Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a recently discovered widespread regulatory peptide which is encoded in the same gene as calcitonin. We assessed the effect of systemic infusion of synthetic rat CGRP at low dose (range 0.32-2.56 pmol/kg per min) on submaximal pentagastrin-stimulated gastric secretion and on gastrointestinal hormones. To assess its pharmacokinetic parameters in man the MCR and plasma half-life were estimated by the continuous infusion method. Gastric acid output and pepsin secretion were significantly reduced by CGRP (-29% of basal, P less than 0.01 and -40% of basal, P less than 0.005, respectively). There was a significant fall in basal levels of gastrin (-39%, P less than 0.001); gastric inhibitory peptide (-44.7%, P less than 0.001); enteroglucagon (-25%, P less than 0.001) and neurotensin (-33%, P less than 0.05). There was no significant change in plasma levels of insulin, motilin, pancreatic polypeptide or glucose. Suppression of gastric secretion and the fall in gastrointestinal hormones was prolonged and basal levels were not re-established after stopping the CGRP infusion. The disappearance curve of immunoreactive CGRP from the plasma was bi-exponential. The plasma half-life of immunoreactive CGRP was calculated as 6.9 +/- 0.9 min for the fast decay and 26.4 +/- 4.7 min for the slow decay. The calculated MCR was 11.3 +/- 1.2 ml/kg per min. Except for flushing of the face no untoward effects were observed. The results of this study suggest the possibility that CGRP could play a role in the regulation of gastric secretion and gastrointestinal hormone release.
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PMID:Infusion of a novel peptide, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in man. Pharmacokinetics and effects on gastric acid secretion and on gastrointestinal hormones. 392 13

This study evaluated the effect of gastric bypass on the glucose, insulin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), neurotensin, and motilin response to orally administered glucose in eight morbidly obese patients before and after operation. Preoperatively, all eight patients remained asymptomatic during an oral glucose tolerance test, which showed glucose intolerance and hyperinsulinism. Plasma VIP, neurotensin, and motilin remained below detectable levels for the entire test. At three months following gastric bypass (21% weight loss), all eight patients became acutely ill during a repeated oral glucose tolerance test and had the following symptoms: facial flushing (eight patients), palpitations (eight patients), nausea (seven patients), abdominal fullness (seven patients), pallor (four patients), diaphoresis (two patients), vomiting (two patients), and diarrhea (two patients). Significant release of neurotensin occurred in seven patients while three patients had release of VIP, further implicating these two peptides as part of the pathophysiologic spectrum of the "dumping syndrome."
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PMID:Neurotensin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, and Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy. Their role in the dumping syndrome. 398

The rates of glucose production and utilization can be estimated by a primed-constant infusion technique using separate catheters for the infusion of radiolabelled glucose and periodic blood withdrawal. In rats, a carotid artery catheter is most often combined with a jugular or femoral venous catheter in such studies. We presently describe a method which utilizes a single jugular catheter for both infusion and sampling in the awake rat. This method is directly compared with simultaneous carotid artery sampling during both the dynamic steady state and a nonsteady state induced by a constant infusion of insulin. Our results demonstrate the validity of a single vein design for the analysis of glucose kinetics in either state. Rapid sampling and complete flushing prevent disruption of infusate equilibrium and sample contamination respectively. This single catheter method requires less technical skill for placement, reduces surgical intervention and enhances the comfort of the awake rat.
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PMID:The analysis of glucose kinetics using a single jugular catheter in awake rats. 399 22

Previous workers from this laboratory observed considerable variation in the proportions of acetic and lactic acids produced in pure broth culture as compared to consistently high proportions of acetic acid produced in the sourdough and flour suspension systems. In the latter the proportion of acetic acid was always in the range of 20 to 35% of the total, whereas in pure broth culture frequently less than 5% acetic acid was produced. In the natural environment, the sourdough bacteria, tentatively identified as lactobacilli, coexist with a yeast, Saccharomyces exiguus, and this study was undertaken to determine whether this yeast or flour ingredients including glucose or other factors were involved in this variable production of acetic acid. The proportion of acetic acid produced in broth culture on maltose, the preferred carbohydrate source, was found to depend almost entirely on the degree of aeration. Essentially anaerobic conditions, as obtained by thorough evacuation and flushing with CO(2) or N(2), resulted in very low (5% or less) proportions of acetic acid. Aerobic conditions, achieved by continuous shaking in cotton-plugged flasks, yielded high levels (23 to 39% of the total) of acetic acid. Similar effects of aeration were observed with glucose as the substrate, although growth was considerably slower, or in nonsterile flour suspension systems. It is theorized that, under aerobic conditions, the reduced pyridine nucleotides generated in the dissimilation of carbohydrate are oxidized directly by molecular oxygen, thereby becoming unavailable for the reduction of the acetyl phosphate intermediate to ethyl alcohol, the usual product of anaerobic dissimilation of glucose by heterofermentative lactic acid bacteria. Comparative studies with known strains of homo- and heterofermentative lactobacilli showed similar effects of aeration only on the heterofermentative strains, lending additional support to the tentative grouping by previous workers from this laboratory of the sourdough bacteria with the heterofermentative lactobacilli.
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PMID:Factors affecting organic acid production by sourdough (San Francisco) bacteria. 504 65

The role of opiate receptors in the metabolic response to an intravenous glucose load was determined in eight non-diabetic subjects (four of whom showed a positive chlorpropamide alcohol flush response and four who did not). Subjects were studied in a double blind randomised fashion receiving either a saline control or the specific opiate receptor antagonist, naloxone (0.4 mg/min), as an infusion for 5 minutes before and 20 minutes after an intravenous bolus of glucose (0.5 g/kg body weight). Naloxone decreased the early plasma glucose peak in all subjects by increasing the distribution volume but did not alter the fractional glucose clearance. Insulin and glucagon responses to glucose were not altered by naloxone. Naloxone delayed the normal post-glucose rise in the levels of the gluconeogenic precursors alanine, lactate, pyruvate and glycerol suggesting a delay in the usual inhibition in gluconeogenesis following a glucose load. There was no difference in the metabolic response between those subjects who were liable to chlorpropamide alcohol flushing and those who were not either with or without naloxone. We conclude that opiate receptors may influence distribution volume and gluconeogenesis but do not play a major role in either insulin or glucagon secretion or in glucose disposal following an intravenous glucose load.
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PMID:Opiate receptors and the metabolic response to intravenous glucose. 629 13

Experiments were conducted using rabbit kidneys stored on ice for 48 hr to elucidate the mode of action of "intracellular" flush solutions. Measurements were made of renal function on a shunt and they were correlated with blood flow and the efficiency of the mechanical expulsion of red cells. By comparison with unflushed, ice-stored kidneys, near complete mechanical expulsion of blood by 30 to 60 min of continuous perfusion with hypertonic Ringer's albumin resulted in significantly higher blood flow with little gain in function. Similarly, increasing the content of nonelectrolyte in Ringer's albumin improved blood flow but not function. A simple flush with a low ionic strength sodium solution (LIE), containing impermeant anions and glucose was superior to that with Ringer's albumin. A high-potassium version of the low ionic strength solution (LIC) was in turn significantly better than LIE for kidney preservation by simple flushing and ice storage. These results were interpreted to mean that whereas mechanical flushing is a relatively minor component of the action of flush solutions, the major benefit results from a reduced sodium and elevated potassium content in the presence of impermeant anions. The primary importance of prevention of cell swelling by the inclusion of nonelectrolytes in "extracellular" flush solutions, is questioned.
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PMID:Experimental observations on the mode of action of "intracellular" flush solution. 636 86

Human pancreatic GRF (hpGRF-40; 1 microgram/kg, iv) selectively stimulates GH release in normal men (9). We now report the effects of graded doses of hpGRF-40 on GH release in 12 normal men. Mean peak increments in serum GH after vehicle and the various doses of hpGRF-40 were 1.13, 11.40, 14.60, 17.01, 14.45, and 15.60 ng/ml after vehicle and 0.1, 0.33, 1.0, 3.3, and 10 micrograms/kg hpGRF-40 (iv bolus), respectively. Peak values were observed 30-60 min after hpGRF-40 treatment. There was considerable variability of responsiveness among individual subjects, and no dose-response relationship between the doses and maximal GH values was found. However, the higher doses of 3.3 and 10.0 micrograms/kg resulted in a more prolonged and biphasic pattern of GH release. A side effect of facial flushing of less than 5-min duration occurred in 4 or 6 subjects who received 3.3 micrograms/kg and in all 5 who received 10 micrograms/kg of hpGRF-40. No changes in serum glucose, LH, TSH, PRL, plasma cortisol, or 8 enteropancreatic hormones occurred after hpGRF-40 treatment. There were small increases in serum somatomedin C levels 24 h after the administration of various doses of hpGRF-40 in 11 of 13 studies. Plasma immunoreactive GRF levels measured 5 min after injection were 0.09, 2.0, 4.9, 23.9, and 66.6 ng/ml after 0.1, 0.33, 1.0, 3.3, and 10 micrograms/kg hpGRF-40, respectively. Serum GH responses after insulin-induced hypoglycemia were compared to GH responses after hpGRF-40. Comparable peak GH stimulation occurred with both provocative tests. Mean +/- SEM peak GH was 20.2 +/- 1.0 ng/ml after insulin and 20.9 +/- 3.2 after hpGRF-40 treatment. hpGRF-40 selectively stimulates GH release in normal men over a dose range of 0.1-10 micrograms/kg and is an effective probe to investigate the dynamics of GH release.
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PMID:Human pancreatic tumor growth hormone-releasing factor: dose-response relationships in normal man. 642 60

Spermatozoa were recovered from the isthmus of the rabbit oviduct at 4 and 11 h post coitum using several defined flushing media. The motility of spermatozoa in the isthmic flushings was subsequently analysed from video recordings. There was little sperm movement in the native isthmic fluid, but vigorous flagellar activity and hyperactivated movement were induced by flushing the isthmus with 0.25 M-sucrose, apparently an effect of dilution. Flushing with a complex culture medium resulted in similar stimulation of sperm movement. When pyruvate was present in the medium, hyperactivated flagellar bending was stimulated, whereas these movements were virtually absent when glucose alone was present. The stimulating effect of dilution was less pronounced when the flushing medium contained 50 mM-potassium. When the isthmus was flushed with media containing 50 mM-K+ and the K+ concentration was lowered to 5 mM during a washing procedure, large-amplitude flagellar movements were sequentially suppressed and restored. The restoration of large-amplitude movements was enhanced when pyruvate was present in the 5 mM-K+ washing medium. These results suggest that alterations in the concentration of both K+ and pyruvate may have a role in regulating the motility of rabbit spermatozoa in the oviducal isthmus, K+ being inhibitory and pyruvate stimulatory.
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PMID:A possible role for potassium and pyruvate in the modulation of sperm motility in the rabbit oviducal isthmus. 654 Mar 6

Bezalip (bezafibrate), at an oral dosage of 200 mg three times a day, has been used on 12 patients with idiopathic hyperlipidemia, and on 12 patients with hyperlipidemia superimposed with diabetes mellitus. Each patient received bezafibrate for 3 months and placebo for 3 months. Blood glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1) and fasting plasma glucose (FPG) were used as indices of diabetic control. Serum triglyceride (TG), total cholesterol (TC), high density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C), and TC/HDL-C ratio were measured and calculated in order to compare the antilipemic effects of bezafibrate with that of placebo. Non-parametric Wilcoxon test was used for statistical analysis. In both the idiopathic group and diabetic group, bezafibrate significantly lowered the serum levels of TG and TC/HDL-C, as well as elevated the level of HDL-C. The serum TC levels were not significantly altered in either of the groups. These effects could not be ascribed to an improved diabetic control, since the percent changes of HbA1 were not different between the bezafibrate periods and the placebo periods. There were no significant facial flushing, nor other side effects during the treatment with bezafibrate. It is concluded that bezafibrate has antilipemic effects, and may be helpful in reducing the atherogenic risks.
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PMID:A therapeutic trial of bezafibrate on patients with hyperlipidemia with or without diabetes mellitus. 657 90

We examined the role of endogenous opiates and/or prostaglandins on the abnormal insulin secretion characteristic of some non-insulin-dependent diabetic subjects. A group of chlorpropamide-alcohol flush positive (CPAF+) and a group of flush negative (CPAF-) non-insulin-dependent subjects were compared as to their pancreatic beta-cell responses to intravenous glucose tolerance tests before and after sodium salicylate infusion, and before and after naloxone infusion. There was no difference in mean insulin secretion (either first or second phase) between CPAF+ versus CPAF- groups. Both groups increased their insulin secretion with salicylate infusion, and both had a small decrease with naloxone infusion. There was no correlation between chlorpropamide-alcohol flushing and beta-cell response to glucose.
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PMID:Insulin responses to glucose in non-insulin-dependent diabetic subjects with and without the chlorpropamide-alcohol flush: effect of salicylate and naloxone. 675 79


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