Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Significant hypertriglyceridemia, the most common lipid abnormality in renal failure, first occurs when the creatinine clearance falls to 50 ml/min. The prevalence of hypertriglyceridemia continues to rise as creatinine clearance falls further with the highest rate developing at a creatinine clearance less than 10 ml/min. Hypertriglyceridemia is correlated with plasma glucagon levels but not growth hormone or
insulin
. Plasma cholesterol values remain normal in the face of deteriorating renal function and show no correlation with any of the hormones measured. Although all three hormones became elevated as renal function diminished, none were directly correlated with glomerular filtration rate. There was a distinct decrease in the prevalence of
hyperlipidemia
after 5 years of maintenance hemodialysis therapy. Plasma growth hormone and glucagon through an effect on plasma triglyceride and plasma
insulin
by effecting plasma cholesterol may play a role in this decline of
hyperlipidemia
with duration of hemodialysis.
...
PMID:Relationship of plasma lipids to renal function and length of time on maintenance hemodialysis. 70 43
Diabetes mellitus occurs in many animals species. However, only a few have been utilized in systematic studies designed to answer unsolved problems associated with the disorder in man such as molecular basis, pathogenesis of the vascular and neural lesions, and the roles of diet, exercise and obesity. Among the animal models available, rodents have been studied most thoroughly for a number of reasons: a) short generation time (sexually mature at about 3 mo of age, gestation time 21 days) and life-span is approximately 3 yr; b) hyperglycemia and/or obesity is known to be inherited in several species; c) environmental factors can be controlled easily in the laboratory because of small size; and d) economic considerations. The better-known rodent diabetes/obesity syndromes may be categorized as follows: 1) hyperglycemic with ketoacidosis, nonobese (Chinese hamster, South African hamster); 2) hyperglycemic with
insulin
hypersecretion, moderate obesity and may develop ketoacidosis (diabetic mouse (db/db), spiny mouse, sand rat); and 3) less pronounced hyperglycemia with hyperinsulinemia,
insulin
"resistance" and marked obesity (obese (ob/ob), yellow (Ay) and New Zealand obese (NZO) mice, and the Zucker "fatty" rat). The PBB/Ld mouse, described here in detail for the first time, is a new strain of mouse that also fits into the latter category. Members of this strain following maturity develop an obesity that is characterized by increasing cellularity of adipose tissue, increased serum immunoreactive
insulin
, reduced glucose tolerance, fatty liver, and
hyperlipidemia
. Therefore, this strain of mouse represents another model for study of adult onset obesity.
...
PMID:Animal models of diabetes and obesity, including the PBB/Ld mouse. 77 Jan 97
The prevalence, nature and possible aetiology of post-transplantation
hyperlipidaemia
were studied in 94 renal allograft recipients. Sixty-five per cent of the group had hypercholesterolaemia or hypertriglyceridaemia, and types IIb and IV were the commonest forms of hyperlipoproteinaemia encountered. The pathogenesis of post-transplantation
hyperlipidaemia
is complex. Hypertriglyceridaemia was maximal in the first year after transplantation and could be correlated with high corticosteroid dosage during this period. Thereafter hypertriglyceridaemia was less marked and was related to obesity, corbohydrate intolerance and basal
insulin
levels. Mean cholesterol levels were elevated throughout the post-transplantation period, varied little and could not be related to corticosteroid dosage, body weight, carbohydrate intolerance, basal
insulin
levels or renal dysfunction.
...
PMID:Hyperlipidaemia in renal transplant patients. 78 23
The purpose of this investigation was the knowledge of certain events related with the intravenous administration of lipids in patients with parenteral nutrition such as tolerance, clearence and changes in the plasmatic lipid fractions and the effect of heparin as capilar lipoprotein-lipase stimulant and of the
insulin
as lipogenetic hormone. With intralipid the authors observed elevation of serum total lipid, triglicerids and fatty acids; in this patients the fatty acids went up after addition of heparin because triglicerid elucidation but went down after
insulin
administration which favor the tisular captation of fatty acids. They do not found alteration in serum cholesterol. The results with heparin and
insulin
suggest a greater and more rapid clearence of plasmatic lipids probably by incorporation of them to the tissues. This feature minimize the risk of exogen
hyperlipemia
, hyperosmolarity and metabolic acidosis.
...
PMID:[Changes of serum lipids during parenteral feeding with a 10 percent of soy oil solution (author's transl)]. 81 81
Statistical analyses were performed in order to determine the effects of the control of the diabetes as well as the food intake on serum lipid levels of 73 diabetic outpatients. They had had elevated fasting blood glucose levels, mostly complicated by various grades of
hyperlipidemia
, before the initiation of treatment.
Hyperlipidemia
was found to be ameliorated in nearly half of those patients after the start of diabetic treatment. However, the elevation of serum triglyceride persisted in 30 per cent of controlled diabetics, and no differences were found in occurrence of hypertriglyceridemia between diet-treatment group, sulfonylurea group, biguanide group, combined group and
insulin
group. Estimation of diet intake revealed that the controlled hypertriglyceridemic patients consumed slightly (but significantly) greater amounts of sucrose, alcohol, and total calories than the controlled normotriglyceridemic patients. In addition to such inadequate diet consumptions, the tendency to be overweight and the subtle increment of fasting blood glucose levels were also shown to have contributed to hypertriglyceridemia. It is thus concluded that the lipid disorder in controlled diabetic outpatients is the result of multifactorial influences and that well-conducted diet therapy and stricter regulation of blood glucose are essential in the management of posttreatment
hyperlipidemia
.
...
PMID:Dietary intake and hyperlipidemia in controlled diabetic outpatients. 83 68
Dogs were made alloxan-diabetic and randomly distributed into either of two prospective treatment groups. In one group it was intended that the metabolic signs of diabetes be controlled poorly, and commercial
insulin
was administered in doses inadequate to prevent chronic, severe hyperglycemia and glucosuria. In the other group it was intended that the metabolic disorder be well controlled, and the animals received food and commercial
insulin
twice daily such that the hyperglycemia and glucosuria became mild or infrequent. Experimental improvement of the carbohydrate disorder was accompanied by amelioration of
hyperlipemia
and other clinical signs of deficient
insulin
activity. By 60 months of diabetes, retinal capillary aneurysms, pericyte ghosts, obliterated vessels, and other microvascular abnormalities typical of diabetes were apparent in each animal of the poor-control group. Better control was found to reduce significantly the incidence and severity of microvascular lesions. The data suggest that the mechanism responsible for diabetic retinopathy is initiated as a result of deficient
insulin
activity and that the development of the microvascular complications of diabetes are preventable and may be inhibited by careful control of the metabolic disorder.
...
PMID:Relationship of microvascular disease in diabetes to metabolic control. 88 98
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.
...
PMID:[Effect of various dietary carbohydrates on supplementary cholesterol]. 89 66
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.
...
PMID:Effect of contraceptive steroids on arginine-stimulated glucagon and insulin secretion in women. III. Medroxyprogesterone acetate. 90 95
Our study indicates that in renal failure elevated plasma triglyceride can first be detected when the GFR falls to 50 ml/min. Hypertriglyceridemia is the commonest abnormality found and increases further when the GFR falls below 10 ml/min. Plasma cholesterol levels remain normal even at low levels of renal function. Although plasma growth hormone, glucagon, and
insulin
levels become elevated when renal function diminishes, there is no definite correlation of their levels and GFR. A decreased incidence of
hyperlipidemia
observed in patients sustained by maintenance hemodialysis for over 5 yrs may in part be due to the triglyceride lowering effect of growth hormone and glucagon and/or the cholesterol lowering effect of
insulin
.
...
PMID:Uremic hyperlipoproteinemia: correlation with residual renal function and duration of maintenance hemodialysis. 91 Mar 86
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...
...
PMID:Origin of endocrine-metabolic changes in the weanling rat ventromedial syndrome. 95 Jun 80
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>