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:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A computer program has been developed to allow the generation of written orders for the logical progression of enteral
hyperalimentation
by the technique of continuous nasogastric infusion. Data required for entry include name, age, sex, height, usual and current weights, degree of stress, and if indicated, restrictions of nitrogen, fluids,
sodium
and potassium. A specific formulation may be requested, or the computer will pick a single nutrient solution or combination of two solutions that will best meet the requested constraints. Output includes entered data with English and Metric interconversion, surface area, and estimates of basal energy expenditure, protein wastage, protein and caloric requirements. If requested, daily orders are written to include a reasonable progression of infusion rates and concentrations of the solutions(s). Daily values are printed for the total amounts to be infused of fluid, calories, protein,
sodium
, potassium, and mOsm. The programs have been demonstrated to run in either on-line or batch mode. The system is easily accessible by physician, dietician, nurse, or other interested professionals.
...
PMID:Computer optimization of enteral hyperalimentation. 11 Sep 60
Parenteral administration of gold thioglucose to mice produces an area or necrosis in the ventromedial portion of the hypothalamus. The lesion, like lesions produced by electrocautery of this area, causes
hyperphagia
and consequent obesity. The glucose moiety of gold thioglucose is essential for production of the lesion. Glucose analogues (2-deoxy-glucose,
sodium
thioglucose and phlorizin) prevent the gold thioglucose-induced lesion, and by themselves produce a transient
hyperphagia
. Insulin deficiency prevents the lesion. Either adrenalectomy or hypophysectomy counteracts the effect of insulin deficiency. Electron microscopic studies, in which general necrosis is avoided by administration of aspirin before gold thioglucose or by administration of subnecrotic doses of gold thioglucose, reveal that gold thioglucose primarily affects neural elements contiguous with capillaries in the ventromedial hypothalamus. The experimental observations indicate the presence of special glucoreceptor cells in the ventromedial hypothalamus that are involved in the regulation of food intake.
...
PMID:Gold thioglucose obesity syndrome. 32 50
Although human need for various nutrients is well-established, the exact requirements for the different nutrients are not well-known. Nutrient requirements are affected by genetics; environment; nature of the diet; and hemeostatic demands under changing physiological conditions expressed as growth, reproduction and response to the stress of injury or disease. Pregnant and lactating women should be properly nourished if well-nourished infants are desired. Nutrient and energy needs are considerably increased during pregnancy and lactation. The most rapid growth of infants occurs during the 1st 4 to 6 months of life. Because of the many advantages of breast milk over artificial milk, full-term newborn infants should be breastfed, unless there are specific contraindications or breastfeeding is unsuccessful. The American Medical Association (AMA) urges that better efforts be made to educate the public and the medical profession as to the advantages of breastfeeding. The 4th to the 6th months of life constitute the transitional period in infant feeding. The baby should be introduced to single-ingredient foods in small quantities, one at a time, to isolate food sensitivities. Good eating habits can be formed early in life through the proper and gradual introduction of varied and nutritional meal patterns. Energy balance is a nutritional problem in late childhood and once maturity is achieved, while calorically and nutritionally inadequate diets are a growing concern for the elderly. Immoderate eating habits (e.g.,
overeating
) may aggravate or contribute to the development of degenerative diseases and should be discouraged. The AMA recommends that the American public focus on the achievement and maintenance of the most desirable body weight through a proper combination of dietary control and exercise. Specific dietary modifications (
sodium
restriction, weight control) are necessary in the management of hypertension, diabetes, coronary heart diseases and other medical problems. The medical profession should assume a more active role in teaching people how to achieve and maintain good health habits through behavioral modification.
...
PMID:American Medical Association concepts of nutrition and health. Council on Scientific Affairs. 49 Aug 37
Issuing from the present state of the influence of the basic nutritive substances (protein, fat, carbohydrates) and various nutritive factors discussed again and again (cholesterol, erucaic acid,
sodium
, calcium/magnesium quotient, pressor amines) on the development of the arteriosclerosis, the indididual factors of influence are critically evaluated. The investigations are getting under way, so that ascertained results are standing beside insufficiently claified or open problems, From the abundance of the observations conclusions are drawn which are of significance for practice. Unfavourable influences of nutrition on the factors of risk (hyperlipoproteinaemia, disturbance of the carbohydrate tolerance, hyperuricaemia,
hyperalimentation
) and on the manifest diseases (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, uric arthritis, obesity) of the metabolic syndrome which finally contribute to the development of arteriosclerosis are emphasized. In front of this background a clinically and ambulatorily tested basic metabolic diet is described. About 20% of the energy content (kcal or kJ) of this diet are protein, 35% fat and 45% are carbohydrates. The saturated fatty acids lie below 30%, the manifold saturated fatty acids, however, above 20% of the total fat proportion. The cholesterol content is below 400 mg, the purin-nitrogen below 200 mg, and the
sodium
content is about 2g per day. This diet can be produced for the treatment of persons with normal weight and overweight in different energetic degradations.
...
PMID:[Nutrition and arteriosclerosis]. 70
Clinical observations suggest that overt rhabdomyolysis may occur if severe hypophosphatemia is superimposed upon a pre-existing subclinical myopathy. To examine this possibility, a subclinical muscle cell injury was induced in 23 dogs by feeding them a phosphorus- and calorie-deficient diet until they lost 30% of their original weight. To induce acute, severe hypophosphatemia in the animals after partial starvation, 17 of the dogs were given large quantities of the same phosphorus-deficient diet in conjunction with an oral carbohydrate supplement, which together provided 140 kcal/kg per day. After phosphorus and caloric deprivation, serum phosphorus and creatine phosphokinase (CPK) activity were normal. Total muscle phosphorus content fell from 28.0+/-1.3 to 26.1+/-2.5 mmol/dg fat-free dry solids.
Sodium
, chloride, and water contents rose. These changes resembled those observed in patients with subclinical alcoholic myopathy. When studied after 3 days of
hyperalimentation
, the animals not receiving phosphorus showed weakness, tremulousness, and in some cases, seizures. Serum phosphorus fell, the average lowest value was 0.8 mg/dl (P <0.001). CPK activity rose from 66+/-357 to 695+/-1,288 IU/liter (P <0.001). Muscle phosphorus content fell further to 21.1+/-7.7 mmol/dg fat-free dry solids (P <0.001). Muscle Na and Cl contents became higher (P <0.01). Sections of gracilis muscle showed frank rhabdomyolysis.6 of the 23 phosphorus- and calorie-deprived dogs were also given 140 kal/kg per day but in addition, each received 147 mmol of elemental phosphorus. These dogs consumed their diet avidly and displayed no symptoms. They did not become hypophosphatemic, their CPK remained normal, and derangements of cellular Na, Cl, and H(2)O were rapidly corrected. The gracilis muscle appeared normal histologically in these animals. These data suggest that a subclinical myopathy may set the stage for rhabdomyolysis if acute, severe hypophosphatemia is superimposed. Neither acute hypophosphatemia nor rhabdomyolysis occur if abundant phosphorus is provided during
hyperalimentation
.
...
PMID:Hypophosphatemia and rhabdomyolysis. 74 77
The efficacy of intravenous
hyperalimentation
in the critically ill patient was evaluated by body composition measurements performed with a multiple isotope dilution technic. The size of the body cell mass was evaluated by measuring the total exchangeable potassium and the intracellular water volume. The total exchangeable
sodium
and the extracellular water volume were both measured to evaluate the extracellular supporting component of body composition. These measurements were performed in two groups of severely ill patients who were in a chronic catabolic state. The first group of sixteen patients received intravenous
hyperalimentation
and the second group of eighteen patients served as controls in that they were not hyperalimented. Similar measurements were performed in sixteen normal volunteers to define the normal range for the various body composition parameters. In the nonalimented patients, there was a significant decrease in the body cell mass accompanied by an expansion of the extracellular supporting component of body composition. Similar changes occurred in the patients receiving intravenous
hyperalimentation
. However, the magnitude of these changes was not great. Thus, intravenous
hyperalimentation
tended to preserve the body cell mass and prevent expansion of the extracellular component of body composition.
...
PMID:Effect of parenteral nutrition on body composition in the critically ill patient. 81 25
The effects of semistarvation and parenteral nutrition on the gastric mucosa were studied in 24 Wistar rats (250 to 350 grams). The animals were divided into three dietary regimens: Group I-standard rat chow ad libitum; Group II-50 cc. per day of a
hyperalimentation
solution containing 30% glucose + 5% amino acids; Group III-50 cc. per day of 5% glucose. The animals were fed for a period of 7 days. Gastric mucosal fluxes of
Na+
, Li+, and H+ then were measured after the gastric instillation of two gastric wash solutions, one primarily an HC1 solution, the other a solution of HC1 plus
sodium
taurocholate. Gross examination of the gastric mucosal surfaces were recorded. Compared to Group I (oral diet), Groups II and III demonstrated a decrease in volume in gastric secretion during the test period (p less than 0.005); and an increase in net negative hydrogen flux (p less than 0.005). Compared to Group II (hyperalimented), Group III (semistarved) demonstrated an increased net negative H+ flux (p less than 0.01), but no difference in volume of secretion. Only Group III demonstrated a difference in H+ flux after the addition of
sodium
taurocholate (p less than 0.05). Gastric lesions were significantly increased in Group III, as compared to Groups I and II. Semistarvation renders the gastric mucosa of the rat more susceptible to injury. Adequate intravenous nutrition alone protected against these effects.
...
PMID:The effects of semistarvation and parenteral nutrition on the gastric mucosa of rats. 81 25
Various flavoring agents were evaluated as to their ability to improve the taste acceptability of Vivovnex-HN, a potent oral
hyperalimentation
diet. Several imitation flavors were incorporated into the Vivonex-HN powder in different concentrations with and without an artificial sweetener. The mixtures were rated by a taste panel. Among the unsweetened flavors, spray-dried orange juice, Sealva imitation mint No.381 and cherry mint imitation appeared to be the most acceptable flavors. Among the individual flavors sweetened with 0.025%
sodium
saccharin, rum, strawberry and raspberry proved to be the most acceptable. Among all of the formulations studied, a combination of rum, strawberry and raspberry with 0.025%
sodium
saccharin was found to be optimal.
...
PMID:Improved taste acceptability for an oral hyperalimentation dosage form. 97 29
Sugar absorption by the biliary ductular epithelium under steady-state conditions was examined using isolated perfused rat liver. The test sugar and mannitol (as a putative marker of paracellular entry) were added to the glucose-free recirculating perfusate each at a concentration of 5 mmol/L, and apparent active biliary ductular absorption equated with the change in concentration of the test sugar relative to that of mannitol. A metabolizable hexose (D-glucose), pentose (D-xylose), and three nonmetabolizable hexoses (alpha-methyl-glucoside, 3-o-methyl-glucose, and L-glucose) were used. All five monosaccharides were well absorbed at constant rates for 2 hours with apparent rates of absorption (mumol.kg body weight-1.min-1, mean +/- SE) of D-glucose, 0.24 +/- 0.01; L-glucose, 0.20 +/- 0.02; 3-o-methyl-glucose, 0.19 +/- 0.02; alpha-methyl-glucoside, 0.16 +/- 0.03; and D-xylose, 0.10 +/- 0.04. The addition of phloridzin to the perfusate inhibited D-glucose absorption in part but did not inhibit L-glucose absorption. When perfusate
Na+
was replaced by N-methylglucamine, the bile-plasma ratio of mannitol remained unchanged, as did the apparent absorption rate of D-glucose and 3-o-methyl-glucose. In contrast, absorption of L-glucose and alpha-methyl-D-glucoside gradually ceased. The addition of 15 mmol/L glucose to the perfusate caused decreased bile flow and increased taurocholate concentration in bile, suggesting that glucose absorption by the biliary ductules induced water reabsorption. It is concluded that sugars are absorbed by the biliary ductular system by Na(+)-dependent and Na(+)-independent transport systems, the substrate affinities of which differ from those reported for apical membrane hexose transport systems in renal tubular and intestinal epithelia. Ductular absorption of solutes such as glucose that enter bile passively may have biological use, because ductular absorption decreases the concentration of substrates for bacterial growth in gallbladder bile. On the other hand, ductular absorption of solutes induces reabsorption of biliary water, resulting in decreased bile flow; this might contribute to cholestasis during prolonged
hyperalimentation
with solutions containing glucose.
...
PMID:Sugar absorption by the biliary ductular epithelium of the rat: evidence for two transport systems. 158 53
Vanadate and vanadyl, two forms of vanadium, have been reported to exert insulin-like effects in vivo and in vitro. In the present study we compared the effectiveness of oral
sodium
metavanadate (NaVO3),
sodium
orthovanadate (Na3VO4) and vanadyl sulphate pentahydrate (VOSO4.5H2O) treatment in alleviating some signs of diabetes in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Vanadium compounds were administered in aqueous solutions of NaCl (80 mM) at concentrations of 0.20 mg/ml (NaVO3), 0.50 mg/ml (Na3VO4), and 1.1 mg/ml (VOSO4.5H2O) for two weeks. Control rats, either diabetic or non-diabetic, drank solutions of NaCl (80 mM). Although some signs of diabetes (hyperglycaemia,
hyperphagia
, polydipsia) were significantly ameliorated by the vanadium treatment, negative side effects were also observed in all of the vanadium-treated diabetic rats. Those effects included some deaths, decreased weight gain, and tissue vanadium accumulation, which are consistent with the reported toxicity of vanadium in non-diabetic rats. Vanadyl sulphate was the most effective compound of those tested in normalizing blood glucose levels. However, the results here reported suggest that chronic administration of vanadyl or vanadate in the drinking water is not a viable alternative treatment to insulin in human diabetes.
...
PMID:Improvement of glucose homeostasis by oral vanadyl or vanadate treatment in diabetic rats is accompanied by negative side effects. 186 88
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>