Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical nutrition assessment has identified two types of protein-calorie malnutrition (PCM), a stress-induced hypoalbuminemic form (HAF-PCM) and a marasmic form (MF-PCM) generated by adaptation to starvation. This study evaluated the differences between these two patterns of PCM with regard to precipitating factors and the clinical sequelae of mortality, cost of total parenteral nutrition, length of hospitalization, and rate of sepsis and nosocomial infection. Of 220 patients receiving total parenteral nutrition over a 12-month period (0.7% of 30, 127 admissions), 180 were included in this study. HAF-PCM was diagnosed in 45% and MF-PCM in 25% of study patients. HAF-PCM was more common in older age groups. Women had PCM less often than did men (57% vs 83%), but whereas men developed both forms of PCM equally, women were more likely to develop HAF-PCM. Prolonged mechanical ventilation increased the likelihood of both patterns, whereas the presence of malignancy, concomitant organ failure, trauma, burns, or surgery did not increase the likelihood of developing either pattern of PCM. HAF-PCM increased the length of hospitalization by 29% and the cost of total parenteral nutrition by 42%. The presence of HAF-PCM increased four-fold the odds of dying, and the odds of developing nosocomial infection and sepsis almost 2.5 times above that seen in its absence. MF-PCM had no clinical effect of its own on any of the outcome parameters, but instead exerted only an interactive synergistic effect with HAF-PCM on length of hospitalization and cost of total parenteral nutrition.
...
PMID:Differentiating subtypes (hypoalbuminemic vs marasmic) of protein-calorie malnutrition: incidence and clinical significance in a university hospital setting. 164 Jun 31

Candidiasis now represents the fourth most frequent nosocomial infection both in the United States and worldwide. Candida albicans is an increasingly common threat to human health as a consequence of AIDS, steroid therapy, organ and tissue transplantation, cancer therapy, broad-spectrum antibiotics, and other immune defects. The pathogenic potential of C. albicans is intimately related to certain key processes, including biofilm formation and filamentation. Ddr48p is a damage response protein that is significantly upregulated during both biofilm formation and filamentation, but its actual function is unknown. Previous studies have indicated that this protein may be essential in C. albicans but not Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here we examined the function of Ddr48p and investigated the role of this protein in biofilm formation and filamentation. We demonstrated that this protein is not essential in C. albicans and appears to be dispensable for filamentation. However, DDR48 is required for the flocculation response stimulated by 3-aminotriazole-induced amino acid starvation. Furthermore, we examined the response of this deletion strain to a wide variety of environmental stressors and antifungal compounds. We observed several mild sensitivity or resistance phenotypes and also found that Ddr48p contributes to the DNA damage response of C. albicans. The results of this study reveal that the role of this highly expressed protein goes beyond a general stress response and impinges on a key facet of pathogenesis, namely, the ability to sense and respond to changes in the host environment.
...
PMID:Investigating the function of Ddr48p in Candida albicans. 2252 69