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

Male Japanese white rabbits were injected subcutaneously with methyl iodide (57 mg/kg body weight/day) on two successive days and their lipid metabolism was investigated 48 hr after the last injection. The plasma triglyceride levels increased from the preinjection average of 56.1 mg/dl to 246.0 mg/dl on an average, the individual values being greatly variable. Analysis of lipoprotein profile of plasma showed a significant increase of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL). Lipolytic activities in postheparin plasma did not change. However, rates of triglyceride secretion into plasma, measured by Triton WR 1339 injection method, were significantly higher in the animals treated with methyl iodide than in the controls. Histological investigation of the liver showed diffuse fat deposits in the hepatocytes without any destructive and inflammatory changes. The results indicate that hyperlipidemia and fatty liver of rabbits induced by methyl iodide is related to the elevation of triglyceride synthesis and its secretion in the liver.
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PMID:[Pathogenesis of hyperlipidemia and fatty liver of rabbits induced by methyl iodide. Increased synthesis and secretion of triglyceride in the liver]. 713 86

Effects of L-ascorbate 2-sulfate (AAS) on fatty liver and hyperlipidemia induced by various treatments were studied in rats and guinea pigs. L-Ascorbic acid (AA) (50 or 175 mg/kg), a reference compound, lowered the lipid levels in the serum and/or liver in guinea pigs, while AA had little effect in rats. On the other hand, AAS (300 mg/kg) was effective in both animals. In rats, AAS lowered cholesterol and triglycerides in the serum from ethionine-treated animals and in the liver from orotic acid-supplemented animals. In guinea pigs, this compound lowered cholesterol and triglycerides in the serum from ethionine-treated animals, lipids in the liver from cholesterol-supplemented animals, and lipids in the serum and liver from scorbutic animals. AA markedly increased the content of AA in the organs in all experiments, while AAS had a slight effect. Thus, it is suggested that AAS exerts its hypolipidemic and lipotropic effects by the specific actions of AAS.
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PMID:Effect of l-ascorbate 2-sulfate on fatty liver and hyperlipidemia induced by various treatments in rats and guinea pigs. 724 Dec 35

Administration of ethanol to healthy subjects as well as those with alcoholic fatty livers has been noted to cause mild elevation of serum enzyme activities and alcoholic hyperlipemia. To see whether this effect is also manifested in alcoholics with advanced liver damage, the serum enzyme activities and lipid content after administration of i.v. ethanol (1.2 g/kg of body wt) over 90 min were compared in 5 alcoholics with hepatic fibrosis and/or alcoholic fatty liver and in 9 patients with alcoholic hepatitis with or without cirrhosis. Disappearance rate of ethanol from the serum was nearly the same in both groups. Serum activities of asparate aminotransferase, mitochondrial isoenzyme of asparate aminotransferase, and ornithine carbamyl transferase, measured at 9 and 12 hr after termination of the i.v. ethanol, were significantly elevated in alcoholics with alcoholic hepatitis (P less than 0.05). They were not elevated in alcoholics with fatty liver. By contrast, hyperlipemic responses, measured as the serum content of triacylglycerol 3 hr after ethanol were significantly greater in alcoholics with fatty liver than in alcoholics with alcoholic hepatitis (P less than 0.05). The observed difference in responses of serum enzyme activities and lipid content after ethanol represents an enhanced susceptibility of patients with alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis towards alcohol-induced injury.
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PMID:Effect of an intravenous infusion of ethanol on serum enzymes and lipids in patients with alcoholic liver disease. 735 55

Using radio-labelled microspheres, the authors studied bone blood flows in various segments of goose femurs (femoral head, trochanter, condyles). Experiments were conducted on three groups of geese: control, fatty liver induced and corticosteroid-treated animals. The preliminary results suggest that hyperlipemia and fatty liver conditions do not seem to obviously disturb intra osseous blood circulation in fatty geese, although corticosteroids might affect bone blood flows in condyles.
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PMID:Regional femur blood flow measurements with radiolabelled microspheres in fatty liver-induced or corticosteroid treated animals: preliminary report. 742 75

Nonalcohol-induced fatty liver is widely believed to be a benign condition with little or no risk of disease progression. There have been occasional reports of progression to cirrhosis but none in the absence of preexisting fibrosis on the index biopsy specimen even when co-existing hepatitis was present (steatohepatitis). From our histological database (1978 to 1985), we identified 161 patients with fatty liver seen at our institution and traced the case notes of 156. One hundred five patients were initially excluded as having an alcohol-induced cause, and the remaining 51 either were seen in the clinic (37) or had died, in which cases copies of their death certificates were obtained (14). A further 7 patients were excluded after clinic attendance gave evidence of alcohol excess and another 4 after review of their initial biopsy showed the presence of fibrosis or steatohepatitis. The apparent cause of the steatosis in the 40 included patients with strictly nonalcohol-induced pure fatty liver was obesity in 12, diabetes in 4 (1 obese patient), and cachexia associated with extrahepatic malignancy in 6. Four of the remaining 19 had serological evidence of an autoimmune disorder, but none of these had any clinical or histological features of autoimmune liver disease. Nine patients had evidence of hyperlipidemia, 3 of whom were also obese. At a median follow-up of 11 years (7 to 16), 12 of 26 living patients had abnormal results of liver blood tests and had repeat liver biopsies performed. None had progressed to steatohepatitis or cirrhosis; 1 obese patient had developed mild fibrosis 9.8 years after her index biopsy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The natural history of nonalcoholic fatty liver: a follow-up study. 748 79

To evaluate the relation between the working conditions and the workers' health, particularly the prevalences of obesity, liver disorder and hyperlipidemia, we analyzed physiological examination data and the questionnaire survey about life behaviors and working conditions during the terms of car manufacturing work and car sales work among 61 male subjects. In the physiological examination data, compared with the term of car manufacturing work, the values of body weight, body mass index (BMI), GOT, GPT, gamma-GTP, TG and T-CHO elevated and the prevalences of obesity and liver disorder increased during the term of car sales work. During the term of car sales work, the prevalences of alcohol drinkers and cigarette smokers increased and the changes of food intake behaviors were noted. It was estimated that the changes of food intake behaviors associated with the differences of working conditions contributed increasing number of obesity and liver disorder that was based on fatty liver caused by hyperlipidemia. These results of this study suggested that working conditions associated with the prevalences of obesity, liver disorder and hyperlipidemia were important to conduct the effective health education in the present occupational health administration.
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PMID:[The study of the relation between the working conditions and the prevalences of obesity, liver disorder and hyperlipidemia: evaluation of physiological examination data during the terms of car manufacturing work and car sales work]. 778 Aug 61

A 35-years old female with Jordans' anomaly was reported. She had been treated for diabetes mellitus and hypertension at another hospital. She was admitted to our hospital for operation for diabetic retinopathy on July 9, 1992. Wright-Giemsa stained peripheral blood smear revealed multiple vacuoles in the cytoplasm of the granulocytes and monocytes. Histochemical studies of these vacuoles showed positive for Sudan III but negative for peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase and PAS staining. Electron microscopic examination revealed that lipid containing vacuoles had no clear membrane and were not associated with cell organelles. Laboratory findings of the serum showed hyperglycemia (FBS 188mg/dl), high HbA1c level (9.4%) and mild type IIa hyperlipidemia. Abdominal sonogram and abdominal CT showed no remarkable abnormalities except for mild fatty liver. Her elder sister and daughter had similar morphological findings in granulocytes, monocytes and lymphocytes.
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PMID:[A case of Jordans' anomaly]. 786 17

The effects of amino acid-fortified low casein and fish oil (FO) diets on hyperlipidemia and proteinuria were studied in rats with nephrotoxic serum nephritis. After an antiserum injection, rats were maintained for 14 d on four different experimental diets: a 20% casein diet containing corn oil (CO) or FO, or an 8% casein diet supplemented with cystine plus threonine containing CO or FO. The 8% casein diets reduced urinary protein excretion in nephritic rats without inducing severe growth retardation or fatty liver compared with the basal 20% casein diets. Both the 8% casein diet and the FO diet decreased serum cholesterol, triglyceride and phospholipid levels in nephritic rats, and nonesterified fatty acid levels were decreased by FO feeding. In nephritic animals, hepatic cholesterol synthesis was decreased by the 8% casein diets compared with the 20% casein diets, and tended to be reduced by FO feeding between groups at the same casein levels. No effect of diet was observed on fatty acid synthesis among the nephritic rats. FO administration to the nephritic animals suppressed fecal steroid excretion. While lipoprotein lipase activity was unchanged among the nephritic rats, hepatic triglyceride lipase activity was reduced by either the 8% casein or FO diet. The results suggest that the hypolipidemic action of low casein diets may, at least in part, be due to reduced hepatic cholesterol synthesis and suppressed triglyceride secretion from the liver. They also suggest that the hypolipidemic action of FO may, at least in part, be due to reduced hepatic cholesterol synthesis and decreased fatty acid mobilization from peripheral adipose tissue.
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PMID:Effects of low casein and fish oil on hyperlipidemia and proteinuria in nephritic rats. 786 59

Effect of a low-soy-protein-isolate (SPI) diet supplemented with methionine on hyperlipidemia, proteinuria, and hypoalbuminemia was studied in rats with nephrotoxic serum nephritis (NSN). Rats were fed experimental diets for 14 d after an injection of nephrotoxic serum. An 8.5%-SPI diet (8.5S), as compared with a basal 20%-SPI diet (20S), improved the hyperlipidemia, proteinura, and hypoalbuminemia secondary to NSN but retarded the growth of rats. The addition of 0.3% methionine to 8.5S (8.5SM) alleviated the growth retardation without loss of the above-mentioned beneficial effects. 8.5SM was found to suppress hepatic cholesterol synthesis compared with 20S. These results suggest that the methionine-supplemented low-SPI diet has a beneficial effect on hyperlipidemia, proteinuria, and hypoalbuminemia without inducing either growth retardation or severe fatty liver in nephritis. They also suggest that the hypocholesterolemic effect of 8.5SM in nephritic rats may be partly attributable to reduced hepatic cholesterol synthesis.
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PMID:Reduction of hyperlipidemia and proteinuria without growth retardation in nephritic rats by a methionine-supplemented, low-soy-protein diet. 787 27

Dieticians computed the fat and cholesterol contents of 11 foods that were commercially produced as ready-to-eat food from food component lists and obtained the P/S ratio (polysaturated/saturated fatty acids) from the fatty acid component list. Meanwhile the same foods were diluted and homogenized. The internal standard was combined with hepatadecanoic acid and tricaprin. The samples that had been extracted by the Folch method were analyzed for their lipid content (GC analysis using a HS-SS-10 columns for fatty acids and an OV-1 column for lipid and cholesterol). A significant positive correlation was noted between the results of dieticians' analysis and those obtained from a gas chromatographic analysis of lipid and cholesterol contents and the P/S ratio, proving that lipid analysis of food by dieticians is highly reliable. Therefore for diseases (such as hyperlipemia, arteriosclerosis, obesity, diabetes mellitus, fatty liver, and pancreatitis) in which dietary factors have a significant effect on their clinical course, dietary instructions on dietary fats based on an analysis by dieticians are considered to be effective.
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PMID:A study on the values computed by dieticians and chemical analysis of fats, cholesterol, and P/S ratio in food. 818 6


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