Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0205700 (ash)
15,125 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seventy-two 3-mo-old pastel mink were fed diets that contained 0, 33, 60, 108, 194 or 350 ppm supplemental fluorine (F), as NaF, for 382 d to assess its effects on growth, fur quality, reproduction and survivability. The basal diet contained 35 ppm F as fed. No significant differences were observed in body weight gains or fur quality between the controls and any of the F-treated groups (P greater than .05). Some males fed 350 ppm supplemental F for a 4-mo period prior to pelting had weakened frontal, parietal and femoral bones that fractured during the pelting process. The F treatments had no measurable adverse effects on breeding, gestation, whelping or lactation, although only 14% of the kits whelped by females fed 350 ppm F survived to 3 wk of age. The survivability of the adult mink was adversely affected only at 350 ppm supplemental F. At the termination of the study, no differences were observed in hematologic parameters or serum calcium concentrations between the controls and treated mink (P greater than .05), but serum alkaline phosphatase activities were increased (P less than .05) by the two highest dietary F levels. Serum F levels were elevated (P less than .01) only in mink fed 194 and 350 ppm F, and urinary and femoral F concentrations in the treated animals were generally greater (P less than .05; P less than .01) than control values and were closely related with dietary F levels. Femoral ash contents of the 194 and 350 ppm F-treated mink were less than the control values (P less than .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Chronic toxicity of dietary fluorine to mink. 344 90

Bioavailability of P from defluorinated phosphate and dicalcium phosphate and the P requirement were studied with 63 male Holstein calves. A P depletion diet containing .08% total P on a dry matter basis was fed to all animals for 4 wk beginning at 6 wk of age and 61 kg weight. Calves developed typical signs of P deficiency. The depletion period was followed by a 6-wk experimental period in which the same depletion diet was used as a control. Phosphorus from each of the two sources was added to make diets containing .14, .20, and .32% total P. Source of supplemental P did not affect weight gains, feed consumption, feed efficiency, serum inorganic P, serum alkaline phosphatase, or bone ash.
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PMID:Bioavailability of phosphorus from defluorinated and dicalcium phosphates and phosphorus requirement of calves. 366 46

Turkey poults were fed a vitamin D-deficient diet and examined for clinical signs and structural changes of bone and parathyroid glands. Vitamin D-deficient poults developed ricketic changes during days 10 to 14. Control poults (deficient diet plus vitamin D) did not develop rickets. In deficient poults, lengths of proliferating-prehypertrophied zones of growth plates increased significantly in the proximal tibiotarsus but were only slightly elongated in the distal tibiotarsus. Unmineralized hypertrophic chondrocyte zones increased in length rapidly in conjunction with a decrease in the length of mineralized hypertrophic degenerative zones; this occurred more rapidly in proximal than in distal tibiotarsus. Other ricketic changes included decreases in bone ash, total femoral bone ash (calcium, phosphorus, magnesium), bone length, and body weight. Plasma alkaline phosphatase was increased, calcium was normal, and phosphorus was normal or elevated. Parathyroids were hyperplastic and had foci of degeneration. Vitamin D3 metabolites 25OHD3, 1,25(OH)2D3, and 24,25(OH)2D3 were rapidly depleted. Increase in bone ash Ca/P ratios in deficient poults suggests that phosphorus may be selectively released from ricketic bone. Low 25OHD3 and 1,25(OH)2D3 of control poults early in the experiment suggests that 1,400 IU of vitamin D3/kg of feed may not be an adequate level of vitamin D3 for growing turkey poults.
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PMID:Pathology of vitamin D deficiency in growing turkeys. 375 Jul 40

Sodium fluoride (NaF) is the single most effective agent for increasing bone volume in the osteoporotic skeleton. However, the mechanism of fluoride-stimulated bone formation is not known, and investigation has been hampered by the lack of a suitable animal model. Young chicks show a rapid skeletal response to NaF that resembles the human skeletal response. This occurs at serum fluoride concentrations comparable to those obtained in humans. Fourteen-day-old chicks treated with NaF (4.2 mM NaF in the drinking water) for 2 weeks showed increases in bone-forming surface in the tibial metaphysis (130% of untreated controls, P less than 0.002), with no change in the number of osteoblasts per length of forming surface (104% of control). The NaF dose dependence of the change in bone-forming surface was biphasic, being optimal at 23 microM fluoride. Linear correlations were observed between dietary NaF and serum fluoride (r = 0.996, P less than 0.001), and serum fluoride and bone fluoride concentrations (r = 0.98, P less than 0.001). Correlations were also observed between the amount of alkaline phosphatase activity in the tibia and the serum fluoride concentration (r = 0.88, P less than 0.03), the serum fluoride concentration and the tibial ash weight (r = 0.93, P less than 0.01), and the bone fluoride concentration and tibial ash weight (r = 0.95, P less than 0.01). Preliminary studies of the time dependence of the skeletal fluoride response in young chicks revealed no difference between 2 weeks and 4 weeks of treatment (bone-forming surface increased to 124% and 139% of controls in separate studies, P less than 0.01 for each).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Characterization of a rapidly responding animal model for fluoride-stimulated bone formation. 376 9

A significantly lower alkaline phosphatase activity was recorded in the arterial blood of cows with higher milk efficiency. They also had higher sugar contents in their blood: highly significantly in arterial blood and significantly in venous blood after milking. As to the other blood components, the differences are low and insignificant. A significant positive relationship between the daily milk yield and the content of ash in blood (mainly in venous blood before milking), highly significant positive relationship between protein content in arterial blood and daily milk yield, and significant to highly significant negative relationship between the activity of alkaline phosphatase in arterial and venous blood before milking and the level of gamma-globulins in arterial blood were recorded in the group of cows with higher milk output. In the group of cows with lower milk production, significant to highly significant negative relationships were obtained between protein content in blood and the daily milk yield (in arterial and venous blood before milking).
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PMID:[Relation between the biochemical composition of the blood of cows and variations in milk production]. 392 Aug 6

During the evaluation of the biochemical components of the arterial and venous blood of cows before and after milking, an insignificantly higher content of ash was found in the blood of the cows of Black-Pied Lowland breed, as compared with the Slovak Pied breed. The difference in the activity of alkaline phosphatase was found to be significant: the higher alkaline phosphatase activity was recorded in the blood of the cows of Slovak Pied breed than in the cows of Black-Pied Lowland cattle of the same age and in the same stage of lactation. A positive relationship was found between the milk yield and albumin level in the blood of the dairy cows of Black-Pied Lowland cattle; in the same breed a negative relationship was found between venous blood before milking and the level of gamma-globulins.
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PMID:[Relation between biochemical components in the blood of cows of various strains and the daily milk yield]. 392 82

Three replicates of a randomized complete-block design in a 3 x 3 factorial arrangement of treatments involving 141 pigs were conducted to evaluate the effect of low P intake on various response criteria in swine from 65 to 95 kg body weight. Total dietary P levels of .09, .21 and .31% were each fed in a Ca:P ratio of 1.1, 1.5:1 or 2:1 for a 35-d experimental period. The basal diet was formulated using corn starch, dextrin and a soy protein concentrate with monosodium phosphate and limestone supplying desired treatment levels of Ca and P. Blood and bones were collected for mineral analysis. Gain and feed performance responses were not affected by Ca:P ration or dietary P level for the 35-d period. Serum inorganic P concentrations declined as Ca:P ratio increased, but increased as dietary P increased. Serum alkaline phosphatase activity increased with higher Ca:P ratios, and decreased as dietary P level increased. Percent bone ash was not influenced by Ca:P ratio, but increased as dietary P level increased. Bone-bending moment was influenced by Ca:P ratio, and increased linearly as dietary P increased. Dietary P level resulted in a linear increase in total bone and its ash component weight, and in the accretion of the ash and organic matrix component. These data suggest that between 65 to 95 kg body weight, percent bone ash was affected by dietary P level, while bone-bending moment, bone component weights, their accretion, both dietary p level and Ca:P ratio.
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PMID:Biological characteristics for assessing low phosphorus intake in finishing swine. 395 2

Studies were conducted to determine the nutritional interrelationship between different fat sources, vitamin D3 (vit D) and excess dietary vitamin A (vit A) in the growing chick. Birds tolerated as much as 30 times the recommended level of vit A without compromising performance or skeletal development as measured by bone ash. The response to excess dietary vit A was not influenced by the type of dietary lipid (corn oil, tallow, or poultry oil). No nutritional interaction between vit A (1,500, 15,000, or 45,000 IU/kg) and vit D (100 or 1000 ICU/kg) was detected as measured by growth, bone ash, growth hormone, incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia (TD), or rickets. Serum alkaline phosphatase activity, however, was significantly affected by vit A, vit D, and age of the chicks. The higher vit D level significantly enhanced growth, bone ash, and reduced incidence of rickets, although it had no effect on incidence of TD.
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PMID:Excess dietary vitamin A in the growing chick: effect of fat source and vitamin D. 396 Aug 10

The effect of mild, non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) on bone calcification and calcium (Ca) homeostasis was studied in growing rats (males and females). The diabetic state was characterized by mild insulin deficiency, plasma levels being 73% of controls, and mild hyperglycemia, with nonfasting plasma glucose levels of 1.5 times normal. There was no difference in plasma levels of Ca, phosphate (Pi), magnesium (Mg), alkaline phosphatase, immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH), calcitonin, 25-(OH)vitamin D (25[OH]D), 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25[OH]2D), and 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (24,25[OH]2D) between the NIDDM rats and their controls of either sex. Metabolic Ca and Pi balance studies revealed that the experimental animals of both sexes were in positive Ca and Pi balance similar to that of their controls. Histologic studies of the kidney and intestinal slices from the experimental group were normal. Ca and Pi bone content calculated per gram bone ash of the femur, mandible, and second and fourth caudal vertebrae, and the organic content in the bones of the NIDDM animals showed no difference from their controls. Femur bone density and tibial epiphyseal growth plate width and morphology were similar histologically in the experimental and control rats. No decreased osteoid content in the tibial bone was found in the diabetic rats compared with controls. Physiologic sex differences, consisting of lower plasma Pi, higher plasma calcitonin levels, increased ratio of femur dry bone weight to total body weight, and increased percentage of mineralized and total bone volume at the tibial metaphysis seen in female compared with male control rats were also seen in the diabetic animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bone calcification and calcium homeostasis in rats with non-insulin-dependent diabetes induced by streptozocin. 397 85

A total of 195 swine from 18 to 35 kg were used to evaluate various biological responses of growing swine fed low P diets at different Ca:P ratios. Three replicates of a randomized complete-block design in a 3 X 3 factorial arrangement of treatments were used. Total dietary P levels of .12, .31 and .50% were fed in 1:1, 1.5:1 or 3:1 Ca:P ratios. Diets were formulated using corn starch, dextrin and soy protein concentrate, with monosodium phosphate and limestone used to supply appropriate dietary treatment levels of Ca and P. Gain and feed performance were generally influenced by both Ca:P ratio and dietary P level. Serum inorganic P decreased linearly as Ca:P ratio widened and increased linearly as dietary P increased. Serum Ca concentrations responded inversely to serum inorganic P in response to both Ca:P ratio and dietary P level. Serum alkaline phosphatase was not affected by Ca:P ratio, but declined quadratically with increasing dietary P level. Bone bending moment was influenced by both dietary P level and Ca:P ratio. Bone component weights (ash, organic matrix), percentage bone ash and net accretion of bone ash and organic component weights were not influenced by Ca:P ratio but increased linearly as dietary P level increased. These results suggest that bone component weights, net ash accretion and percentage bone ash were more sensitive criteria than bone bending moment or serum alkaline phosphatase, which in turn were more sensitive than serum inorganic P, Ca, Mg and growth performance characteristics in response to dietary P level.
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PMID:Biological characteristics for assessing low phosphorus intake in growing swine. 398 43


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