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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (encephalopathy)
18,178 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Regional amino acids and brain neurotransmitters were studied in 33 normal and 32 rats with sepsis (induced by cecal ligation and puncture) infused with different amino acid formulations. The brain amino acid pattern during sepsis showed increased concentrations of most essential and six of the nonessential amino acids. The most consistent finding was the accumulation of indoleamines in all six brain regions studied during sepsis; increased brain tryptophan levels presumably resulted in enhanced metabolism of serotonin (5HT), increased production of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5HIAA), and a high 5HT/5HIAA ratio. Infusion of branched-chain amino acid-enriched formulas restored brain amino acid and neurotransmitter profiles, decreasing levels of tryptophan, tyrosine, 5HIAA, and 5HT/5HIAA ratios while increasing norepinephrine levels in some regions. These alterations in brain neurotransmitter metabolism may be at least partially responsible for the development of septic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Regional brain amino acid and neurotransmitter derangements during abdominal sepsis and septic encephalopathy in the rat. The effect of amino acid infusions. 241 5

The latest observations suggest that a decreased level of serum branched-chain amino acids plays a role in the pathogenesis of liver encephalopathy. In this study we analysed the behaviour of the serum concentrations of: ammonia, phenols, alpha-amino nitrogen, tyrosine, phenylalanine and tryptophan in rats with thioacetamide-induced liver encephalopathy. The first group of rats was on protein-free diet and Aminosteril-Hepa (Fresenius FRG)--an amino acids solution with predominance of branched-chain amino acids. The second group of rats received a diet with 1 g/kg b.w. of protein daily. The levels of biochemical indices were analysed 0, 3, 5 and 7 days after liver encephalopathy development. The results of our study indicate a favourable influence of infusion a branched-chain amino acids solution (Aminosteril-Hepa) on the biochemical indices, particularly phenols and alpha-amino nitrogen in experimental liver encephalopathy.
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PMID:[Studies of the effect of a protein-free diet and branched-chain amino acids (preparation Aminosteril-Hepa) on selected biochemical indicators in chronic experimental hepatic encephalopathy]. 251 93

The uremic syndrome is multifactorial, and affects most tissues and organs. Disturbances in protein and amino acid metabolism may play important roles, especially in chronic uremia, either directly or by production of toxic metabolites, with resultant negative nitrogen (N) balance, muscle wasting, reduced protein synthesis, and characteristically abnormal intracellular free amino acid concentrations. There are also grossly abnormal amino acid levels in the plasma of uremic patients, e.g., increases in conjugated amino acids, high levels of several nonessential and low levels of essential amino acids. The ratios of tyrosine/phenylalanine and of valine/glycine are decreased. The low tryptophan levels may contribute to encephalopathy as a result of an imbalance in neurotransmitter synthesis. Citrulline is found in excess; the explanation is unresolved. There are elevated concentrations of the sulfur-containing amino acids: cystine, taurine, cystathionine, and homocysteine. Excess of the latter is implicated in the atherogenesis of renal failure. Disturbed metabolism and interorgan exchange of amino acids in the uremic state explains some of the abnormalities in tissue and plasma concentrations of individual amino acids. Enzymatic defects are involved in the disturbed metabolism of branched chain amino acids (BCAA), with possible antagonism among them, which impairs growth and amino acid utilization. Carbohydrate intolerance, associated with insensitivity of peripheral tissues to insulin and hyperinsulinemia, elicits decreased plasma BCAA. Protein synthesis rates in normal and pathological conditions are more closely related to the intracellular amino acid pool than to plasma amino acid levels. Concentrations of individual amino acids in the plasma pool are poor indicators of their intracellular concentrations. Muscle contains the largest pool of protein and free amino acids in the body. In chronic renal failure patients, the intracellular concentrations of valine, threonine, lysine, and carnosine are low. With low protein diets and in hemodialysis, serine, tyrosine, and taurine often are also low. The low taurine may be related to fatigue and to uremic cardiomyopathies. The commonly used amino acid supplements generally fail to correct the intracellular amino acid deficits. A "New Formula" has been developed to correct these intracellular amino acid abnormalities, and to supplement a low protein diet. It provides more valine than leucine, increased tyrosine and threonine, and less histidine, leucine, isoleucine, lysine, methionine, and phenylalanine than in formulas customarily used for patients with chronic renal failure. It is uncertain whether other ap
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PMID:Amino acid metabolism in uremia. 267 58

Cerebral blood flow (CBF), measured by the non-invasive 133-Xenon inhalation method, plasma levels of ammonia (NH3) and free tryptophan (fTRP) were determined in 30 cirrhotic patients without overt encephalopathy. Psychometric evaluation detected subclinical hepatic encephalopathy (SHE) in 20 of them, and was normal in the other 10. A significant CBF difference (p less than 0.05) was found between the SHE and the non-SHE patients. fTRP levels were significantly (p less than 0.05) higher in patients with SHE than in those without SHE, and a significant negative correlation (p = 0.003) was found between CBF values and fTRP in the whole group of patients. NH3 did not differ in the two subgroups and did not correlate with CBF values. It is concluded that CBF could have some implications in SHE, although its relevance is still unclear. The negative correlation between CBF and fTRP prompts further investigation concerning the relationships between plasma fTRP, brain serotonin, cerebral metabolism and blood flow in the development of brain derangement during cirrhosis.
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PMID:Cerebral blood flow and plasma free tryptophan in cirrhotics with and without hepatic encephalopathy. 279 14

This study compared the effect of a vegetable diet with an animal protein diet on various aspects of nitrogen metabolism to identify what components of the vegetable diet might be causing beneficial therapeutic effects in hepatic encephalopathy. Vegetable diets contained 4.5-fold greater amounts of fiber (56 +/- 3 g/day) and reduced amounts of methionine, tyrosine, and tryptophan. In 6 stable cirrhotic subjects without encephalopathy, vegetable diets caused a significant reduction in the urea production rate from 106 +/- 5 to 89 +/- 5 mg X kg-1 X 24 h-1 of urea nitrogen. This was mainly accounted for by a fall in urinary urea output. Vegetable diets also caused a fall in total urinary nitrogen, which was accounted for by the fall in urea nitrogen, and a comparable increase in fecal nitrogen from 12 +/- 2 to 28 +/- 5 mg X kg-1 X 24 h-1. The fecal bacterial fraction contained 63% of the increase in stool nitrogen. Most plasma amino acids, including methionine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, as well as total and free tryptophan, were unchanged. The effect of vegetable diets on nitrogen metabolism can be mainly accounted for by the increased intake of dietary fiber and increased incorporation and elimination of nitrogen in fecal bacteria.
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PMID:Effects of vegetable diets on nitrogen metabolism in cirrhotic subjects. 299 Oct 68

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels were measured in a dog model of spontaneous chronic portosystemic encephalopathy. Dogs with congenital portacaval shunts (intra- or extra-hepatic) develop neurological features of abnormal psychomotor behaviour and depressed consciousness that are consistent with the symptoms of chronic portosystemic encephalopathy in humans. In the five dogs studied, plasma ammonia was elevated, as was CSF tryptophan, both usual biochemical abnormalities in portosystemic encephalopathy. CSF levels of GABA in five dogs with portosystemic encephalopathy (100 +/- 13 pmol/ml) were not significantly different from those in five control dogs (96 +/- 14 pmol/ml). CSF levels of GABA were not altered after ammonia infusion. If enhanced GABA-ergic neurotransmission, due to influx of gut-derived GABA into the brain, is responsible for the pathophysiology of chronic portosystemic encephalopathy in this model, it is not reflected by increased levels of GABA in CSF.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid gamma-aminobutyric acid levels in dogs with chronic portosystemic encephalopathy. 379 75

Patients with stupor or coma from fulminant hepatic failure were found to have high cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of homovanillic acid (HVA) and 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA), metabolites of dopamine and serotonin respectively. Excessive amounts of their precursors-phenylalanine and tyrosine and free tryptophan-were found in the patients' plasma. Methionine, which participates in dopamine degradation, was also much increased. Similar disturbances were found in patients suffering an acute exacerbation of chronic encephalopathy. These abnormalities would be consistent with other evidence of an increased turnover of serotonin and possibly dopamine in the brain during hepatic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Dopamine and serotonin metabolism in hepatic encephalopathy. 481 89

Patients with uraemic encephalopathy were previously found to have low total tryptophan (bound plus free), but high free tryptophan concentrations in the plasma and high CSF tryptophan concentrations. The 5-hydroxytryptamine metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid was also raised in the CSF. A study of the effect of dialysis treatment on these substances in chronic uraemic patients with and without dialysis dementia is described. After an episode of dialysis the patients without dialysis dementia showed increased plasma total tryptophan and decreased free tryptophan. These changes were associated with a decrease of plasma free fatty acid. The patients with dialysis dementia did not show changes in tryptophan, but plasma free fatty acid rose. CSF concentrations of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid fell moderately in both groups of patients on dialysis.
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PMID:Effect of dialysis on plasma and CSF tryptophan and CSF 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid in advanced renal disease. 615 56

It has been proposed that hepatic encephalopathy and malnutrition in cirrhosis can be reversed by infusion of a protein formula (F080) enriched with branched-chain amino acids (valine, leucine, isoleucine) and containing decreased amounts of aromatic amino acids (phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan). This hypothesis was tested by measuring changes in encephalopathy status, plasma ammonia, amino acid profile, and liver function during seven metabolic balance studies in three patients with cirrhosis and subclinical encephalopathy given increasing amounts (20-100 g/d) of F080. The results showed the following: 1) positive nitrogen balance was achieved only with 80 and 100 g F080/day; 2) plasma ammonia fell during negative, but increased during positive nitrogen balance; 3) plasma tyrosine and cystine fell significantly (p less than 0.05) with all intakes of F080; 4) the abnormal branched-chain to aromatic amino acid ratio was reversed; 5) extracellular volume was expanded in all patients; 6) albumin, bilirubin, prothrombin time became abnormal; and 7) encephalopathy did not significantly change from baseline. It is concluded that, in this population, F080 is an inadequate nutritional formula when given as the sole protein source because it produces hypotyrosinemia and hypocystinemia. The marked changes in the ratio of branched-chain to aromatic amino acids are not accompanied by improvement in encephalopathy.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition with F080 in cirrhotics with subclinical encephalopathy. 640 94

The etiology of uremic encephalopathy remains largely unknown. In order to elucidate the role of amino acid changes in uremic encephalopathy, the free amino acids in serum and cerebral cortex were measured in the experimental uremic models. The rats weighing 200 g underwent bilateral ureteral ligation for 48 hours (acute uremia), while the other animals were kept for 4 months after unilateral nephrectomy followed by partial 2/3 nephrectomy of the remaining kidney (chronic uremia). They were confirmed to develop chemical changes compatible with uremia showing markedly elevated serum levels of BUN, creatinine and K+, and were compared with the sham-operated controls. The amino acid patterns, obtained from serum and cerebral cortex, were essentially identical in both acute and chronic uremia. In serum, aspartic acid, glycine and 3-methylhistidine were significantly elevated, and in addition citrulline, alpha-aminoadipic acid, cystine and gamma-aminobutyric acid specifically appeared in uremia. On the contrary, glutamic acid, leucine, lysine, tryptophan, tyrosine and valine were significantly reduced. Tyrosine/phenylalanine ratio, valine/glycine ratio, essential amino acids/non essential amino acids ratio were also apparently reduced in uremia. In cerebral cortex, aspartic acid, glutamine, glycine, histidine, ornithine, phenylalanine, phosphoethanolamine and taurine were significantly elevated, whereas 1-methylhistidine and 3-methylhistidine were specifically detected. Carnocine, glutamic acid and ornithine disclosed a significant reduction in uremia. The above complicated changes in cerebral cortex could not be explained simply by the enhanced permeability of the blood-brain barrier, or by the accelerated ammonia fixation. Therefore, it was suggested that the amino acid levels in cerebral cortex vary under the control of the sophisticated mechanism.
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PMID:[A comparative study of free amino acid levels in serum and cerebral cortex in uremic rat]. 650 56


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