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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To plan prospective studies of
obesity
and hypertension, we measured skinfold thickness, weight, blood pressure, and protein fractions in 920 children who were divided according to age, sex, and race. Correlations between measurements were calculated within each of these groups. Children aged 10, 11, and 12 years had direct correlations between diastolic blood pressure and
serum albumin
level, but inverse correlations between diastolic blood pressure and alpha-globulin level as well as inverse correlations with alpha-globulin level. These correlations did not occur in similar children aged 8, 9, and 10. Although diastolic blood pressure correlated with skinfold thickness in all groups, there was no correlation between skinfold thickness and serum protein levels.
...
PMID:Correlation of blood pressure with skinfold thickness and protein levels. 5 84
Antigen-coated particles of cross-linked dextran may be used for affinity chromatography of antibodies and for the fractionation of lymphoid cells with appropriate surface receptors. Furthermore, such particles serve as convenient substrates for quantitative immunofluorescence tests. The fluoro-immuno-cyto-adherence (FICA) is a simple technique which combines affinity chromatography and immunofluorescence, provides durable antigen-coated substrates and allows the identification, enumeration and characterization of lymphoid cells capable of binding an antigen, covalently linked via a spacer onto the surface of dextran beads. In the present study chicken thyroglobulin (TG) or bovine
serum albumin
(BSA) were coupled onto fluorescein and rhodamin-labelled or unlabelled Sephadex G-25 beads by means of spacer molecules. The specificity and degree of antigen-coating were controlled by indirect immunoflourescence. For the study of antigen-binding cells the different antigen-coated beads were mixed with suspensions of peripheral blood lymphoid cells from
Obese
strain (OS) chickens with spontaneous hereditary autoimmune thyroiditis, or with cells from BSA-immunized or unimmunized normal White Leghron chickens. Specific adherence of OS lymphocytes to TG-coated beads and of lymphocytes from BSA-immunized chickens to BSA-beads was found. The test and control preparations are observed simultaneously under the fluorescence microscope where the distinction of beads coated with different antigens can be made on the basis of the color of their fluorescence. Results obtained with the FICA technique are in good agreement with those of conventional rosette tests.
...
PMID:Fluoro-immuno-cytoadherence (FICA): A new method for the identification and enumeration of antigen-binding cells. 32 Jul 68
1. Heat output by suspensions of isolated rat hepatocytes was determined by using a modified batch-type microcalorimeter. 2. The ratio of O(2) uptake (determined polarographically) to heat output was used to assess the metabolic efficiency of isolated hepatocytes. 3. Cells from starved or fed rats incubated in either bicarbonate-buffered physiological saline containing gelatin, or bicarbonate-buffered physiological saline containing amino acids,
serum albumin
and glucose showed no significant difference with respect to the ratio of O(2) uptake to heat output. 4. For liver cells from 24h-starved rats, the addition of 10mm-dihydroxyacetone and 2.5mm-fructose significantly decreased the ratio of O(2) uptake to heat output from 1.94+/-0.05 in the controls to 1.52+/-0.04 and 1.54+/-0.01mumol/J respectively. 5. Glucagon (1mum), which slightly increased both O(2) uptake and heat output, did not significantly alter the ratio. 6. The addition of extracellular 10mm-NH(4)Cl and urease to provide an energetically wasteful cycle by ensuring hydrolysis of newly synthesized urea, lowered the ratio of O(2) uptake to heat output from 1.81+/-0.08 to 1.47+/-0.06mumol/J, indicating a reduced metabolic efficiency. 7. Metabolic efficiency in rats of different dietary regimen, age and genetically based
obesity
was also assessed. No differences in the ratio of O(2) uptake to heat output were found between liver cell suspensions prepared from rats maintained on colony diet and high-fat diet or sucrose-rich diet nor between animals ranging from 38 to 179 days of age. Comparison of the ratio of liver cell O(2) uptake to heat output between homozygote Zucker fa/fa obese rats and their lean littermates showed no significant difference. 8. It is concluded that the ratio of O(2) uptake to heat output for isolated hepatocytes is relatively constant unless perturbed by conditions that markedly enhance substrate cycling.
...
PMID:The application of microcalorimetry to the assessment of metabolic efficiency in isolated rat hepatocytes. 48 37
Nutritional assessment of white persons over 59 who participated in the 1973 Missouri Nutrition Survey was based upon biochemical measurements, dietary intakes using food frequency histories, anthropometric measurements, and a dental examination. There were three major nutritionally related problems: poor dental health,
obesity
, and anemia. The mean for DMF, periodental index, and oral hygiene index for males was 20.5, 4.9, and 3.9, respectively; for females, 17.6, 3.6, and 2.5. Over one-half of both sexes were edentulous. Of the women 59% were greater than 119% of desirable weight compared to 22% of the men. Using guidelines from the Ten-State Nutrition Survey, the following percentages of men had low blood levels: 20, hemoglobin and serum iron; 2, plasma vitamin A; 6, plasma carotene; 1, serum vitamin C; and 0,
serum albumin
. The percent of women with low biochemical levels were: 11, hemoglobin; 10, serum iron; 7, plasma vitamin A; 1, serum vitamin C; and 2,
serum albumin
. None of the subjects had low or deficient levels of erythrocyte glutathione reductase. One-half of the women compared to one-fifth of the men had consumed diets with one or more nutrients below 67% of the 1974 Recommended Dietary Allowances.
...
PMID:Nutritional status of elderly residents in Missouri. 72 63
A method is presented for radioimmunological determination of 3alpha, 5beta-tetrahydroaldosterone. It is based upon the reactivity of this steroid with an antiserum induced by the 3-carboxymethyloxime of 18, 21-aldosterone diacetate conjugated with bovine
serum albumin
. One hundred microliters of urine enzymatically hydrolyzed with an helix pomatia preparation, containing tritiated tetrahydroaldosterone for the yield calculation, were extracted with dichloromethane and chromatographed on a small celite column. The yield after extraction and chromatography was 64 +/- 17%. The radioimmunological determination was carried out in a conventional manner. The method is specific, sensitive (10 pg/tube), exact, reproducible, very simple and extremely rapid. The results showed good agreement with values given by a colorimetric method (p less than 0.001). The median value measured in 45 healthy adult subjects under standard sodium diet was 53.3 microgram/24h (95 % of the population within a 16.6 to 131.1 microgram/24h range). In 78 cases of adrenocortical insufficiency, 60 cases of
obesity
and 28 cases of hypokalemia, the median values (and the ranges : microgram/24h) were respectively 7.7 (1.0 - 51.0), 80.9 (17.0 - 503.0) and 64.3 (8.0 - 181.0). In 330 hypertensive patients the excretion of tetrahydroaldosterone exceeded the normal range in 115 cases (35%) with a median of 199.7 microgram/24h (131 to 620 microgram/24h).
...
PMID:Radioimmunological determination of urinary tetrahydroaldosterone. 91 Feb 48
Dietary fat intake is often regarded as a major determinant of coronary heart disease (CHD) rate and it has been deemed unnecessary to invoke racial or other factors to explain the differences in CHD rates among different ethnic groups. Despite a high prevalence of CHD risk factors such as hypertension,
obesity
, and smoking, CHD remains a rarity in westernized black Africans. Cord blood total cholesterol (TC), low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLC) and apolipoprotein B (apo B) levels were measured and found to be respectively 12.1%, 18.3% and 22.4% lower in black neonates when compared to white neonates. These differences were again studied in a group of young black African males and a comparable group of age-matched whites who had been exposed to the same environment and western diet for at least 2 years. Although the body mass indices and
serum albumin
concentrations in the adult males were not significantly different, serum levels of TC, LDLC and apo B were 10.7%, 18.7% and 39.7% lower in the blacks, respectively. Furthermore, high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC) and Apolipoprotein AI were 20.2% and 9.5% higher, homocysteine 45.6% lower and coagulation factor VII 26.6% lower in the adult black Africans. It is concluded that blacks are biochemically less responsive to an atherogenic diet than whites and these differences are already present at birth.
...
PMID:Ethnic immunity to coronary heart disease? 179 43
Sixteen risk factors for nosocomial pneumonia were prospectively studied in 582 intubated patients in a surgical intensive care unit (ICU) to identify patients at particularly high risk. Overall, pneumonias developed in 94 of the patients (16%). Significant risk factors for pneumonia were mechanical ventilation for more than 72 h, impaired consciousness or co-operation, specific therapeutic interventions as a marker of severe underlying diseases (dopamine/dobutamine greater than or equal to 5 micrograms/kg.min, barbiturate therapy for treatment of elevated intracranial pressure, continuous i.v. antiarrhythmic or antihypertensive drugs), and pre-existing pulmonary abnormalities (P less than 0.001). The acquisition of postoperative pneumonia was further associated with male sex, ASA class IV and a history of smoking, but statistical significance was lost after stepwise logistic regression. Longer operative procedures, thoracic or upper abdominal surgery, longer preoperative hospital stay, low
serum albumin
concentration on admission, prior antibiotics, old age,
obesity
, low weight, malignant disease, and steroid treatment did not influence the incidence of pneumonia. In this study we were able to identify a subpopulation of intensive care patients at particularly high risk for pneumonia.
...
PMID:[Risk factors in nosocomial pneumonia in intensive care patients. A prospective study to identify high-risk patients]. 195 43
Although hypoalbuminemia is a fundamental characteristic of nephrotic syndrome (NS), there are many patients with massive proteinuria that do not develop hypoalbuminemia. We have studied the clinical and biochemical characteristics of 19 patients with persistent massive proteinuria (greater than 5 g/d) and normal
serum albumin
(group I) in comparison with 16 patients with similar proteinuria excretion, but persistent hypoalbuminemia (group II). Most of group I patients had diagnoses suggesting glomerular hyperfiltration (focal glomerulosclerosis [FGS] associated with vesicoureteral reflux [VUR], reduction of renal mass, proteinuria associated with
obesity
, sclerotic phase of idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis [GN] in contrast with those of group II, in which membranous GN was the most frequent diagnosis. We prospectively investigated differences in the antiproteinuric effect of captopril, an antiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI); after 6 months of treatment, proteinuria decreased clearly in group I (7.1 +/- 1.7 to 3.7 +/- 1.7 g/d; P less than 0.001), whereas no significant changes were observed in group II (8.1 +/- 2.4 to 8.8 +/- 4 g/d). Serum creatinine (Scr) remained stable during captopril treatment in group I, whereas three patients in group II showed a worsening of renal function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nephrotic proteinuria without hypoalbuminemia: clinical characteristics and response to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition. 199 78
Equilibria of the binding of palmitate to
serum albumin
in adults are studied by dialysis-exchange-rate determinations. The results are used for a description of binding equilibria of fatty acids in general, as follows. 1. The reserve albumin concentration, p, for binding of palmitate is used as an approximate measure of p*, the reserve albumin concentration for binding of mixed fatty acids present in serum. 2. The total availability of fatty acids is defined as C*/p*, where C* is the total concentration of non-esterified fatty acid. 3. The fatty-acid-binding property of albumin is described by L* = p*/P = alpha C*/P, where P is the albumin concentration. The numerical value of alpha is -0.05. The above parameters are measured in sera from four healthy volunteers, in whom large variations of serum fatty acid concentration occurred. A group of 64 healthy students showed considerable variation of L* from one individual to another. It is found that L* decrease significantly with increasing body mass index (body mass divided by the square of the body length). In 42 patients with diabetes type I, L* was independent of body mass index. These findings are consistent with a previously formulated hypothesis of mechanism of
obesity
.
...
PMID:Binding of long-chain fatty acids to serum albumin in healthy humans. Relationship to obesity. 202 68
Binding equilibria of valproate (2-n-propyl-pentanoic acid anion) with defatted human
serum albumin
were studied by equilibrium dialysis in a 66 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, 37 degrees. Three hundred and fifty-six observed points for bound versus free valproate concentration were obtained and analyzed in terms of stepwise binding. It was found that the best fit resulted from a model in which 67% of the albumin was capable of binding valproate, whereas 33% did not bind. Thirty acceptable variants of the curve fitting were generated in order to assess the variation of the binding constants. The binding albumin component combines with three molecules of valproate with high affinity and with at least seven additional molecules that are loosely bound. Saturation of the protein cannot be reached. At very high concentrations of free valproate (above 10 mM) irreversible changes in the albumin take place, resulting in poor reproducibility in the amount of bound valproate. In the presence of palmitate, 0.5, 1, and 1.5 mol/mol of albumin, binding of valproate is decreased by a competitive mechanism. It is hypothesized that
obesity
, developing as a complication of valproate treatment of epilepsy, results from increased availability of long-chain fatty acids due to competitive valproate binding.
...
PMID:Valproate and palmitate binding to human serum albumin: an hypothesis on obesity. 211 Oct 5
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