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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The amounts of feed required during each of the reproductive phases are graphically illustrated and supported by specific recommendations where possible with discussion of the underlying rationale and of the often conflicting considerations. For
flushing
, an increase of 50 to 100% of energy requirements above maintenance level is recommended, supplied, for example, by one to two kg maize extra per day during the week before expected oestrus, in order to increase the ovulation rate. During pregnancy a constant feeding level is proposed 2.2 to 2.5 kg of feed with 8.8 MJ of nett energy/kg and 12% digestible crude protein being necessary. Two days before farrowing the feeding level must be lowered and steps taken to keep the
gut
contents to a minimum. During lactation the feed has to contain 8.8 MJ nett energy/kg and 14% digestible crude protein and the intake reduced by 10 to 20% in the case of early weaning. At weaning a fasting regime is suggested to effect physiological stress. The relation between feeding level during pregnancy and the mass gain of the sow asnd number of piglets born, as well as on the birth mass of the piglets, and the relation between N intake and N retention and litter mass oat birth are shown graphically.
...
PMID:Some aspects of feeding of brood gilts and sows. 55 Nov 91
The mast cell, equipped with enzymes, chemotactic factors, a vasoactive amine, an anticoagulant, and lipid-derived proinflammatory products, may be essential in tissue modeling as well as in defense. Its primarily perivascular location in skin and the mucosa of the respiratory tract and the
gut
assures its availability to counter parasites. By the same token, the mast cell is responsible for interactions with inhaled, ingested, and injected antigens that comprise IgE-mediated allergic reactions. Abnormally high numbers of mast cells in the skin, either localized or generalized, result in urticaria pigmentosa or generalized cutaneous mastocytosis, respectively. Tissue infiltration by excessive mast cells, primarily in
gut
, bone, liver, and spleen, results in systemic mastocytosis; this may be accompanied by myelodysplasia or lymphoma and may eventuate in mast cell leukemia. Until the etiology of mastocytosis is understood, the treatment is symptomatic: histamine antagonism by H1 +/- H2 blockade for
flushing
, itching, and gastric distress; cyclooxygenase inhibition to prevent prostaglandin D2 (PGD2)-induced hypotension when indicated; and oral cromolyn to prevent gastrointestinal symptoms and bone pain.
...
PMID:Mast cell disease. 149 Jun 22
Human ethanol consumption has a profound impact on nutritional status, causing major alterations in intermediary metabolism and critical deficiencies of vitamins and trace elements. The major enzyme systems responsible for the principal steps in ethanol metabolism have been characterized and the genes cloned, and significant functional polymorphisms have been identified. An inactive allele of the mitochondrial ALDH is associated with
flushing
and reduced alcohol intake. This allele may also confer greater sensitivity to some of ethanol's toxic effects. In populations not possessing this variant, twin and adoptive studies have revealed that heritability for alcoholism is greater than 50%. The occurrence of three functional polymorphisms in the ethanol metabolic pathway, including two mutations which are conserved across populations, suggests a role for selection in their maintenance. The two general categories of selective forces to maintain these polymorphisms are food toxins and infectious diseases. Of the infectious agents, amoebi and other anaerobic and microaerophilic organisms of the
gut
are the most logical candidates.
...
PMID:Genetic epidemiology of ethanol metabolic enzymes: a role for selection. 219 94
We compared the clinical and biochemical profiles of 11 patients with idiopathic
flushing
(IF) with those of eight patients with carcinoid syndrome (CS). Patients with IF were more often women, had a longer duration of symptoms, and were younger. Palpitations, syncope, and hypotension occurred only in patients with IF, while wheezing and abdominal pain occurred only with CS; diarrhea occurred in both types of patients. Elevated blood serotonin levels were present primarily in CS. Increased levels of urine 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid was specific for CS but unsufficiently sensitive to detect all cases. Abnormalities of
gut
and vasoactive peptides failed to distinguish the two conditions.
Flushing
in carcinoid patients responds uniformly to octreotide (Sandostatin), but only one third of the patients with IF are relieved of the symptom. Patients with IF have features that distinguish them from individuals with
flushing
from other causes, such as CS, postmenopausal state, chlorpropamide-alcohol flush, panic attacks, medullary thyroid carcinoma, and autonomic epilepsy. Familiarity with the clinical and biochemical features of IF should facilitate evaluation and identification of these patients.
...
PMID:Distinguishing features of idiopathic flushing and carcinoid syndrome. 246 88
The levels of 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin, 5-HT) and substance P (SP) were assayed (using high performance liquid chromatography-electron capture and radioimmunoassay methods) in the peripheral blood of 17 patients with known mid-
gut
carcinoids, 16 of whom had hepatic metastases. All patients had supranormal basal levels of 5-HT and SP. The clinical and hormonal changes induced by two provocation tests, intravenous pentagastrin (PG) and calcium infusion, were compared. Pentagastrin caused
flushing
in all the patients, induced gastrointestinal symptoms in all but one of the patients with hepatic involvement, and universally elevated circulating 5-HT levels. Pretreatment with a 5-HT2-receptor blocking agent, ketanserin, abolished the gastrointestinal effects but had virtually no influence on either 5-HT levels or
flushing
induced by intravenous pentagastrin. In contrast, calcium infusion induced carcinoid symptoms in only two of six patients, and this was consistently associated with stimulation of circulating serotonin levels. The authors conclude that 1) 5-HT may be responsible for the gastrointestinal symptoms in carcinoid patients, but it does not seem to play any role in
flushing
; 2) ketanserin may be a useful therapeutic agent in alleviating gastrointestinal symptoms in carcinoid patients; 3) differential responses to PG suggests that SP is released from a site different from that of 5-HT; 4) it is possible that SP may contribute to the mediation of
flushing
, but it cannot be the sole agent causing this symptom; and 5) the pentagastrin test with measurements of 5-HT levels in peripheral blood seems to be superior to calcium infusion as a provocative test in documenting the diagnosis of carcinoid disease.
...
PMID:The pentagastrin test in the diagnosis of the carcinoid syndrome. Blockade of gastrointestinal symptoms by ketanserin. 257 77
Polyethylene glycol-electrolyte lavage solution (PEG-ELS) is a whole
gut
lavage solution designed to cleanse the gastrointestinal tract prior to bowel surgery or endoscopy. This method relies on pediatric nurses safely administering a large volume of PEG-ELS, marketed as Golytely, to produce the
flushing
effect without significant absorption of the Golytely.
...
PMID:Preop use of Golytely in pediatrics. 258 5
Carcinoid tumors are the most frequent
gut
neuroendocrine tumors accounting for more than 50% of all tumors of the gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) axis. These tumors appear to derive from a stem cell line capable of differentiating into a variety of malignant cells that secrete many different peptides and amines. The symptoms of carcinoid tumors are often non-specific, vague abdominal pain that may precede the diagnosis by a median of 9 years. Carcinoid syndrome occurs in less than 10% of patients. We evaluated the effects of SMS 201-995 in 14 such patients, 12 with diarrhea, 8 with
flushing
, 3 with wheezing, one with tricuspid valve incompetence, 6 with facial telangiectasia, 3 with a pellagra type dermatosis and one with myopathy. Diarrhea was abolished or significantly reduced in 83%,
flushing
in 100%, wheezing in 100%, and myopathy improved in the one patient. Blood serotonin was resistant to change, urine 5HIAA fell in 75%, and most
gut
neuropeptide hormones apart from somatostatin were suppressed. Tumor growth appeared to be slowed in 2/3 of cases treated for up to 4 years. The analog of somatostatin appears to be a useful addition to the therapeutic armamentarium for carcinoid tumors and the symptom complex.
...
PMID:Use of somatostatin analog in management of carcinoid syndrome. 292 Jun 54
The exact etiology of carcinoid
flushing
remains unknown, but the symptoms are probably mediated through release of one or several humoral substances.
Flushing
seen in fore-
gut
carcinoids (gastric carcinoids) has been ascribed to excessive histamine release, whereas
flushing
seen in mid-
gut
carcinoids (ileal carcinoids) tentatively has been ascribed to excessive release of serotonin, bradykinin, substance P, substance K or eledoisin. In this study plasma histamine was measured in 8 patients with mid-
gut
carcinoids and carcinoid syndrome using an enzymatic isotopic method in order to evaluate histamine as the vasoactive agent in patients with ileal carcinoid tumours and carcinoid syndrome. All patients had raised plasma histamine values. In patients with mid-
gut
carcinoids histamine may be one of the substances mediating
flushing
.
...
PMID:Histamine in carcinoid syndrome. 318 38
During a control infusion noradrenaline and alcohol each provoked carcinoid
flushing
in four of five patients and pentagastrin in two of five patients. When tetradecapeptide somatostatin was infused on another day no patient flushed at any time, even when 16 microgram of either noradrenaline or pentagastrin were administered. Carcinoid
flushing
was not associated with release of gastrin or any of the other vasoactive or postprandially released
gut
regulatory peptides measured. In a sixth patient with severe prolonged carcinoid
flushing
, subcutaneous Des AA1, 2, 4, 5, 12D Trp8 somatostatin markedly reduced the incidence and severity of
flushing
for two days. Somatostatin is thus a potent inhibitor of carcinoid
flushing
, but no evidence has been found for the
gut
hormones measured to be mediators of
flushing
.
...
PMID:Somatostatin, gastrointestinal peptides, and the carcinoid syndrome. 611 1
Nine patients with mid-
gut
carcinoid tumours received leucocyte interferon (IFN) i.m. daily for 90 days. Six patients clearly ameliorated in symptoms typical of the carcinoid syndrome (
flushing
, diarrhoea, asthma) which correlated with reduced serum levels of tumour related polypeptides and urinary output of 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA). Before IFN treatment, peripheral blood mononuclear leucocytes (PBLs) from carcinoid patients showed markedly deficient production of pH 2 labile IFN-alpha in response to Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I (SACoI) in vitro. In contrast, IFN-alpha responses to the inducers Sendai virus and beta-haemolytic streptococcus group G and IFN-gamma responses to Lens culinaris lectin and concanavalin A were normal. Also, basal and in vitro IFN enhanced natural killer (NK) cell activity and T cell mitogen-induced cell proliferation were similar in patients and controls. During 90 days of IFN therapy, SACoI-induced IFN responses became entirely undetectable. There were transient declines at 1 and 30 days in IFN responses to the other IFN inducers, of mitogen-induced lymphocyte proliferation and of basal NK activities. The increments of NK cell activities after in vitro IFN exposure were clearly decreased in IFN treated patients, suggesting in vivo activation of these cells. Thus, the results demonstrate one remarkable abnormality in carcinoid patients: a deficient IFN response to SACoI and a clear influence of IFN therapy on several parameters of the IFN-NK system.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the natural killer cell-interferon system in patients with mid-gut carcinoid tumours treated with leucocyte interferon. 661 63
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