Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
While
malnutrition
attending cancer cachexia may be associated with variable losses of body fat, lipid metabolism has been only minimally studied. To clarify potential aberrations of lipid metabolism in weight losing cancer patients, the whole body rate of lipolysis was determined in 9 cancer patients in the postabsorptive state and compared to that in 5 normal subjects. A primed-three stage infusion of glycerol was used to measure plasma glycerol clearance and turnover. A positive correlation between glycerol turnover and plasma concentration was demonstrated in both cancer patients (r = 0.72) and in normal subjects (r = 0.81). Glycerol turnover rate in cancer patients (2.05 +/- 0.14 mumol X kg-1 X min-1) was not different from that in normals (2.31 +/- 0.50); while glycerol clearance in cancer patients (1.72 +/- 0.13 L/min) was significantly lower (P less than 0.025) by 32% than that in normals. This study demonstrates that the whole body lipolytic rate in cancer patients is not different from healthy normals. As a consequence, the loss of body fat in patients with cancer cachexia may be due to a reduced rate of lipogenesis rather than augmented lipolysis as is observed in nonmalignant
malnutrition
,
starvation
, or injury.
...
PMID:Cancer cachexia and the rate of whole body lipolysis in man. 395 2
Hand grip dynamometry was studied in 109 normally nourished and 26 malnourished patients. The grip strength was 37,5 +/- 9,9 kg/m2 in normal men, 30,5 +/- 14,4 kg/m2 in men with carcinoma of the oesophagus (
starvation
-adapted) and 22,0 +/- 9,2 kg/m2 in catabolic men (P less than 0,001). Normal women had a grip strength of 31,6 +/- 7,5 kg/m2 compared with 22,3 +/- 7,0 in catabolic women (P = 0,083). Hand grip dynamometry fell with age (r = 0,69 men; r = 0,57 women), although the correlation was only statistically significant in women (P less than 0,05). There was a strong correlation between right and left hand grip (r = 0,84 men; r = 0,86 women), but hand grip did not correlate well with other indices of nutritional status. Although hand grip dynamometry is a quick, easy and reproducible test, and grip strength is reduced in
malnutrition
, it cannot replace other tests of nutritional status.
...
PMID:Nutritional assessment by hand grip dynamometry. 404 77
Jejunal disappearance rates of glycine (a model for neutral amino acid absorption), triglycine (a model for peptide transport), and tetraglycine (a model for brush-border membrane hydrolysis) were investigated by an in situ perfusion technique before and after 2 wk of
starvation
in seven obese volunteers. The three test solutions of glycine, triglycine, and tetraglycine were equivalent in glycine content. Before
starvation
glycine absorption was greatest from the triglycine solution and smallest from the glycine solution.
Starvation
significantly decreased glycine absorption from both glycine and triglycine solutions, but not from the tetraglycine solution. However, glycine absorption was still significantly greater from the triglycine and tetraglycine solutions than from the glycine solution.
Starvation
had no significant effect on the disappearance rate of triglycine, but it increased the disappearance rate of tetraglycine. We conclude that a)
starvation
has different effects on functions of mucosal brush-border membrane, for example, it reduces amino acid absorption but enhances peptide hydrolysis; and b) the greater amino acid absorption from peptides is maintained even after 2 wk of
starvation
, suggesting that peptides are superior to free amino acids as the nitrogen source for enteral nutrition if employed in
malnutrition
.
...
PMID:Effect of starvation on amino acid and peptide transport and peptide hydrolysis in humans. 406 43
The role of dietary protein deficiency in kwashiorkor is uncertain, although it has been shown not to be involved in the famine oedema of adults. A study of six different diets given to 103 children with oedematous
malnutrition
showed that the rate of loss of oedema was strongly correlated with the dietary energy intake (r = 0.75) but not with the protein intake (r = 0.03). 66 patients given a very-low protein diet (2.5% protein energy) lost oedema as fast as those given five times as much protein. The energy intake above which oedema resolved and below which oedema accumulated was 245-270 KJ/kg/day. Because energy deficiency is not invariably associated with oedema it cannot be the only factor involved, and the necessary dietary component(s) must therefore have been present in surfeit in all the therapeutic diets. This could be potassium together with factors necessary for its retention. The accessory ingredients must be low in foods associated with human and experimental nutritional oedema. It is suggested that protein deficiency is not the cause of the oedema of kwashiorkor and that there is no need to postulate a different pathogenesis for this oedema from
starvation
oedema of adults.
...
PMID:Protein deficiency, energy deficiency, and the oedema of malnutrition. 612 17
The nature and mechanism of the pancreatic exocrine dysfunction in diabetes mellitus were evaluated in vitro using isolated pancreatic acini prepared from streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. The content of amylase and ribonuclease in diabetic acini was approximately 0.5 and 50% of the normal content, respectively. Further, reduced amounts of both enzymes were secreted by diabetic acini in response to both cholecystokinin (CCK) and carbamylcholine. However, when enzyme secretion was normalized relative to initial acinar contents, both normal and diabetic acini released enzymes at a comparable maximal rate. The time course of the release of these enzymes, and newly synthesized protein were similar in both acini. In normal acini, the effect of CCK was maximal at a concentration of 100 pM; higher concentrations led to submaximal enzyme release. The dose-response curve in diabetic acini was similarly shaped, but shifted three-fold towards higher concentration. The mobilization of cellular Ca(2+) in response to CCK was also shifted. In contrast to these results with CCK, the dose-response curve to carbamylcholine was unaltered by diabetes. The observed effects were confirmed to be due to insulin deficiency and not due to direct toxic effect of streptozotocin on acinar cells or
malnutrition
. Streptozotocin had no acute effect on acini when measured 24 h after administration, and alloxan, another beta cell toxin, induced similar changes in acinar enzyme content and secretory response. Moreover, the administration of exogenous insulin to diabetic rats returned the content of pancreatic amylase and the secretory response to CCK towards normal.
Starvation
for 48 h, although inducing a significant weight loss, did not mimic the effects of diabetes. The present studies demonstrate two major abnormalities in pancreatic exocrine secretion in the diabetic rat: (a) the content of certain digestive enzymes is markedly altered, leading to an altered amount of zymogen secretion, (b) the sensitivity to CCK is selectively reduced, most likely related to a defect in receptor activated transmembrane signaling.
...
PMID:Effect of diabetes mellitus on the regulation of enzyme secretion by isolated rat pancreatic acini. 617 17
Three months after gastric partitioning for morbid obesity, two patients developed an unusual and severe form of polyneuropathy that affected their sense of position maximally. This disorder produced severe ataxia of the upper extremities and trunk, and pseudochorea. One patient died and the autopsy showed an extensive demyelinating polyneuropathy. Neuronal cell bodies in the anterior horns and dorsal root ganglia showed extensive accumulations of lipofuscin and Schwann cells showed extensive accumulations of lipid. This neuronal and Schwann cell lipidosis appears to result from
starvation
of the obese and has never been reported in other forms of human
starvation
or
nutritional deficiency
.
...
PMID:Peripheral neuropathy and starvation after gastric partitioning for morbid obesity. 627 6
The duration of action of drugs (or other environmental chemicals) is dependent on their rate of metabolic deactivation and elimination from the body. Termination of activity is achieved either through excretion of the drug via the kidney and bile or, more commonly, through metabolic deactivation by enzymes of the liver and other tissues. In recent years, it has become increasingly obvious that nutritional status is one of the major factors capable of modifying the pharmacological effect of drugs. Numerous studies have indicated that the process of drug metabolism may be affected by acute
starvation
, undernutrition, protein nutrition, and deficiencies of minerals, vitamins, and lipids. Although most of the evidence concerning the effects of nutrition on the metabolism of drugs has been derived from studies on experimental animals, there is significant fragmentary human data to show that the same effects may occur in man. This paper will discuss the influence of nutritional status with particular references to protein and ascorbic acid on the metabolism of foreign compounds including drugs. The interrelationships of nutrition and the metabolism of drugs are an important consideration in view of the widespread recurrence of primary
malnutrition
in the developing countries, and of secondary
malnutrition
in more affluent societies, especially in debilitated chronically ill patients, in postoperative patients, and in those whose dietary manipulations are carried out in weight-reducing regimens. The effects of nutrition on drug metabolism may be viewed as an extension of the search for one of the environmental factors that modify drug action.
...
PMID:Effects of protein malnutrition and ascorbic acid levels on drug metabolism. 640 42
Malnourished
patients are particularly vulnerable to pulmonary infection. In this study using a rat model,
starvation
was found to depress significantly the phagocytic capability of pulmonary alveolar macrophages which play important roles in the local cellular defenses of the lung. Intracellular bactericidal function of the alveolar macrophages was not affected. On refeeding, in spite of the rats regaining their body weights and the recuperation of certain systemic immune indexes, there was a delay in the recovery of alveolar macrophage phagocytic function.
...
PMID:Depression and delayed recovery of alveolar macrophage function during starvation and refeeding. 642 57
Nutritional support is an integral and essential part of the management of 5-10 percent of hospitalized children. Children in the intensive care unit are particularly likely to develop
malnutrition
because of the nature and duration of their illness, and their inability to eat by mouth. This article reviews the physiology of
starvation
and the development of
malnutrition
in children. A method of estimating the nutritional requirements of children is presented. The techniques of nutritional support, including enteral, peripheral, and central parenteral nutrition are discussed in detail. Appropriate formulas are given for different age groups. Electrolyte, vitamin, and mineral supplements are discussed. Guidelines are provided for choosing between peripheral and central total parenteral nutrition. A monitoring protocol is suggested and complications of nutritional therapy are reviewed. Safe and effective nutritional support requires considerable investment of time and effort by members of the nutrition team.
...
PMID:Nutritional support of children in the intensive care unit. 643 86
The spine morphology of LV--pyramidal neurons in the cingulate cortex was analyzed, using drawings of apical side dendrites without ramifications, by light microscopical analysis of 5300 times magnification in GOLGI-preparations of the brains of 11 and 60 days old control rats as well as of experimental animals reared under
starvation
conditions from day 1 till day 60 of their postnatal life. The spine density and the relative frequency of three different spine types (thin, mushroom and stubby shaped) was estimated in control and undernourished animals.
Undernutrition
resulted in a considerable deficit in the spine number of 25% in 11 days old animals, respectively, of 41% in 60 days old animals. Additionally, in 60 days old undernourished rats changes in the relative frequency of the three spine types was found. To the thin type belonged 46% (68% in controls) to the mushroom shaped form 37% (19% in controls) and to the stubby type 16% (13% in controls) of all visible spines. This pattern in 60 days old undernourished rats was very similar to the pattern of 11 days old control animals (thin 43%, mushroom 36%, stubby 22%). The evaluate the differentiation of the dendritic spines during ontogenesis as well as the disturbing influence of undernutrition on these processes, additional data of the spine morphology (neck length and head area) were collected. The spines of the 11 days old animals showed a larger head area (undernourished and controls) than the young adult ones. However, the thin spine type present in 60 days old undernourished rats exhibits morphological features (extremely long necks of about 2,5 micron in comparison to 1,6 micron in controls as well as very large heads) which appeared to be quite similar to the thin and long spine type observed by PURPURA (1975) in human fetal cortex and in cortex of patients with mental retardation. This super long thin spine type is considered to be a less ripe stage of the spine development. The relative high portion of mushroom and stubby shaped spines in undernourished and young animals points to the same assumption or to degenerative changes in the experimental animals.
...
PMID:[Effect of nonspecific malnutrition on spine morphology of lamina V pyramidal cells of the cingulate area of juvenile and adult rats]. 644 22
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