Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cancer cachexia is frequently accompanied by hyperlipidemia. To identify the mechanisms underlying this alteration in lipid metabolism, free fatty acid (FFA) and very low density lipoprotein-associated triacylglycerol (VLDL-TG) kinetics were determined in tumor-bearing (subcutaneously implanted methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma) Fischer 344 rats. The animals were studied after chronic vascular catheterization, in an unanesthetized, undisturbed state, after 24 hr of fasting. They were separated into three groups: control (n = 5), tumor-bearing (n = 5, tumor burden = 10% body weight), and 7 days after tumor excision (n = 5). VLDL-TG and FFA kinetics were assessed by a constant infusion of [3H]palmitate-labeled VLDL-TG and [14C]palmitate bound to albumin, respectively. FFA rate of appearance (FFA-Ra) and clearance (FFA-Cl) and VLDL-TG rate of appearance (VLDL-TG-Ra) and clearance (VLDL-TG-Cl) were determined at steady state. We observed that the tumor-bearing rats had significantly increased FFA-Ra and VLDL-TG-Ra, decreased VLDL-CL, and maintained FFA-Cl, when compared to control. These alterations returned to normal levels after tumor excision. The results suggest that the hyperlipidemia observed in tumor-bearing rats is due to elevated lipolysis rate, maintained rate of plasma FFA clearance, increased triacylglycerol production and VLDL secretion by the liver, and decreased VLDL-TG clearance from plasma. These alterations were reversed 7 days following tumor excision.
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PMID:Lipid kinetic alterations in tumor-bearing rats: reversal by tumor excision. 233 18

Hyperlipidemia occurs in animals bearing tumors but the mechanism of its development is uncertain. We have measured triacylglycerol clearance and production rate in rats bearing a transplantable sarcoma. The plasma content of very-low-density lipoprotein triacylglycerol was increased in these tumor-bearing rats but our data excluded a primary clearance defect because the rate of triacylglycerol accumulation (mg/min) after Triton injection was equal to or greater than in normal control rats, except in cachectic rats with very large tumors. The fractional clearance of injected radioactive triacylglycerols was less in tumor-bearing rats than in controls, but the turnover (mg/min) was probably not decreased in the tumor-bearing rats because of their expanded plasma pool. Also inconsistent with a decreased turnover was our finding of a greater production of radioactive plasma triacylglycerols after injection of a tracer dose of radioactive free fatty acid, and unchanged production in Triton-treated rats. Therefore, in the fasted state, the hyperlipidemia of the tumor-bearing rats was associated with an unchanged or possibly an increased flux of hepatic triacylglycerols and a primary clearance defect was excluded. After fat-feeding, rats with tumors developed a higher post-prandial hyperlipidemia than control rats. Therefore, the clearance mechanism for the plasma triacylglycerols was close to saturation in the fasted state, and the added influx of exogenous triacylglycerols was removed less efficiently in the tumor-bearing rats.
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PMID:Hyperlipidemia in tumor-bearing rats. 647 46

Male Fischer 344 rats implanted with a methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma (MCS), along with normal (or control) animals, were fed diets containing either 10% com oil (CO) or 2% CO + 8% fish oil (FO), designated as diets CO and FO, respectively, in a study designed to determine the effect of dietary FO on serum lipids (in the presence or absence of a tumor) and the growth and fatty acid composition of the MCS. For both diets, MCS-bearing rats had significantly (p < 0.05) higher serum levels of triglycerides, cholesterol, phospholipids, and total lipids than controls. For both controls and tumor-bearers, serum levels of all these lipids were, with the exception of cholesterol for the tumorbearers, significantly lower in rats receiving the FO diet than for the corresponding groups receiving the CO diet. Relative to rats fed the CO diet, those fed the FO diet had significantly higher serum levels of some fatty acids (e.g., 20:5n-3) but significantly lower levels of others (e.g., 18:2n-6), regardless of tumor status. For the tumor-bearers, differences in the levels of fatty acids in MCS tissue reflected differences in the fatty acid composition of total serum lipids. Sarcoma growth was unaffected by diet. Thus, feeding dietary FO resulted in changes in the lipid status of both control and tumor-bearing rats. Since sarcoma growth was unaffected by diet, the reduction in the severity of MCS-induced hyperlipidemia by FO appears to be due to an effect of the oil per se.
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PMID:Effect of dietary fish oil on tumor-induced hyperlipidemia and tumor growth in rats implanted with a methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma. 1020 75

Milwaukee Shoulder Syndrome (MSS) is a painful progressive arthropathy in which hydroxyapatite crystal deposition in synovial tissue induces lysosomal release of collagenase and neutral proteases. These enzymes are destructive to periarticular tissue, including the synovium, articular cartilage, rotator cuff muscles, and the intrasynovial cortical bone. MSS predominantly occurring in women (90%) over the age of 70 years of age with a clinical history marked by recurrent joint effusions and pain, which classically worsens at night. Our patient is a 69-year-old woman who presented with progressive shoulder pain, most prominent at night, with limited range of motion and swelling; intermittent discharge; and intermittent neck pain that radiated to her right upper extremity. Her medical history was notable for invasive carcinoma of the right breast treated with mastectomy and radiation. She was also treated with radiation therapy for right shoulder pain and a lucent right shoulder lesion presumed to be metastatic breast cancer. The remainder of her medical history consists of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, and uneventful bilateral total knee arthroplasties. At presentation, she denied constitutional symptoms. Based on the patient's history and physical exam the differential diagnosis included primary and metastatic malignancy, radiation induced sarcoma and necrosis, infection, Charcot disease, and crystal arthropathies. Physical exam, laboratory findings, and imaging studies led us to the diagnosis of MSS.
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PMID:Shoulder Lesion in a 69 Year Old Woman. 2977 93