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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The toxicities of free doxorubicin (F-DOX) and liposome-associated doxorubicin (L-DOX) were investigated in inbred BALB/c and outbred Sabra mice treated iv with 5, 7.5, and 10 mg doxorubicin (DOX)/kg body weight every 2 weeks up to 8 injections and observed for 6 months. Sonicated liposomes containing phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylglycerol, and cholesterol were used. The lethal effect was reduced in mice treated with L-DOX as compared to mice treated with F-DOX. At a dose of 7.5 mg DOX/kg, 100% of mice receiving the L-DOX survived a cumulative dose of 60 mg/kg administered over 98 days, while 92% of mice receiving the F-DOX died. Two distinct patterns of death were observed: an acute phase type occurring early after injection of high doses of DOX and apparently related to gastrointestinal toxicity and a delayed phase type requiring a long latency after initial drug exposure and characterized by a complex pattern of abnormalities. Delivery of DOX by liposomes effectively protected against both types of lethal effects. Reduced toxicity of L-DOX resulted in reduced body and organ weight losses, reduced severity of pathologic changes, and fewer blood biochemical alterations. The pathological damage to the heart muscle found in mice treated with L-DOX was less severe than with F-DOX, and in some cases it was reversible. Nephrotoxicity was extremely frequent and severe among F-DOX-treated mice, while it was totally insignificant among L-DOX-treated mice.
Hyperlipidemia
, hypoglycemia, and glycogen-depleted hepatocytes were characteristic findings in mice treated with F-DOX. Altogether, the data obtained in this study indicate that liposomes significantly diminish the toxicity of DOX with the use of an intermittent schedule of chemotherapy. In addition to changes in tissue distribution as a mechanism of reduced toxicity, it is proposed that DOX associated with liposomal lipids interacts less efficiently than the free drug with target intracellular phospholipids.
J Natl
Cancer
Inst 1986 Aug
PMID:Comparative long-term study of the toxicities of free and liposome-associated doxorubicin in mice after intravenous administration. 346 Dec 7
Clinicopathologic and histopathologic evidence of both endoperoxidation with hyperprostaglandinemia and
hyperlipidemia
in a 5-week-old infant with a hemophagocytic syndrome is reported. Institution of histiocytolytic (VP-16) and cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor (indomethacin) therapies returned the prostaglandin levels and lipid profile to a nearly normal state coincidental with clinical recovery. It appears that by reducing the cell mass of histiocytes and controlling the over-production of prostaglandins, some types of hemophagocytic syndrome can be reversed.
Cancer
1987 Nov 15
PMID:Endoperoxidation, hyperprostaglandinemia, and hyperlipidemia in a case of erythrophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. Reversal with VP-16 and indomethacin. 347 16
Total serum cholesterol, free and esterified cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, serum triglycerides and serum lipoproteins were measured in 103 consecutive
cancer
patients (60 men and 43 women; mean age, 56 years) and 100 age-matched noncancer inpatients.
Cancer
patients as a group demonstrated significantly lower total cholesterol, esterified cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, compared with noncancer patients. Breast cancer proved to be an exception associated with increased serum total cholesterol, free cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides. a-lipoproteins were constantly increased in
cancer
patients whereas no differences were found in the other lipoprotein fractions. Finally, the observed overall incidence of
hyperlipidemia
in
cancer
patients (23/103) was not significantly different from the controls (29/100).
Cancer
1987 Dec 15
PMID:Serum lipids and lipoprotein disorders in cancer patients. 367 28
A 61-year-old woman was treated with tamoxifen for breast cancer and had marked hyperlipoproteinemia: high plasma triglyceride levels (2790 mg/dl); increased very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) cholesterol levels (241 mg/dl); and high VLDL apoprotein B levels (126 mg/dl). Low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol was decreased (104 mg/dl) and LDL apoprotein B was at 107 mg/dl. A low activity of both postheparin plasma lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic triglyceride lipase (h-TGL) was also noted. All these observations were reversed following tamoxifen withdrawal. Plasma triglyceride levels fell to 361 mg/dl. VLDL cholesterol and VLDL apoprotein B decreased to 41 mg/dl (83%) and 21 mg/dl (83%), respectively. Meanwhile, LDL cholesterol rose to 194 mg/dl (86%) and LDL apoprotein B increased to 138 mg/dl (29%). LPL and h-TGL activities did increase following tamoxifen withdrawal. Our observations show that, in some patients, the previously described weak hypertriglyceridemic effect of tamoxifen is amplified. That observation supports the concept and helps to explain that, in such severe induced
lipemia
, reduction of the activities of LPL and h-TGL might impede the conversion of VLDL to LDL, thus causing an amplification of the effect.
Cancer
1986 Jun 01
PMID:Severe lipemia induced by tamoxifen. 369 11
Necrobiotic xanthogranuloma is a newly recognized cutaneous manifestation associated with paraproteinemia. Necrobiotic xanthogranuloma is distinctive clinically by yellowish-red nodular lesions, often ulcerated, with predilection for the periorbital area and ocular involvement. Histologically, it is characterized by the combination of inflammatory xanthogranulomas together with areas of necrobiosis. These skin lesions are associated with a dysglobulinemia and preceded the development of an IgG lambda myeloma in a previous patient.
Hyperlipidemia
may be found in some patients. A case of necrobiotic xanthogranuloma is reported, occurring in a 46-year-old man and associated with an IgG kappa myeloma.
Cancer
1987 Feb 01
PMID:Necrobiotic xanthogranuloma with myeloma. A case report. 379 Nov 68
The rate of tumor growth in vivo in adult rats (250- to 350-g total body weight) is stimulated during an acute fast. No tumor growth stimulation is observed in fasted immature rats (less than about 200-g total body weight). The different tumor growth responses in rats of these two age groups appear to depend on the increased availability to the tumor of nutrients from host fat stores in adult rats. Immature rats, which lack significant fat stores, show neither
hyperlipemia
nor ketosis during fasting. These experiments were performed to determine the relationship between blood fat store-derived nutrient concentrations and the onset of stimulated tumor growth in fasted adult rats. Animals were matched for tumor size and growth during a period of ad libitum feeding preceding the fast. Tumor growth was documented by increased size and incorporation of [methyl-3H]thymidine into tumor DNA. Mobilization of host fat stores leading to increased blood concentrations of free fatty acids, glycerol, ketone bodies, and triglycerides started about 7 h after food was removed and reached its maximum after about 15 h. Increased rates of tumor growth and incorporation of thymidine into tumor DNA correlated closely with the higher circulating nutrient concentrations. Both the nutrient concentrations and tumor growth were decreased by refeeding. These findings suggest that the availability of nutrients derived from host fat stores may be rate limiting for tumor growth in vivo.
Cancer
Res 1987 Feb 15
PMID:Blood nutrient concentrations and tumor growth in vivo in rats: relationships during the onset of an acute fast. 380 90
A 36-year-old woman had a 6-year history of recurrent panniculitis with development of an angiocentric and angiodestructive cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) of the helper cell phenotype. She subsequently developed a rapidly progressive fatal syndrome characterized by cytophagocytic histiocytosis and
hyperlipidaemia
. Cytophagocytic histiocytosis has previously been reported in association with panniculitis,
malignancy
and infection, but not with CTCL and the precise relationship between panniculitis, CTCL, cytophagocytic histiocytosis and
hyperlipidemia
is unclear.
...
PMID:Panniculitis associated with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and cytophagocytic histiocytosis. 387 26
No single pathophysiologic factor has been identified as the cause of recurrent acute pancreatitis. A systematic search should be undertaken in every patient to identify one of a myriad of factors that have been shown to play a part in causing this distressing illness. The abuse of alcohol remains the likeliest cause, and further research may reveal an inborn error of metabolism that jeopardizes some people. Biliary tract disease, gallstones, choledochal cyst, papillary stenosis, and duodenal diverticula show a clear relationship. Metabolic disorders such as hypercalcemia,
hyperlipidemia
, and hyperparathyroidism remain suspect. Systemic illnesses such as systemic lupus erythematosus and cystic fibrosis must be considered. Development anomalies such as pancreas divisum may precipitate acute pancreatitis through aberrant anatomic structures.
Cancer
must always be disproved. Not yet firmly established but worthy of thorough investigation are uncommon causes, such as the ingestion of certain drugs or combinations of drugs and trauma, either recent or past. Pancreatitis remains frightening for those with the disease and puzzling and frustrating for the medical people who treat it. A careful history and investigation in accordance with a systematic diagnostic plan that includes many disparate factors will lead to identification of the cause in the majority of patients.
...
PMID:Pathophysiologic factors in recurrent acute pancreatitis. 393 40
Alterations in plasma lipoprotein lipid and apoprotein accompanying the
hyperlipidemia
of rats bearing Morris hepatoma 7288C were characterized. In tumor-bearing animals all plasma lipid classes except cholesterol ester (CE) were elevated, particularly free cholesterol (FC) and triglyceride (TG), which increased by 57 and 63%, respectively. Fasting only partially reduced the tumor-induced
hyperlipidemia
and had no effect on the ratios of FC/CE and TG/CE. Analysis of plasma lipoproteins revealed an elevation of VLDL, IDL, and LDL in host rats, with more than a 2-fold increase in both lipid and protein of VLDL. In contrast, the three high density fractions, HDL2, HDL3, and d greater than 1.21 g/ml, were reduced. The inverse changes in concentration of host lipoproteins of lower versus higher density indicate a defective catabolism of TG-rich lipoprotein. This possibility is supported by the analysis of apolipoprotein. The percentage of total apoprotein contributed by apo C-I and C-II was reduced in all host fractions except HDL2, while the C-IIIs remained unchanged except for a small decrease in C-III-3 of host VLDL and a slight increase in the combined C-IIIs of HDL2. These changes were reflected in the decreased C-I+C-II/C-III ratios of all host lipoprotein fractions. Apo E levels remained similar to control values except for a significant decrease in HDL2. Host VLDL showed increased apo A-IV and A-I content, while A-IV was decreased in HDL2. Changes in apo B profiles were also observed.
Cancer
Res 1986 Apr
PMID:Characterization of alterations in plasma lipoprotein lipid and apoprotein profiles accompanying hepatoma-induced hyperlipidemia in rats. 394 72
The present status of oral contraceptive steroids and the IUD, the 2 most effective and increasingly popular contraceptive methods (used by 41.6% of all U.S. married couples practicing contraception in 1970), is presented. Oral steroid contraceptives with varying quantity and activity of estrogen (ethinyl estradiol or mestranol) and progestogen (norethindrone, norethynodrel, ethynodiol diacetate, or norgestrel), are of 3 types: combination, sequential, and minidose progestogen alone. The most effective contraceptive available is the combined oral pill with a pregnancy rate of less than .2 % per 100 women after 1 year. Contraceptive action is exerted primarily through inhibition of ovulation and secondarily by alterations in cervical mucus, endometrial glands, the ovary, and in the oviduct and uterine muscle. In comparison, sequential oral contraceptives are less effective with greater side effects, and should only be used in women with amenorrhea. Effects of oral contraceptives other than contraception include those on the (1) the primary targets of the female reproductive system, (2) on other endocrine oragans and (3) on the remainder of the body. In the first group, changes may include transitory stromal fibrosis in the ovary, enlarged fibromyomata, intermenstrual bleeding or amenorrhea, increased amount of cervical mucus, polypoid hyperplasia of the endocervical glands, breast tenderness, and changes in lactation. Changes in the second category which may occur affect the adrenal glands, hypothalamus, the thyroid (increased thyroid-binding globulin), and pancreas (alterations in glucose metabolism). Effects on the rest of the body may include increase in serum lipids and changed atherogenic index, abnormalities in liver function, thromboembolism (incidence in oral contraceptive users 4.4 times that in non-users), melasma, alterations in the central nervous system with increased incidence of cerebral vascular accidents, hypertension, and increased body weight. Absolute contraindications to oral contraceptive therapy include
cancer
of the breast and uterus, pregnancy, active liver disease,
hyperlipidemia
, and history of gestational diabetes, thromboembolic phenomena or coronary artery disease. Relative contraindications include depression, migraine, myomata of the uterus, hypertension, epilipsy, oligomenorrhea and amenorrhea. Reliable epidemiologic data on IUDs from the Cooperative Statistical Program indicated first year pregnancy rate of 2.5%. Problems with the IUD include: 1) pregnancy with device in situ, which is associated with a higher incidence of spontaneous abortion; 2) ectopic pregnancy, which is prevented at a rate of only 90% compared with intrauterine pregnancies prevented in 97-98%; and 3) expulsions (20% of which are unnoticed), the expulsion rate being higher with decreasing age and parity, higher in the first than second year of use, and higher with smaller than larger devices. A major problem is discontinuation for medical reasons (15% rate in the first year), mainly bleeding and pain. Perforation, another serious complication, occurs initially at time of insertion with an incidence of 1 per 2500 insertions for the loop. IUDs were found to produce a sterile inflammatory tissue reaction, which is postulated as the primary causative factor for their contraceptive effect in humans.
...
PMID:Current status of contraceptive steroids and the intrauterine device. 459 80
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