Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020639 (hypoproteinemia)
1,134 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An experimental protein-calorie malnutrition was produced in weanling Sprague-Dawley rats. The model resembles human malnutrition with respect to weight loss, inanition, angular stomatitis, anemia, lymphopenia, hypoproteinemia with hypoalbuminemia, and marked thymic involution. In addition, systemic invasion by gram-negative rods was documented. However, no edema was produced, and animals did not survive for longer than six weeks on the protein-deficient diet. One percent glycogen was found to be a satisfactory nonprotein stimulus for induction of a peritoneal exudate consisting primarily of young macrophages. Electron microscopy showed that morphologic events of phagocytosis and degranulation proceeded normally in macrophages from protein-deficient animals. In addition, cell surface receptors for IgG were preserved under these experimental conditions. These data indicate that weanling rats may be employed as a small animal model for servere, fulminant protein-calorie malnutrition in humans.
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PMID:Antibacterial functions of macrophages in experimental protein-calorie malnutrition. I. Description of the model, morphologic observations, and macrophage surface IgG receptors. 9 98

All children with evidence of xerophthalmia who were admitted to an inpatient facility for treatment of severe protein-calorie malnutrition and its complications were compared to other inpatients with severe PCM but free from signs or symptoms of vitamin A deficiency. Xerophthalmic inpatients were older and had more severe hypoproteinemia than inpatients without eye signs, and were more undernourished by anthropometric criteria than a comparison group matched for age, sex, and type of PCM. Children with more severe eye lesions were more retarded in growth than those with minimal ocular signs. All inpatients had high rates of bacterial infections, regardless of their vitamin status. However, xerophthalmic children had a highly significant increase in the rate of positive urine cultures. Mortality rates were similar in all study groups.
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PMID:Xerophthalmia, protein-calorie malnutrition, and infections in children. 11 19

Detailed studies of protein metabolism were undertaken in a patient with pellagra and hypoproteinemia associated with the carcinoid syndrome both before and after treatment. The synthesis of albumin improved from 82 mg per kg per day to 135 mg per kg per day with little change in the daily excretion of 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid. After treatment with nicotinamide the patient made good progress with a complete resolution of the signs of pellagra and protein malnutrition. These results support the hypothesis that a reduced availability of the essential amino acid L-tryptophan may limit the synthesis of albumin and nicotinic acid in patients with the carcinoid syndrome who become anoretic.
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PMID:Studies of tryptophan and albumin metabolism in a patient with carcinoid syndrome, pellagra, and hypoproteinemia. 13 45

The plasma proteins are constantly shuttling between intravascular and extravascular mass of a specific plasma protein is determined by its individual rate of synthesis and the mean total time it spends in plasma. The ratio of intravascular to total mass (distribution ratio) is determined by the relative rate, at which it passes from plasma to interstitial spaces (transcapillary escape rate: TER) and the relative return rate via lymph. TER in a specific organ depends on the local leakiness of the microvasculature. The overall value in normal man varies with the molecular weight of the protein being about 5%/h of the intravascular albumin mass, 3%/h for IgG and less than 1%/h for IgM. The higher the TER, the lower is the intravascular fraction. Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, burns, myxedema and certain types of liver cirrhosis will increase TER. In hypertension and diabetes this may be compensated for by an increased lymphatic return rate. Hypoproteinemia due to malnutrition or urinary or gastrointestinal loss is accompanied by a shift from the extravascular to the intravascular space.
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PMID:Intra- and extravascular distribution of albumin and immunoglobulin in man. 73 85

1. Clinical and necropsy observations in lepromatous leprosy associated with severe emaciation and accompanying hypoproteinemia suggest that protein deprivation may be of pathogenic significance in the ulcerative phenomenon that is designated "Lazarine leprosy". 2. An experimental utilizing Wiersung rats infected with Mycobacterium lepraemurium and maintained on a protein-free diet was developed for the purpose of studying the effect of protein starvation on the course of chronic mycobacterial disease similar to lepromatous leprosy with respect to pathogen and host inflammatory response. 3. It was possible to maintain the experimental animals on a protein-free diet for up to 18 weeks of concomitant M. lepraemurium infection. This was long enough for the infection to disseminate to a degree that was evident in control animals only several weeks later. 4. The protein-deprived animals showed decreased inflammatory response to the pathogen, presented more rapid dissemination of the infection and harbored more bacilli per macrophage than did animals similarly infected but maintained on a protein adequate diet. This indicates impairment of native cellular immunity by protein deprivation through decrease in ability of macrophages to inhibit bacillary multiplication. 5. There was no evidence of impairment of macrophage ability to phagocytose the pathogens. 6. Morphologically the increased dissemination of pathogens and decrease in inflammatory response was similar to the increase in number and extent of visceral lesions seen in Lazarine leprosy. Decreased ability to dispose of the infecting bacilli was similar in the two models, human and animal. The animal model does not, as does lepromatous leprosy, involve the skin in the infection. Hence comparable ulcerative phenomena were not replicated in the animals. 7. It is suggested that Lazarine leprosy may result from enhanced lepromatous leprous infection occurring as a result of protein malnutrition. The pathogenic mechanism appears to be impairment of cellular immunity probably enhanced by concomitant impairment of humoral antibody immunity resulting also in decreased resistance to pyogenic and other secondary pathogens. The tissue edema attendant on decreased serum osmotic pressure due to lowering of the serum protein fractions enhances the probability of ulceration.
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PMID:The role of protein malnutrition in the pathogenesis of ulcerative "Lazarine" leprosy. 82 11

Male weanling rats were fed a 72% rice diet containing no detectable carnitine and limiting in threonine and lysine. Such dietary conditions may simulate protein malnutrition in man. Under these conditions growth impairment, anemia, hypoproteinemia, and fatty liver developed. The study focused principally on the fatty liver syndrome which was corrected to varying extents depending on degrees of supplementation with carnitine, lysine, threonine, and appropriate combinations of these nutrients. Such reduction in fatty liver accumulation was accounted for principally by the lowering of triglycerides, but also in part of total cholesterol levels. All the data, which also included monitoring carnitine uptake by the tissues and measurement of plasma triglycerides, were consistent with the view that fatty liver accumulation occurs in amino acid deficient diets because (a) of an impairment in the synthesis of the lipoprotein complex mandatory for triglyceride secretion from the liver and (b) from a deficiency of carnitine needed for the intramitochondrial transport of fatty acids prerequisite for their oxidation.
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PMID:Dietary lysine and carnitine: relation to growth and fatty livers in rats. 124 84

Shigellosis in children can cause growth retardation, worsening of malnutrition, and hypoproteinemia. To assess the effects of ingestion of a protein-rich diet during convalescence, 22 children aged 2 to 4 y with culture-proven shigellosis were randomly assigned after 5 d of antibiotic treatment to 21-d feeding regimens of either a 150 kcal/kg/d high-protein diet with 15% of calories as protein or an isocaloric control diet with 6% of calories as protein. At the start and end of dietary treatment, weight, height, mid-arm circumference, skinfold thickness, serum protein concentrations, and serum IGF-I were measured. Means of weight gain and increases in mid-arm circumference were greater in children fed high-protein diets than those fed control diets (1.23 versus 0.76 kg; 1.40 versus 0.96 cm; p < 0.05). Mean increase in height in children fed high-protein diets (0.83 cm) was not significantly greater than with control diets (0.74 cm). Mean increases in serum concentrations of total protein, prealbumin, and retinol-binding protein were greater in the high-protein group than in controls (p < 0.05). Mean serum concentrations of IGF-I were low in both groups before treatment [4.2 +/- 2.6 nmol/L (31.9 +/- 19.6 ng/mL) in controls; 3.1 +/- 3.4 nmol/L (24.0 +/- 26.3 ng/mL) in the high-protein group] but increased more in the high-protein group [39.0 +/- 16.2 nmol/L (298 +/- 124 ng/mL)] than in the control group [16.7 +/- 9.2 nmol/L (128 +/- 70 ng/mL), p < 0.01].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of a protein-rich diet during convalescence from shigellosis on catch-up growth, serum proteins, and insulin-like growth factor-I. 128 60

Clinical characteristics were examined in 5 elderly patients whose brain showed typical features of Wernicke's encephalopathy at the autopsy. All 5 were females with a mean age of 67 +/- 4 years old. The pathological diagnosis of Wernicke's encephalopathy was based on the presence of bleeding or atrophy of bilateral mammilary bodies, proliferation of capillaries and increase of macrophages in mammilary bodies, midbrain periaqueductal gray matter and periventricular area, with relatively intact neurons. Wernicke's encephalopathy was diagnosed clinically only in one case. The remaining four had no clinical diagnosis of Wernicke's encephalopathy. Underlying diseases were varied including neurological, metabolic, gastrointestinal disorders and malignancy. The predominant symptom, consciousness disturbance, was seen in 4 cases. Two of them showed a comatose state. Ocular symptoms and ataxia were observed in 2 cases. Laboratory findings revealed leukocytosis and anemia in 3 cases, hypoproteinemia in 4 cases. One case was alcoholic, but the other four were non-alcoholics and developed the disease after prolonged malnutrition. At the onset of the disease, 4 cases were receiving glucose and electrolyte infusion without vitamins, at the onset of the disease. We propose that in elderly patients with consciousness disturbance of unknown cause, Wernicke's encephalopathy should be taken into consideration even in non-alcoholics, and thiamine infusion should be commenced at once when the disease is suspected even when typical symptoms are lacking.
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PMID:[Clinical characteristics of Wernicke's encephalopathy in the elderly]. 156 Jun 7

The consequences of malnutrition and impact of nutritional support on the liver transplant patient have not been adequately addressed in clinical research studies. As we have gained experience in assessing patients for transplantation surgery, the risks of malnutrition have been realized. Part of the success of liver transplantation today is related to improved timing of surgery, patient selection, and perioperative management. Malnutrition is one of the adverse risk factors that is potentially reversible and therefore specialized nutritional support techniques should be able to improve postsurgical outcome. However, the performance and interpretation of nutritional research has been impeded by difficulties in separating the effects of liver dysfunction from disturbances secondary to nutritional deficiencies; for example, hypoproteinemia would be a consequence of both. Through the use of multivariate prognostic formulas and development of better nutritional indices for patients with liver disease, it should be possible to identify those patients who will receive the greatest benefit from preoperative and perioperative nutritional support. Furthermore, the kinds of nutritional supplementation having the greatest impact could then be determined.
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PMID:Impact of malnutrition and its therapy on liver transplantation. 176 36

High dietary protein intake, in the past recommended for nephrotic syndrome, does not improve hypoproteinemia and may accelerate progressive renal damage. In contrast, low-protein diets reduce proteinuria and preserve renal function in experimental renal models of nephrotic syndrome. In this study, 20 steroid-resistant, nephrotic patients were treated with a pure vegetarian, low-protein diet, supplemented with essential amino acids and ketoanalogues (supplemented vegan diet, SVD) for 4.6 +/- 3.1 months. Before the study, these patients followed an unrestricted protein, low-sodium diet (LSD). Proteinuria, daily urea nitrogen excretion and creatinine clearance decreased significantly on SVD. A similar lowering effect of SVD was observed on serum total cholesterol. Seven of the 20 patients changed from LSD to SVD and vice-versa on 3 occasions, and in all cases, we found an increase of proteinuria during the LSD period. Serum albumin, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides and anthropometric measurements did not change on SVD. Our data suggest that SVD exerts a favorable effect on proteinuria and hypercholesterolemia in nephrotic patients, without inducing clinical or laboratory signs of malnutrition.
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PMID:A special, supplemented 'vegan' diet for nephrotic patients. 180 35


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