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

Studies are reported on the reaction kinetics of the glucose assay according to Trinder which involves the specific oxidation of glucose by glucose oxidase and the determination of the hydrogen peroxide released by means of phenol and 4-aminophenazone in the presence of peroxidase. The results have been used to develop a general kinetic fixed-time method for the analysis of glucose in whole blood and serum. The single reagent method has been adapted to the ENI GEMSAEC centrifugal analyzer and to the Abbott ABA-100 analyzer. The procedures exhibited excellent precision and the results correlated well with those obtained by the hexokinase method, Linearity was achieved from 3 to 64 mmol/1 glucose for the GEMSAEC method, and from 3 to 33 mmol/1 glucose for the ABA-100 method. Reagent or sample blank corrections were not necessary. There were no interferences from various drugs, hemoglobin, bilirubin, or lipemia.
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PMID:Kinetic enzymatic method for automated determination of glucose in blood and serum. 83 60

The effect of addition of different carbohydrates (starch, glucose, fructose) to the feed was investigated using the experimental animal. Additionally, the admixture of cholesterol and of cholesterol plus cholic acid was tested. Fructose (70% of the feed) causes a slight increase in serum triglyceride concentration and a very slight increase in triglyceride concentration in the liver. Fructose and to a lesser degree glucose cause an increase in pyruvate kinase activity in the liver. The activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is increased slightly following high-dosed glucose, whereas the increase is very pronounced following fuctose-rich feed. The admixture of cholesterol (with cholic acid) causes a decrease in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity up to 70%. The activity of glutamate dehydrogenase is decreased also following cholesterol admixture. A fructose-rich diet causes a slight degree of hyperlipemia with a metabolic situation similar to a latent diabetic state. This effect is greatly intensified by the addition of cholesterol and cholic acid to the diet of the rats. Especially striking was the increase in serum-free-fatty-acid concentrations in all groups of animals. This is speculated to be a sign of insulin deficiency. The so-called "carbohydrate-induced hypertriglyceridemia" is obviously intensified within a short period by the admixture of cholesterol plus cholic acid to the experimental diet.
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PMID:[Effect of various dietary carbohydrates on supplementary cholesterol]. 89 66

A rapid method for estimating glucose concentrations in serum and in fluoride-, iodoacetate-, heparin-, and EDTA-treated plasma and whole blood is described. The procedure requires about three minutes to perform and utilize a tungstic acid precipitant solution and urine glucose dipsticks. Test results correlate with those of a reference quantitative glucose method at levels from 25 to 500 mg/dl (1.38 to 27.5 mmol/l). Hemolysis, lipemia and bilirubin levels as high as 20 mg/dl (342 mmol/l) do not interfere with the procedure. The simplicity and adaptability of the method make it useful in emergency situations.
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PMID:A rapid screening method for blood glucose estimation. 90 68

This article presents a theory concerning the pathogenetic background for three diseases of civilization: essential hypertension, stable diabetes and atherosclerosis. Man and many other animals have mobilizing mechanisms for preparation for physical activity, expressed inter alia by an increase in blood pressure, hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia. During physical activity, blood pressure falls almost to the resting level and hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia are reduced parallel with the metabolism of glucose and fats in working muscles. In wealthy countries, this preparation for physical activity, which is dominated by the sympathetic-adrenergic system, comes into action just as frequently as in less wealthy countries -- or possibly even more frequently -- but this is rarely followed by muscular activity. How long is this sympathetic dominance maintained? How high are the blood pressure, hyperglycaemia and hyperlipidaemia? How slowly do these return to normal levels? It appears probable that this may be of fundamental pathogenetic significance in the three abovementioned diseases, the causes of which we have difficulty in finding or agreeing upon. Various prophylactic possibilities are mentioned briefly.
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PMID:[An hypothesis concerning the pathogenetic background of 3 diseases of civilization]. 90 6

The effect of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) on basal circulating lipids, arginine-stimulated glucagon and insulin secretion, and glucose tolerance was studied in normal women. After 5 days of oral MPA treatment (10 mg/day), there was a small but significant decline in basal circulating triglycerides. No changes were observed in fasting plasma concentrations of cholesterol, free fatty acids, glucagon, insulin, or glucose; in the plasma glucagon, insulin, or glucose responses during L-arginine infusion; or in the plasma insulin or glucose responses during oral glucose tolerance tests. There was no correlation of any of these parameters with the observed decline in fasting plasma triglyceride concentrations. These results confirm previous reports of no consistent changes in lipid or glucose homeostasis in women using derivatives of 17alpha-acetoxyprogesterone derivatives for contraceptive purposes, and suggest that MPA may be a suitable alternative for those women who develop hyperlipemia or glucose intolerance when they use contraceptive agents which contain derivatives of ethinyl estradiol and nortestosterone.
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PMID:Effect of contraceptive steroids on arginine-stimulated glucagon and insulin secretion in women. III. Medroxyprogesterone acetate. 90 95

Glucose, free fatty acids, triglycerides and cholesterol in serum were determined in 14 patients during one of the dialysis with terminal renal insufficiency, kept on chronic hemodialysis, at two-hours intervals. None of the patients had severe hyperlipidemia prior to dialysis. A moderate elevation of glucose level developed with a distinct increase of the free fatty acids valued after hemodialysis with a relatively high glucose content in dialyse solution. Elevated triglyceride values were found in single patients, whereas cholesterol was practically kept unchanged.
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PMID:[Changes in the plasma values of glucose, free fatty acids, triglycerides and cholesterol in terminal kidney failure during hemodialysis]. 91 13

Metabolic effects of a new ketogenic regimen in which ketonemia is induced by feeding of medium chain triglycerides (MCT) are described, and comparisons are made with effects of the standard high fat ketogenic diet. Eighteen children maintained on the MCT diet for 3 months to 4 years failed to show elevations of serum cholesterol and had only a slight rise in serum total fatty acids, in contrast to the marked hyperlipidemia observed in children on the standard high fat diet. Long term use of the MCT diet did not affect pH of venous blood. Blood glucose fell below 50 mg/100 ml in one-third of the children, the lowest levels being reached 2--3 weeks after the start of the diet. Plasma D(--)-beta-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) and acetoacetate rose gradually after institution of diet therapy, maximum levels being reached after about 1 month. Higher levels of BHB and acetoacetate were achieved in children under the age of 10 years (BHB = 4.3 mM +/- 0.6 SEM, acetoacetate = 1.8 mM +/- 0.3 SEM) than in 10--18 year olds (BHB = 1.6 mM +/- 0.2 SEM, acetoacetate = 0.57 mM +/- 0.08 SEM). Plasma BHB and acetoacetate levels in children maintained on a 3:1 high fat diet were similar to those in children on a 60% MCT diet. Plasma levels of BHB showed a significant correlation with anticonvulsant effect (P less than 0.02). Both the ketonemia and the anticonvulsant action were reversed rapidly by intravenous infusion of glucose.
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PMID:Ketonemia and seizures: metabolic and anticonvulsant effects of two ketogenic diets in childhood epilepsy. 93 25

In order to evaluate the degree and type of hearing loss in patients with chronic renal failure, 61 patients undergoing chronic hemodialysis were examined. Hearing threshold levels, adjusted for age and sex, demonstrated a significant high frequency deficit, which in some patients was noted early in the course of hemodialysis. Fluctuations in hearing were noted over single dialysis events but were transient and apparently independent of corresponding changes in Na, K, Ca, BUN, creatinine, glucose, mean blood pressure, and weight. Preliminary attempts to evaluate hyperlipidemia as a possible cause of hearing loss did not reveal any hearing deficit or gain as related to triglyceride or cholesterol levels. The data suggested other possible causes of observed auditory loss.
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PMID:Hearing function and chronic renal failure. 94 7

Destruction of the ventromedial hypothalamic nuclei (VMN) in the weanling rat without injury to the median eminence results in a series of somatic, endocrine, and metabolic changes that are characterized by normal food and water intake but decreased linear growth, normal body weight but increased carcass fat and reduced carcass protein, lean body mass, and water. The endocrine alterations comprise hyperinsulinemia in the face of normoglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia and hypercholesterolemia and reduced growth hormone levels. The metabolic changes include greater oxidation of glucose and incorporation into lipid and reduced palmitate oxidation but increased incorporation into lipid. Weanling rats with VMN lesions are normophagic in absolute terms, relative to body weight and per metabolic unit, but their nocturnal feeding and weight gain cycles are disrupted and their locomotor activity is reduced. The VMN are involved in the long-term control of feeding - as in the mature rat - as shown by intragastric preloading studies and dietary density manipulation, glucose preference tests and intraperitoneal injections with glucose. Hyperinsulinemia and hypertriglyceridemia are present four days after the VMN operation in the presence of subnormal food intake and plasma glucose levels. Manipulations of the fat content of the diet revealed that the hyperlipidemia is of both endogenous and exogenous origin and that lipoprotein lipase is increased; a 48-hour fast reduced the hyperlipidemia to control levels, however. This suggests that weanling VMN rat tissue may have an impaired ability to take up circulating lipid. An increased incorporation of glycerol into lipid may be due to induction of glycerokinase by hyperinsulinemia. Adipose tissue of weanling VMN rats showed glycerokinase by hyperinsulinemia. Adipose tissue of weanling VMN rats showed neither depressed lipolysis nor diminished lipolytic activity per milligram of tissue protein. Glucose oxidation and incorporation into adipose tissue is increased in several tissues in vitro and there is enhanced glucose disappearance from plasma and incorporation into tissue lipids in vivo. These changes develop within a short time after lesion production and persist at least partially up to six months: glucose utilization in liver increases already four hours after the operation whereas it takes 72 hours to commence in adipose tissue. Insulin resistance is not apparent either in vivo or in vitro. The decreased growth hormone levels are not critical to the metabolic changes, nor is the hyperinsulinemia totally necessary. The metabolic changes also appear on several different types of diet and persist with fasting. The latter does not reduce insulin sensitivity of VMN rat tissues, wheras it does so in normal rats. Mature rats developed the same metabolic changes even in the absence of hyperphagia. The metabolic alterations can be blocked by pharmacologic doses of glucocorticoids, but are enhanced by the administration of estrogen...
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PMID:Origin of endocrine-metabolic changes in the weanling rat ventromedial syndrome. 95 Jun 80

A preliminary survey has been completed using manual densitometric technics to determine the mean retinal circulation times in groups of normal controls, offspring to two diabetic parents with normal glucose tolerance (prediabetics), and offspring of two diabetic parents with abnormal glucose tolerance (chemical diabetics). Comparisons of the mean retinal circulation time showed differences between the left eye and right eye in prediabetic and chemical diabetic groups and a sex difference in both normals and prediabetics. In addition, both age and per cent ideal body weight were inversely related to the mean retinal circulation time. The levels of fasting serum cholesterol, triglyceride, and growth hormone, in many instances, also appeared to be inversely related to the mean retinal circulation time. Similarly, the degree of glucose tolerance (determined by the area under the glucose curve above baseline) was significantly inversely related to the mean retinal circulation time. The mean retinal circulation time adjusted for per cent ideal weight was analyzed separately for both right eye and left eye, and a significantly shorter mean retinal circulation time was noted, particularly in males, for prediabetics than for normal controls and for chemical diabetics than for both prediabetics and normals. Analysis of the mean retinal circulation time adjusted for age showed similar differences. It is postulated that the genetic prediabetic state with or without glucose intolerance might be associated with significant alterations of mean retinal circulation time independent of age and per cent ideal weight. It is also suggested that a number of potentially meaningful interrelationships between the degree of glucose intolerance and/or hyperlipidemia might exist and should be further quantified.
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PMID:Mean retinal circulation time as determined by fluorescein angiography in normal, prediabetic, and chemical-diabetic subjects. 97 94


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