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Query: UMLS:C0042875 (vitamin E deficiency)
916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this report is to present an overview on vitamin E distribution, requirements, absorption and biochemical and nutritional aspects. A continuous interest in biochemical functions is recently developed and vitamin E certainly plays an important role throughout the body. The best known of its effects and still actively considered in recent years is the role as an important biological antioxidant. The red blood cell is an ideal model for studying the antioxidant role of vitamin E in cell membranes. Nutritional deprivation is a rare occurrence in developed countries. In prematurely delivered newborns the deficiency is due to marginal stores and to transient malabsorption but it can also be iatrogenic. In infants and adults vitamin E deficiency does occur in syndromes characterized by increased consumption or reduced absorption. Various gastrointestinal disorders induce, with steatorrhoea, marked alteration of vitamin E levels. Cystic fibrosis (CF), the commonest cause of pancreatic insufficiency during the first decades of life, is of particular interest. The fat malabsorption, often severe, may not well respond to pancreatic therapy and the hepatobiliary disease, increased in frequency with improved survival, induce a further reduction in intestinal bile salt concentration. Several manifestations have been attributed to vitamin E deficiency in CF and, although overt neurological complications seem to be relatively uncommon, it is recommended to maintain an adequate supplementation.
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PMID:[Vitamin E: physiology and pathology]. 328 49

Interest in malondialdehyde (MDA) metabolism stems from its formation as a product of lipid peroxidation in the diet and in the tissues; its reactivity with functional groups of nucleic acid bases, proteins and phospholipids; its mutagenicity in bacteria, and its reported skin and liver carcinogenicity in animals. Administration of the Na enol salt of MDA in the drinking water of mice over a range of 0.1-10.0 micrograms/g/day for 12 mo produced dose-dependent hyperplastic and neoplastic changes in liver nuclei and increased mortality at the highest level but produced no gross hepatic tumors. Addition of MDA to the medium of rat skin fibroblasts grown in culture caused nuclear abnormalities at concentrations as low as 10(-6) M despite an uptake of only 4%. [1,3-14C]MDA was rapidly oxidized to [14C]acetate in rat liver mitochondria and to 14CO2 in vivo; however, approximately 10% of the radioactivity was recovered in the urine. Chromatographic analysis of rat urine revealed the presence of several compounds which yield MDA on acid hydrolysis. Total MDA excretion increased in response to conditions which stimulate lipid peroxidation in vivo, including vitamin E deficiency, Fe or CCl4 administration, and enrichment of the tissues with PUFA. N-acetyl-e-(2-propenal)lysine was identified as a major urinary metabolite of MDA in rat and human urine. This compound is derived primarily from N-alpha-(2-propenal)lysine released in digestion as a product of reactions between MDA and the epsilon-amino groups of N-terminal lysine residues in food proteins. However, its presence in the urine of animals fasted or fed MDA-free diets indicates that it is also formed in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The metabolism of malondialdehyde. 371 50

A girl with cystic fibrosis who developed a neurological syndrome probably secondary to vitamin E deficiency at the age of 10 years is described. The severity of the deficiency and the early development of neurological features probably result from reduced intraluminal bile salt concentrations in addition to the pancreatic insufficiency.
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PMID:Symptomatic vitamin E deficiency in cystic fibrosis. 397 91

Although malondialdehyde (MDA) is extensively metabolized to CO2, small amounts are nevertheless excreted in an acid-hydrolyzable form in rat urine. In this study, urinary MDA was evaluated as an indicator of lipid peroxidation in the diet and in the tissues. MDA was released from its bound form(s) in urine by acid treatment and determined as the TBA-MA derivative by HPLC. MDA excretion by the rat was found to be responsive to oral administration of the Na enol salt and to peroxidation of dietary lipids. Urinary MDA also increased in response to the increased lipid peroxidation in vivo produced by vitamin E deficiency and by administration of iron nitrilotriacetate. Chronic feeding of a diet containing cod liver oil led to increases in MDA excretion which were not completely eliminated by fasting or feeding a peroxide-free diet, indicating that there was increased lipid peroxidation in vivo. MDA excretion was not responsive to Se deficiency or CCl4 administration. DPPD, a biologically active antioxidant, but not BHA, a non-biologically active antioxidant, prevented the increase in MDA excretion in vitamin E deficient animals. The results indicate that MDA excretion can serve as an indicator of the extent of lipid peroxidation in the diet and, under conditions which preclude a dietary effect, as an index of lipid peroxidation in vivo.
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PMID:Urinary malondialdehyde as an indicator of lipid peroxidation in the diet and in the tissues. 652 8

In summary, we propose the following scheme (Figure 5) to describe the role of peroxidation in the pathophysiology of SCA. Sickle erythrocytes are more susceptible to peroxidation than are normal erythrocytes. This increased susceptibility to peroxidation is, in part, due to decreased blood vitamin E levels and abnormal membrane phospholipid organization induced by sickling. The peroxidative damage of sickle erythrocytes may accelerate or contribute to loss of cell deformability and to chronic hemolysis. Peroxidative damage can produce abnormal cellular properties, such as potassium leak and reduced filterability, and contribute to formation of ISCs. Increased red cell rigidity can initiate episodes of capillary obstruction, leading to vasoocclusive painful crises and to tissue infarction. Liver dysfunction as well as increased production of bilirubin secondary to hemolysis could result in bile sludging and decreased secretion of bile salts into the intestinal lumen. Reduced bile salt secretion leads to partial fat and vitamin E malabsorption. Vitamin E deficiency enhances red cell susceptibility to peroxidation and promotes a vicious cycle in SCA. Although we have not studied factors that might initiate peroxidative damage, sickle hemoglobin and excess body iron should be considered as potential sources. Our studies suggest that vitamin E supplementation to sickle-cell patients could be of clinical benefit.
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PMID:Peroxidation, vitamin E, and sickle-cell anemia. 695 61

Plasma concentrations of alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) and other analytes in Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) in Nepal were determined during typical work camp management of the elephants. Elephants foraged for food for 4-6 hr each day under the control of mahouts and were also provided daily with cut forage and supplements of unhusked rice, cane molasses, and salt. Blood samples were taken monthly for 1 yr without chemical restraint from 26 female elephants in four camps. Elephants were 6-60+ yr of age. Mean (+/-SEM) alpha-tocopherol concentration was 0.77+/-0.047 microg/ml, with a range of 0.23-1.57 microg/ml. Subadults had lower concentrations than did older elephants, and there were significant differences in mean concentrations from different camps and in mean monthly concentrations. Plasma alpha-tocopherol concentration appears to vary widely between individuals, and a single value of <0.3 microg/ml is not sufficient to diagnose incipient vitamin E deficiency. Mean (+/-SEM) plasma retinol (vitamin A) concentration was 0.063+/-0.003 microg/ml with a range of 0.01-0.12 microg/ml. Subadults had higher concentrations than did older elephants, and mean retinal values differed significantly among camps. Beta-carotene was not found in plasma. Twenty-five other analytes determined or derived were generally similar to those reported in other Asian and African (Loxodonta africana) elephants. Estimates of nutrient intake, based upon diet composition, suggested that dietary concentrations of zinc and sodium may have been marginal, but the absence of signs of any nutrient deficiencies indicates that dietary husbandry in these elephant camps was generally satisfactory.
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PMID:Plasma vitamin E and other analyte levels in Nepalese camp elephants (Elephas maximus). 980 97