Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Benefits of immediate postinjury nutritional support remain ill defined. Seventy-five consecutive patients undergoing emergent celiotomy with an abdominal trauma index (A.T.I.) greater than 15 were randomized prospectively to a control group (no supplemental nutrition during first 5 days) or enteral-fed group. The enteral patients had a needle catheter jejunostomy (N.C.J.) placed at laparotomy with the constant infusion of an elemental diet (Vivonex HN) begun at 18 hours and advanced to 3,000 ml/day (3,000 kcal, 20 gm N2) within 72 hours. Control and enteral-fed groups were comparable with respect to demographic features, trauma mechanism, shock, colon injury, splenectomy, A.T.I., and initial nutritional assessment. Twenty (63%) of the enteral patients were maintained on the elemental diet greater than 5 days; four (12%) needed total parenteral nutrition (T.P.N.). Nine (29%) of the control patients required T.P.N. Nitrogen balance was markedly improved (p less than 0.001) in the enteral-fed group. Although visceral protein markers and overall complication rate were not significantly different, septic morbidity was greater (p less than 0.025) in the control group (abdominal infection in seven and pneumonia in two) compared to the enteral-fed patients (abdominal abscess in three). Analysis of patients with A.T.I. 15-40 disclosed sepsis in seven (26%) of the control versus one (4%) of the enteral-fed group (p less than 0.01). Our clinical experience demonstrates the feasibility of immediate postoperative enteral feeding via N.C.J. after major abdominal trauma, and suggests this early nutrition reduces septic complications in critically injured patients.
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PMID:Benefits of immediate jejunostomy feeding after major abdominal trauma--a prospective, randomized study. 309 57

Sepsis was induced by cecal ligation and puncture in male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing approximately 70 g and the animals were intravenously infused with one of four isocaloric solutions: group I (N = 16), 8.5% dextrose solution; group II (N = 16), alpha-ketoisocaproic acid (KIA, 5.1 mg/ml) in 8.5% dextrose; group III (N = 16), FreAmine HBC (containing 45% branched-chain amino acids) in 2.5% dextrose; and group IV (N = 17), FreAmine HBC in 2.5% dextrose + KIA (5.1 mg/ml). Eighteen hr after induction of sepsis, extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus (SOL) muscles were dissected with intact tendons and incubated for the study of protein synthesis and degradation, which were measured as incorporation of 14C-phenylalanine into protein and release of tyrosine into incubation medium, respectively. Urine was collected for determination of nitrogen balance. Nitrogen balance, which was equally negative in groups I and II, was significantly improved in groups III and IV and became equally positive in these groups. Protein synthesis and degradation rates in incubated EDL and SOL muscles were similar to those which we have reported previously in septic rats. Except for a higher synthetic rate in SOL in group II, no other differences in protein synthesis or degradation rates between the four experimental groups were found. Thus, the present study showed that infusion of a branched-chain amino acid-enriched solution improved nitrogen balance in septic rats. KIA alone or administered with the amino acid solution did not affect nitrogen balance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Infusion of a branched-chain amino acid-enriched solution and alpha-ketoisocaproic acid in septic rats: effects on nitrogen balance and skeletal muscle protein turnover. 339 21

Twenty mechanically ventilated patients with acute renal failure were studied on 31 occasions to determine their energy expenditure (EE) during a 2 h period before a hemodialysis. Oxygen consumption and CO2 elimination were measured continuously with a mass spectrometer system. EE (1660 +/- 48 kcal day-1) was close to the total caloric intake (1682 +/- 83 kcal day-1) and represented 1.19 +/- 0.03 times the predicted resting energy expenditure (PREE) with large inter-individual variations (0.7-1.7 PREE). EE/PREE was higher when sepsis was present (1.31 +/- 0.03 versus 1.14 +/- 0.02; p less than 0.05). Glucose oxidation rate (4.35 mg kg-1 min-1) exceeded glucose intake (2.6 mg kg-1 min-1). Respiratory quotient was 1.02 +/- 0.01. Nitrogen loss was 17.3 +/- 1.7 g day-1 and nitrogen balance -11.9 +/- 1.9 g day-1. In conclusion, EE values were scattered but never exceeded 1.7 times the PREE. Sepsis increased EE. With a nutritional support covering EE, nitrogen balance remained markedly negative and a preferential utilisation of glucose and lipogenesis occurred.
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PMID:Energy expenditure in the acute renal failure patient mechanically ventilated. 366 74

Several recent studies have suggested that solutions containing increased amounts of branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) might be useful in the treatment of patients with trauma and/or sepsis. In this study we investigated the optimal amount of BCAA in a balanced nutritional solution in an injured rat laparotomy model. The amino acid content of a standard BCAA-enriched amino acid solution was enriched to 40, 45, and 50% by the addition of equimolar amounts of the three BCAA. Rats were infused with either 3.6 cal/100 g body weight/24 hr or with 18 cal/100 g body weight/24 hr with either a 40, 45, or 50% BCAA mixture and evaluated for nitrogen balance, plasma amino acid levels, and levels of plasma blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, glucose, albumin, and blood ammonia. Nitrogen balance was negative in rats receiving only 3.6 cal/100 g body weight/24 hr, but was least negative in the group receiving 45% BCAA. Nitrogen balance was positive in groups receiving 18 cal/100 g body weight/24 hr, but was most positive in groups receiving 40 or 45% BCAA-containing solutions. Plasma amino acid patterns were least distorted in the 40 and 45% formulations. Blood ammonia was highest in the 40% BCAA group and plasma albumin was best maintained in the 45% BCAA group regardless of the amount of caloric supply. The results suggest that a 45% BCAA-enriched solution is the most appropriate in this injured rat model.
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PMID:The optimal branched-chain to total amino acid ratio in the injury-adapted amino acid formulation. 392 29

With both enteral and parenteral feedings, the amount of nutrients required depends on the degree of nutritional depletion, level of hypermetabolism, and the phase of the patient's response to illness or injury. Protein requirements are significantly increased in the critically ill. In skeletal trauma, energy needs are increased approximately 25%, in sepsis, 50%, and in severe burns, 75-100%. Energy requirements increase also but in part are met by body fat reserves. While D5W solutions were once thought to spare body proteins by reducing gluconeogenesis, it is now known that such semi-starvation regimes are deficient by omitting protein intake. Enteral and parenteral feeding techniques have developed as precise methods for administering a balance of required protein and calories. A comprehensive nutritional assessment will determine patient nutrient requirements. The marasmic patient without significant stress will generally require 30-40 kcal/kg and 1.5 g protein/kg of ideal body weight. Such support should lead to a slow weight gain and positive nitrogen balance of 2-6 g nitrogen. In the hypoalbunemic patient with concomitant stress, nitrogen retention will be limited until the stress, i.e. acute injury or infection, is relieved. Nitrogen (g):calorie (kcal) intake will average 1:80. During therapy, nutritional assessment parameters must be measured periodically to evaluate the effectiveness of the nutritional regime.
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PMID:Modern parenteral and enteral nutrition in critical care. 641 94

Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) may regulate muscle amino acid flux. Metabolic studies of both experimental animals and humans utilizing comparatively large amounts of BCAAs infused with hypocaloric glucose have shown that catabolism and proteolysis can be blunted. These studies suggested that the nitrogen-sparing properties of amino acid solutions used in postoperative trauma or sepsis might be improved by increasing the amount of BCAAs. This hypothesis was tested on ten patients undergoing operations of moderate severity utilizing a peripheral amino acid mixture with a branched-chain:non-branched-chain ratio of 45:55% given in 5% dextrose. The patients received 1.7 gm of protein equivalent/kg of ideal body weight in 5% dextrose-crystalloid solution with a concentration of 3.5% amino acids for the first 5 postoperative days. Nitrogen balance, 3-methylhistidine excretion, blood chemistries, and plasma amino acid profile tests were done daily. The results showed that nitrogen equilibrium was maintained for 5 postoperative days without any untoward effects on patients, their surgical wounds, or hepatic function. Plasma amino acids showed no significant changes from baseline with the exception of elevations of the BCAAs. We conclude that this 45% BCAA-enriched solution may be safely administered to patients with postoperative traumatic injury and results in nitrogen equilibrium over a 5-day period.
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PMID:The effect of a new branched chain--enriched amino acid solution on postoperative catabolism. 681 32

Nitrogen flux across the splanchnic bed is altered following operation, injury, and sepsis, but the individual contributions of gut and liver and their interrelationships remain undefined. Since more than 60% of whole blood amino acid nitrogen is transported as glutamine and alanine, we determined the flux of these amino acids across the gastrointestinal tract and liver in splenectomized, awake dogs during a control period and a 2 and 4 days following a standard laparotomy. Blood flow was measured in all studies and substrate flux calculated from flow and arteriovenous and portovenous concentration differences. Portal blood flow decreased by 25% following operation from a control value of 26 +/- 2 ml/kg body weight . min to 19 +/- 2 (P less than 0.05). Total hepatic blood flow did not change significantly after operation, but the individual contributions of the hepatic artery and portal vein were altered; hepatic artery flow increased from a control value of 10 +/- 1 ml/kg . min to 23 +/- 3 (P less than 0.001). Glutamine uptake by teh gastrointestinal tract nearly doubled from a control value of 0.75 +/- 0.16 microM/kg . min to 1.31 +/- 0.13 (P less than 0.05) on postoperative day 2. This increase in flux occurred despite a diminished arterial concentration and a reduced portal blood flow, indicating that extraction of glutamine by the gastrointestinal tract was not primarily dependent on increased arterial concentration. Alanine, on the other hand, was released by the gut at a rate of 1.97 +/- 0.37 microM/kg . min in controls and decreased to 0.81 +/- 0.13 microM/kg . min (P less than 0.05) in dogs that had operation. Glutamine was released by the liver in control dogs at a rate of 1.59 +/- 0.59 microM/kg . min but switched to an organ of slight glutamine uptake (0.31 +/- 0.31, P less than 0.01) on postoperative day 2. Alanine uptake by the liver doubled from 2.94 +/- 0.29 to 5.46 +/- 0.63 microM/kg . min (P less than 0.05) following surgical stress. The gastrointestinal tract plays an active metabolic role in the processing of amino acids following operation and may be a key regulatory of interorgan substrate flux following injury and infection.
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PMID:Postoperative alteration of arteriovenous exchange of amino acids across the gastrointestinal tract. 687 48

The potential of nutritional assessment parameters in predicting sepsis in burn patients was investigated. Sixty-two consecutive patients (mean age 41 years) with an average burn size of 19% were studied. Values were obtained on postburn day 10 for serum albumin, transferrin, nitrogen balance, total lymphocyte count, skin test reactivity, and percentage of ideal body weight. Parameters predictive of imminent septic episode included serum albumin less than 3.0 g/dl (p less than 0.001), total lymphocyte count less than 1500/mm3 (p less than 0.001), anergy (p less than 0.001), and serum transferrin less than 150 mg/dl (p less than 0.001). Nitrogen balance and percentage of ideal body weight were not found to contribute to group discrimination.
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PMID:Nutritional indicators of postburn bacteremic sepsis. 719 89

A recombinant (r) NH2-terminal fragment of bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein, rBPI23, was shown to inhibit murine macrophage nitric oxide (NO) production elicited by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) plus interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). Normal mouse plasma amplified NO synthesis (measured as NO2- release) at LPS concentrations of 1-10 ng/mL, and antibody to the plasma LPS-binding protein (LBP) partially inhibited NO2- release in the presence of normal mouse plasma. rBPI23 (1 microgram/mL) effectively inhibited LPS-dependent NO2- release in the presence or absence of normal mouse plasma. Fifty percent inhibition of IFN-gamma/LPS-elicited NO2- production or of binding of fluoresceinated LPS was obtained with approximately 0.2 microgram/mL rBPI23. These results provide a basis for studies of rBPI23 effects on NO synthase activity in murine models of gram-negative sepsis.
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PMID:Bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein inhibits induction of macrophage nitric oxide production by lipopolysaccharide. 827 72

alpha2-HS glycoprotein is a major protein of human plasma whose function is still obscure. A proteolytically processed form of alpha2-HS glycoprotein lacking a segment of 40 amino acid residues bridging its heavy and light chain portions ("connecting peptide") has been described suggesting that this peptide is released by post-translational processing to fulfill biological role(s) of alpha2-HS glycoprotein. To test this hypothesis we investigated how the connecting peptide is released from the parental molecule by limited proteolysis. We developed monoclonal antibodies to various portions of the connecting peptide and its NH2-terminal flanking region which cross-react with the native alpha2-HS glycoprotein. Purified alpha2-HS glycoprotein from human plasma was subjected to limited proteolysis by proteinases including trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase plasmin, kallikrein, thrombin, and renin. Immunoprint analysis of the proteolytic digests indicated that alpha2-HS glycoprotein is readily cleaved in its connecting peptide region. NH2-terminal amino sequence analysis of the generated fragments demonstrated that a single proteinase, chymotrypsin, cleaves the critical Leu-Leu bond flanking the NH2-terminal portion of the connecting peptide region. Most but not all of the other proteinase cleavage sites map to a short stretch of 9 residues located in the center portion of the connecting peptide region. Immunoprint analysis of plasma samples from patients with sepsis demonstrate that the connecting peptide region is cleaved under pathological conditions. Our results indicate that the connecting peptide and/or fragments thereof are readily releasable from alpha2-HS glycoprotein in vitro and in vivo.
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PMID:Limited proteolysis of human alpha2-HS glycoprotein/fetuin. Evidence that a chymotryptic activity can release the connecting peptide. 894 Jan 98


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