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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum lipids were studied in iron-deficient and control rats during suckling and after weaning at 21, 30, and 60 days of age. Diets providing 5 or 307 ppm iron were fed to dams and their offspring during gestation, lactation, and after weaning. Rats on the deficient diet throughout the experimental period developed a hyperlipidemia characterized by elevated triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipids which was present at 21, 30, and 60 days. Control pups weaned to the deficient diet developed anemia at 30 days of age and hypertriglyceridemia at 60 days of age. Repletion of deficient rats with iron after weaning caused a rapid decline in serum lipid levels after only 9 days on the control diet. The hyperlipidemia of iron deficiency thus appears to be reversible with iron supplementation. The time required to develop hypertriglyceridemia in iron deficiency is longer postweaning than during suckling.
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PMID:Serum lipids in suckling and post-weanling iron-deficient rats. 51 75

Three levels of iron (5, 29, 307 ppm iron) were fed to rats from conception through the 18th day of lactation. Dams in the 5 ppm iron group and pups in the 5 and 29 ppm iron groups developed anemia characterized by lower hemoglobin and hematocrit values than control animals. Liver and spleen levels of iron in dams and pups in the 5 and 29 ppm iron groups were lower than in the 307 ppm iron groups. Milk iron was lower in the 5 ppm iron group than in the 29 and 307 ppm iron groups. Pups in the 5 ppm iron group had hyperlipidemia characterized by elevated serum triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipids. Milk lipids and post-heparin plasma lipoprotein lipase levels in pups did not differ among experimental groups. Triglyceride and CO2 production from [U-14C]glucose were significantly greater in the iron-deficient pups than in control pups. Hyperlipidemia in 18-day-old iron-deficient rat pups appears to be related to increased endogenous production of triglycerides.
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PMID:Iron deficiency hyperlipidemia in 18-day-old rat pups: effects of milk lipids, lipoprotein lipase, and triglyceride synthesis. 61 36

Many alterations in metabolic and endocrine function occur in end-stage renal disease. Glucose intolerance is almost always present with uremia; it improves shortly after institution of regular hemodialysis. Hyperlipidemia (type IV) is prevalent, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease causes death in about 50% of patients receiving long-term hemodialysis. Although plasma levels of growth hormone usually are elevated, children with chronic renal failure show growth retardation. The occurrence of thyroid disorders is difficult to determine, since many clinical features of uremia are similar to those of hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism. The incidence of duodenal ulcer is high, possibly due to high gastrin levels. Sex hormone disturbances are common. Anemia is a constant feature of chronic renal failure; patients usually tolerate it well.
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PMID:Metabolic and endocrine alterations in end-stage renal failure. 71 39

A brief survey of the literature on the side effects of oral contraceptives is given. Of the many influences on laboratory results those related to (reversible) cholestasis or to a change in protein synthesis are the most important ones. A decrease of the tolerance for glucose is sometimes observed. Few of the clinical side effects attributed to oral contraceptives can be directly correlated with the pharmaceutical action of these drugs. Many so-called side effects of the pill are due to other factors such as altered psychosociological or sexual behavior, etc. However, among users of oral contraceptives there is a significant decrease in the number of benign tumors, particularly of the breast, the uterus and the ovaries. It is still an open question if this also signifies protection against cancer. Anemias due to iron deficiency are less frequent among users of the pill. According to recent studies arterial hypertension and cholecystopathies are probably directly related to oral contraceptives, but a causal relation has not been proven for migraine, headaches, depression etc. An elevated risk for vascular complications seems to be well established: there is a 4-6-fold increase of the estimated risk for venous thrombo-embolism and a 4-9-fold increase for cerebrovascular accidents among users of oral contraceptives when compared with nonpregnant women of the same age not using the pill. Oral contraceptives act as a supplementary factor of risk which may cumulate with other similar factors, such as arterial hypertension, hyperlipidemia, overweight, smoking etc. Mortality due to oral contraceptives is very much 10-50 x) inferior to the one caused by delivery and the post partum state. Since the number of failures in prevention of pregnancies is less for oral contraceptives than for any other method of contraception, the overall risk of death under oral contraceptives in this age group of women is least.
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PMID:[Real and seeming side-effects of oral contraceptives with an emphasis on medical and haematological problems. Review of literature (author's transl)]. 79 Mar 74

Hyperlipaemia persisted for more than 12 months in rats treated with cobalt chloride, 9 of 20 treated rats and 1 control rat died within the first year, and 8 of the surviving animals developed fibrosarcomas--in 4 of these the tumour was far removed from the injection sites. The results are discussed with reference to the use of cobalt chloride treatment for anaemia in patients with chronic renal failure.
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PMID:Fibrosarcomas induced by cobalt chloride (CoCl2) in rats. 83 22

Rats fed a diet containing a high percentage of butter, cholesterol, cholic acid and proply thiouracil (HFD) showed weight loss and developed hyperlipidemia, marked fatty infiltration of the liver, moderate elevation of SGPT, degenerative changes of the heart muscle, bradycardia, alterations of the QRS complex in the electrocardiogram, and initial hemoconcentration followed by moderate anemia. Treatment with adriamycin (18 X 1 mg/kg i.p.) resulted in significant augmentation of the cardiotoxic effects of this drug demonstrated by electrocardiographic measurements and myocardial histopathology. Adriamycin-induced atrophy of the lymphatic tissue was seen only in rats fed HFD and not in animals receiving ground chow. Adriamycin levels in the heart after single i.p. injection were higher in rats receiving HFD. This effect was present already after 10 days on HFD. At this time histopathological liver changes were present and SGPT was elevated. It is concluded that the increase in adriamycin toxicity is, at least in part, due to diminished excretion by the liver. These experimental findings are in accordance with clinical observations which have identified liver disease as one of the important risk factors for the development of adriamycin cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Modification of adriamycin toxicity in rats fed a high fat diet. 86 Jun 72

Ethylism represents at the present time one of the most frequent etiological factors of primitive osteonecrosis of the femoral head. In relation to a case of osteonecrosis of the femoral head associated with multiple bone infarcts in a chronic alcoholic, also presenting recurring jaundice, alcohol-sensitive hyperlipidaemia, and moderate anaemia, the authors review the role of fatty embolisms in the formation of primitive osteonecrosis of the femoral head. These fatty embolisms may be the result of alcohol-induced hyperlipidaemia, possibly an associated pancreatic disorders, or in particular of hepatic steatosis. A systematic histological study of 10 recent unselected cases of primitive osteonecrosis of the femoral head confirmed the extreme frequency of such embolisms (8 cases out of 10).
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PMID:[Osteonecrosis, alcoholism and liver steatosis]. 112 80

The macroscopic and microscopic findings of a case of Zieve's syndrome are described (fatty liver, icterus, hyperlipemia and hemolytic anemia in chronic alcoholism). The outstanding macroscopic finding is milky turbidity of the blood in arterial and venous vascular channels as well as hepatomegaly and anaemia of internal organs. A prominent feature of the histological picture is the high-grade lipaemia of the large and small vessels (arteries and veins), capillary occlusions resembling fat embolism in all organs and severe diffuse fatty metamorphosis of the liver. Circulatory disorders and the cause of death are discussed.
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PMID:[Morphological findings in Zieve's syndrome (author's transl)]. 121 21

In veterinary medicine, PCV determined by centrifugation of blood in a microhematocrit tube is the most common clinical test used to initially assess and monitor anemic and polycythemic animals. In contrast, blood hemoglobin (Hb) concentration, rather than PCV, is generally determined in human patients. One automated system photometrically measures blood Hb concentration after conversion of Hb to azide methemoglobin without dilution and was found to be a simple and accurate instrument for use in human medicine. We evaluated the system for its accuracy in measuring blood Hb concentration in animals by comparing it with standard techniques and for its suitability in veterinary practice. Blood samples, anticoagulated with potassium EDTA, from 78 healthy animals (33 dogs, 17 cats, 13 horses, and 15 cows) and 58 dogs and 4 cats with various blood abnormalities (10 anemia, 11 polycythemia, 21 lipemia, 16 leukocytosis, and 6 icterus) were analyzed. In all species, blood Hb concentration of healthy animals determined by the system was comparable to that measured by standard cyanmethemoglobin methods (ie, an automated counter; rI = 0.987 to 0.998 and a hemoglobin kit, rI = 0.946 to 0.993). The aforementioned system also yielded similar values to those obtained by use of standard methods in anemic, polycythemic, and icteric dogs and cats. Moreover, the system reads the absorbance at 2 wavelengths to correct for turbidity, and therefore, accurately measured Hb concentration in blood samples with severe lipemia (triglycerides concentration > 500 mg/dl) and marked leukocytosis (> 50,000 WBC/microliter), whereas other standard Hb techniques are known to give falsely high results.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Evaluation of an automated system for hemoglobin measurement in animals. 145 15

The "essential laboratory tests" were applied to 1,026 new patients visiting the outpatient unit of Comprehensive Medicine, National Defense Medical College, to determine the usefulness of these tests in primary care medicine. The "essential laboratory tests" have contributed to the establishment of the initial diagnosis or confirmation of the "tentative initial diagnosis", and to the estimation of the nature or degree of seriousness of the disease. In addition, other diseases not related to the patient's chief complaint could be screened in 32% of the new patients examined with these tests. The "essential laboratory tests" were also found to be useful for the estimation of the presence of malignant tumors in 12 patients with various kinds of malignancies as well as the estimation or evaluation for such conditions as infection or inflammation, anemia, liver or renal dysfunction, and the ambulatory screening of metabolic diseases including hyperlipidemia, liver or urinary tract diseases. In conclusion, simultaneous performance of the "essential laboratory tests" with the history taking and the physical examination will provide important medical information in primary care medicine.
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PMID:["Essential laboratory tests" in primary care medicine--experiences in Comprehensive Medicine, National Defense Medical College]. 150 73


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