Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A cross-sectional epidemiological study was carried out among subjects exposed to mercury (Hg) vapour, ie, a group of 131 male workers (mean age: 30.9 yr; average duration of exposure, 4.8 yr) and a group of 54 female workers (mean age, 29.9 yr; average duration of exposure 7 yr). The results were compared with those obtained in well-matched control groups comprising 114 and 48 male and female workers, respectively. The intensity of current Hg vapour exposure was rather moderate as reflected by the levels of mercury in urine (HgU) (mean and 95th percentile: males 52 and 147 micrograms/g creatinine; females 37 and 63 micrograms/g creatinine) and of mercury in blood (mean and 95th percentile: males 1.4 and 3.7 micrograms/dl; females 0.9 and 1.4 microgram/dl). Several symptoms mainly related to the central nervous system (memory disturbances, depressive feelings, fatigue, irritability) were more prevalent in the Hg-exposed subjects. They were, however, not related to exposure parameters. In both male and female Hg-exposed workers no significant disturbances were found in short-term memory (audioverbal), simple reaction time (visual), critical flicker fusion, and colour discrimination ability. Only slight renal tubular effects were detected in Hg-exposed males and females, ie, an increased urinary beta-galactosidase activity and an increased urinary excretion of retinol-binding protein. The prevalence of these preclinical renal effects was more related to the current exposure intensity (HgU) than to the duration of exposure and was detected mainly when HgU exceeds 50 micrograms/g creatinine. Changes in hand tremor spectrum recorded with an accelerometer were found in the Hg-exposed males only. The prevalence of abnormal values for some hand tremor parameters (total velocity and total displacement in the 2-50-Hz band) was mainly increased in male workers exposed for more than 10 yr. Unlike the renal tubular effects, the preclinical signs of tremor were more related to the integrated exposure than to the current exposure. Since the female workers, who have been exposed to Hg vapour levels usually insufficient to increase their HgU levels above 50 micrograms/g creatinine, did not exhibit any change in hand tremor pattern, the results of the present study tend to validate our previously proposed biological threshold limit value of a HgU of 50 micrograms/g creatinine for workers chronically exposed to mercury vapour.
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PMID:Surveillance of workers exposed to mercury vapour:validation of a previously proposed biological threshold limit value for mercury concentration in urine. 387 86

Methods have been developed for the removal of retinol from human plasma retinol-binding protein (RBP), so as to form the retinol-free apoprotein, and for the recombination of apo-RBP with retinol to again form the holoprotein. Retinol is removed from RBP by gently shaking a solution of RBP with heptane under controlled conditions. During the shaking, retinol is gradually extracted from the RBP and into the heptane phase. The reassociation of apo-RBP with retinol is achieved by exposing a solution of apo-RBP to Celite coated with a thin film of retinol, followed by isolation of the RBP by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. This procedure results in the recombination of apo-RBP with an amount of retinol almost identical with that previously removed by extraction. The two-phase extraction procedure was used to explore some of the factors which affect the interaction of retinol with RBP. The retinol-RBP complex was most stable in the lower portion of the pH range 5.6 to 10. The rate of removal of retinol from the RBP-prealbumin complex (the form in which RBP normally circulates in plasma) was markedly less than the rate of its removal from RBP alone. The interaction of retinol with RBP appears to be stabilized by the formation of the RBP-prealbumin complex. The recombination procedure was employed to examine the specificity of the binding of retinol to RBP, by determining whether compounds other than all-trans-retinol would effectively bind to apo-RBP. Apo-RBP did not bind cholesterol, but displayed a slight affinity for phytol. The affinity of RBP for beta-carotene was minimal, whereas both retinyl acetate and retinal were bound about one-third as effectively as all-trans-retinol. In contrast, retinoic acid bound to apo-RBP almost as effectively as did retinol. Each of two isomers of retinol, 13-cis and 11,13-di-cis-retinol, bound to apo-RBP to some extent. The 13-cis isomer appeared to bind somewhat less effectively than did the 11,13-di-cis isomer. The binding of retinol to RBP is highly but not absolutely specific.
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PMID:Extraction and recombination studies of the interaction of retinol with human plasma retinol-binding protein. 433 54

Latex immunoassay is a nonisotopic method based on agglutination, by protein, of calibrated latex particles coated with a specific antibody. The assay has been automated in a simple continuous-flow system by incubating the reaction mixture in a heated mixing coil for 25 min and measuring the agglutination with a cell counter. No external shaking of the latex suspension and no additional reagent is required for the agglutination. The method can accurately and precisely quantify a wide variety of proteins in plasma and urine, including human ferritin, beta 2-microglobulin, retinol-binding protein, and albumin. Depending on the antigen-antibody system, the detection limit ranges from 10(-10) to about 10(-12) mol/L. Within- and between-assay CVs are less than 10%. In the assay of ferritin, sera are pretreated to eliminate interferences from chylomicrons, complement, and rheumatoid factor.
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PMID:Continuous-flow system for automation of latex immunoassay by particle counting. 634 48