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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is an important source of non-shivering thermogenesis. Increased BAT amounts have been reported to occur in association with several diseases, including congestive heart failure. The objective of the present study was to determine whether BAT accumulation occurs in patients with Chagas disease. Histological sections of peri-adrenal tissue obtained at autopsy from 259 patients were examined. Of these patients, 58 had the digestive form of Chagas disease, 50 had the cardiac form without heart failure and 201 had the cardiac form with heart failure. All cases were investigated in terms of nutritional status and classified as malnourished, normotrophic or obese according to the Quetelet index. The results showed no correlation between BAT and the patients' nutritional status, and more BAT accumulation in patients with the cardiac form of Chagas disease compared to patients with the digestive form. Similarly, a history of heart failure was correlated with greater BAT accumulation. On the basis of the present data and of information reported in the literature, we propose that chronic hypoxia may be the cause of BAT accumulation in Chagas disease patients with heart failure.
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PMID:Accumulation of brown adipose tissue in patients with Chagas heart disease. 178 Sep 87

Congestive heart failure (CHF) is most prevalent in aged individuals and elicits a spectrum of cardiovascular and muscular perturbations that impairs the ability to deliver (Qo(2)) and utilize (Vo(2)) oxygen in skeletal muscle. Whether aging potentiates the CHF-induced alterations in the Qo(2)-to-Vo(2) relationship [which determines microvascular Po(2) (Pmv(O(2)))] in resting and contracting skeletal muscle is unclear. We tested the hypothesis that old rats with CHF would demonstrate a greater impairment of skeletal muscle Pmv(O(2)) than observed in young rats with CHF. Phosphorescence quenching was utilized to measure spinotrapezius Pmv(O(2)) at rest and across the rest-to-contractions (1-Hz, 4-6 V) transition in young (Y) and old (O) male Fischer 344 Brown-Norway rats with CHF induced by myocardial infarction (mean left ventricular end-diastolic pressure >20 mmHg for Y(CHF) and O(CHF)). In CHF muscle, aging significantly reduced resting Pmv(O(2)) (32.3 +/- 3.4 Torr for Y(CHF) and 21.3 +/- 3.3 Torr for O(CHF); P < 0.05) and in both Y(CHF) and O(CHF) compared with their aged-matched counterparts, CHF reduced the rate of the Pmv(O(2)) fall at the onset of contractions. Moreover, across the on-transient and in the subsequent steady state, Pmv(O(2)) values in O(CHF) vs. Y(CHF) were substantially lower (for steady-state, 20.4 +/- 1.7 Torr for Y(CHF) and 16.4 +/- 2.0 Torr for O(CHF); P < 0.05). At rest and during contractions in CHF, the pressure driving blood-muscle O(2) diffusion (Pmv(O(2))) is substantially decreased in old animals. This finding suggests that muscle dysfunction and exercise intolerance in aged CHF patients might be due, in part, to the failure to maintain a sufficiently high Pmv(O(2)) to facilitate blood-muscle O(2) exchange and support mitochondrial ATP production.
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PMID:Aging potentiates the effect of congestive heart failure on muscle microvascular oxygenation. 1776 89