic mice. Immunohistochemical study showed that transplanted MIN6 cells produced insulin. Fatty liver associated with diabetes mellitus observed in db/db mice was not found in the MIN6 cell-transplanted mice. Implication of the results is discussed with reference to potential therapies for severe diabetes.
...
PMID:Rectification of diabetic state in C57BL/KsJ-db/db mice by the implantation of pancreatic beta cell line MIN6. 885

Various alterations in hormonal levels have been suggested to contribute to the development of nutritional oedema and fatty liver in children with kwashiorkor. We present an infant who underwent near-total pancreatectomy at the age of 4 weeks and developed kwashiorkor after 11 weeks. The sequence of events following surgery can be divided into two phases. The first phase was characterized by hyperinsulinaemia and hypoglycaemia before feeds. During this phase, although the weight gain was slow (10 g/day) serum albumin (32 g/I) and prealbumin (0.23 g/I) concentrations were maintained with no oedema or hepatomegaly. In the second phase, insulin deficiency prevailed and he was receiving the same amount of milk (protein)/day (enriched with starch). During that phase he rapidly developed hypoalbuminaemia (18 g/l), hypoprealbuminaemia (0.1 g/l), oedema, hepatomegaly, and dermatosis. This case demonstrates clearly the important role of defective insulin secretion in the development of nutritional oedema and hepatomegaly.
...
PMID:Hypoinsulinaemia has an important role in the development of oedema and hepatomegaly during malnutrition. 893 62

In the present study, the time course of change in sucrose-induced insulin resistance, triglyceride (TG) concentration, and liver fatty acid composition was examined. Male rats (n = 8-10/group per time point) was fed a high-starch (ST) diet for 2 wk and were then equicalorically fed ST or a high-sucrose (SU) diet for 1, 2, 5, or 8 wk. Body weight and percent body fat were similar between ST and SU diets at all time points. Glucose infusion rate (GIR) was significantly (P < 0.05) lower in the SU diet (9.2 +/- 0.9, 7.4 +/- 0.5, 6.2 +/- 1.0, and 6.0 +/- 0.9 mg.kg-1.min-1) vs. the ST diet (15.1 +/- 1.7, 15.7 +/- 0.7, 14.7 +/- 1.9, and 14.2 +/- 0.9 mg.kg-1.min-1) at 1, 2, 5, and 8 wk, respectively. Reduced suppression of glucose appearance accounted for 85, 50, 45, and 40% of the reduction in GIR at these same time points. Muscle glycogen synthesis was reduced (P < 0.05 vs. ST diet) in the SU diet at 2, 5, and 8 wk. Fasting plasma TG concentration was inversely related (r = -0.79, P < 0.001) to muscle glycogen synthesis, and liver TG concentration was positively related (r = 0.59, P < 0.01) to glucose appearance. Liver fatty acid composition was similar between diet groups. In summary, the SU diet produced insulin resistance in liver before muscle. TG concentration appears to be related to sucrose-induced insulin resistance in liver and muscle.
...
PMID:Changes in insulin action, triglycerides, and lipid composition during sucrose feeding in rats. 894 70

Increased lipolysis, low insulin/glucagon ratios and malonyl-CoA concentrations are prerequisites for ketogenesis. From an aetiological viewpoint, there are two quite different types of metabolic disorders in which ketosis can occur, the hypoglycaemic-hypoinsulinaemic and the hyperglycaemic-hyperinsulinaemic type. The former, Type I, generally occurs 3-6 weeks after calving in cows whose milk secretion is so extensive that the demand for glucose exceeds the capacity for glucose production. To protect the body from hazardous protein degradation by a high rate of gluconeogenesis, this process is inhibited and the increased energy requirements are met by the elevated utilization of ketone bodies. In this strong catabolic metabolic state the plasma levels of glucose and insulin are very low, the levels of ketone bodies are high and there are small risks for fat accumulation in the liver cells. The hyperglycaemic, hyperinsulinaemic form, Type II, generally occurs earlier in lactation. An important aetiologic factor is overfeeding in the dry period, which can lead to disturbances in the hormonal adaptation of metabolism at calving with increased plasma levels of insulin and glucose and often out not always also with hyperketonaemia. If combined with stress, there may be increased lipolysis in adipose tissues, lipid synthesis and accumulation in the liver, i.e. the development of fatty liver. This hyperglycaemic form of disturbance has many similarities with the initial stage of non-insulin-dependent (Type II) diabetes in humans. It has been shown that ketone bodies inhibit protein degradation and thereby gluconeogenesis and also are able to spare glucose by inhibiting glucose utilization. They also can inhibit lipolysis and function as a regulatory safety system, replacing insulin, in situations when the activity of this hormone is low, as in Type I ketosis. Ketone bodies thus have important functions as substrates replacing glucose in many tissues and also as signal substances in the regulation of energy metabolism.
...
PMID:New aspects of ketone bodies in energy metabolism of dairy cows: a review. 901 Nov 47


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