Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

As a result of investigations into the diagnostic validity of selected haematologic-morphological and clinical-chemical test factors of iron metabolism in the diagnosis of hypochromic anaemia, the examined test faktora are differently evaluated as individual parameters and in their combination. 1. Haematocrit (PCV) is equal to the determination of haemoglobin concentration as a search parameter. 2. The number of reticulocytes, copper and zinc as well as caeruloplasmin have a separating effect as individual parameters on the examined classes of iron deficiency and tumour and infect anaemia. 3. Iron has no value as a individual parameter. It is only in combination with TEBK and the haematologic test factors that is has a diagnostic value. 4. In contrast, ferritin as an individual parameter is of primary importance and should be used extensively in the laboratory diagnosis of hypochromic anaemia. 5. TEBK and transferrin may be supposed to be equal in their diagnostic value. 6. When used in combination, haemoglobin, MCV, TEBK, Transferrin, and ferritin have effective separating function. They permit hypochromic anaemia to be widely assigned to one or another kind of the examined classes.
...
PMID:[The value of parameters of iron metabolism in the differential diagnosis of anemias]. 170

Crossed immunoelectrophoresis (X-IEP) revealed several abnormalities in serum proteins from patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), tuberculosis (TB), and cystic fibrosis (CF). The two quite different kinds of pulmonary disease, one acute (ARDS) and the other chronic (TB and CF) exhibited serum changes specific for each disease and abnormalities associated with inflammation and pathogenesis, in general. In ARDS sera, most proteins were extremely low, presumably due to leakage into the lungs through damaged tissue, while the acute-phase proteins, orosomucoid, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and haptoglobin, were markedly high when compared to the overall protein pattern. The extremely high alpha 1-antichymotrypsin values were not seen in corresponding TB and CF sera. Numerous TB patients had elevated alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and haptoglobin, but only the alpha 1-antitrypsin population mean was significantly different from normal. Gc-globulin, ceruloplasmin, and beta-lipoprotein were higher and alpha 1-lipoprotein and inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor lower than normal. All other quantitative serum changes were not statistically significant. Surprisingly, all TB patients belonged to the Gc-1-1 genotype in contrast to the Gc-1-1, Gc-1-2, Gc-2-2 polymorphisms of the other populations. CF homozygote sera revealed statistically significant increases in the acute-phase proteins, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and haptoglobin, while orosomucoid, transferrin, IgA, and IgG tended to be higher than normal. The tendency for higher levels of transferrin indicated possible iron deficiency in some patients. In contrast, prealbumin, alpha 1-lipoprotein, and inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor were significantly depressed in CF patients. CF heterozygotes shared the decrease of alpha 1-lipoprotein with the patients while exhibiting small but significant depressions of alpha 2-macroglobulin and IgG. Though not statistically significant, lowered concentrations of alpha 1-antitrypsin were evident for the heterozygotes.
...
PMID:Protein abnormalities in adult respiratory distress syndrome, tuberculosis, and cystic fibrosis sera. 243 15

The influence of lead exposure, iron deficiency, or their combination on certain biochemical parameters in blood, plasma, and urine of rats was investigated in an attempt to identify the specific diagnostic tests of the two conditions and to draw a possible interrelationship between the two factors. The decrease in blood-glutathione peroxidase activity, -packed cell volume, plasma-ceruloplasmin, and-Fe levels and increase in urinary excretion of delta-aminolevulinic acid, plasma-cholesterol, and-total Fe binding capacity occur under Fe deficiency as well as Pb intoxication. However, increase in the activity of blood delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) without any change in blood zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) level appears to be a specific effect of Fe deficiency that could be distinguished from Pb intoxication, a condition characterized by the inhibition in blood ALAD activity accompanied by an increase in blood ZPP level. The linear regression analysis of the data showed that the blood Pb and plasma free cholesterol levels increase with the decrease in plasma Fe level.
...
PMID:Interrelationship between iron deficiency and lead intoxication (Part 1). 248 14

The present study was designed to investigate the effects of nickel chloride on dietary iron deficiency in rats. The degree of iron deficiency was relatively moderate, but a more generalized anemia occurred in iron deficiency, in absence of nickel chloride. Moderate iron deficiency anemia induced increased lactate-dehydrogenase activity of serum and bone marrow, perhaps related to the decreased production of energy by oxidative means. Nickel chloride, perhaps for its ability to change iron absorption, for the maintenance of bone marrow metabolism and for to increase ceruloplasmin activity, inhibited the alteration on hemoglobin synthesis. Furthermore, nickel chloride possibly for its action on copper content and Cu-Zn superoxide-dismutase activity, inhibits the shortening of the red cell life span, caused by superoxide radicals.
...
PMID:Influence of nickel chloride on iron-deficiency in rats. 263 91

Copper deficiency was found in an adult patient who had received excessive daily oral zinc for 10 mo. The deficiency was characterized by hypochromic-microcytic anemia, leukopenia, and neutropenia. Although initially thought to be caused by iron deficiency, the anemia did not respond to oral or intravenous iron. Cessation of zinc tablets and ingestion of an oral copper preparation daily for 2 mo failed to correct the anemia or leukopenia. It was not until shortly after intravenous administration of a cupric chloride solution during a 5-day period, at a total dose of 10 mg, that serum copper and ceruloplasmin levels increased and the anemia, leukopenia, and neutropenia resolved. These data suggest that the elimination of excess zinc is slow and that, until such elimination occurs, the intestinal absorption of copper is blocked.
...
PMID:Zinc-induced copper deficiency. 333 23

Reference serum copper, ceruloplasmin and zinc values were established for 100 healthy white nulliparous students aged 18-23 years resident in Cape Town who had been taking low-dosage triphasic contraceptives for a minimum period of 3 months, and in 100 female students not taking contraceptives. The mean serum copper values were 26.5 +/- 4.2 mumol/l and 16.9 +/- 2.7 mumol/l for those taking and not taking oral contraceptives respectively; corresponding values for ceruloplasmin were 181 +/- 43.9 IU/ml and 110 +/- 22.7 IU/ml respectively. Both differences were statistically significant. Serum zinc values for those on contraceptives were 14.1 +/- 2.1 mumol/l and for the others 14.7 +/- 2.0 mumol/l. There were no differences in the haematological parameters except for a significantly higher mean corpuscular volume in females taking oral contraceptives. Of possible clinical significance in this student population are prevalence rates of 2.2% for anaemia (haemoglobin value less than 11.5 g/dl), 7% for iron deficiency (serum ferritin less than 12 micrograms/l) and 6.6% for iron depletion (serum ferritin 12-20 micrograms/l).
...
PMID:Reference values for serum copper, ceruloplasmin and zinc and haematological indices for healthy nulliparous females. 366 Jan 57

The importance of ceruloplasmin in iron metabolism was studied in swine made hypoceruloplasminemic by copper deprivation. When the plasma ceruloplasmin level fell below 1% of normal, cell-to-plasma iron flow became sufficiently impaired to cause hypoferremia, even though total body iron stores were normal. When ceruloplasmin was administered to such animals, plasma iron increased immediately and continued to rise at a rate proportional to the logarithm of the ceruloplasmin dose. The administration of inorganic copper induced increases in plasma iron only after ceruloplasmin appeared in the circulation. Thus, ceruloplasmin appeared to be essential to the normal movement of iron from cells to plasma. Studies designed to define the mechanism of action of ceruloplasmin were based on the in vitro observation that ceruloplasmin behaves as an enzyme (ferroxidase) that catalyzes oxidation of ferrous iron. Retention of injected ferrous iron in the plasma of ceruloplasmin-deficient swine was significantly less than that of ferric iron, reflecting impaired transferrin iron binding. Rat ceruloplasmin, which has little ferroxidase activity, was much less effective than porcine or human ceruloplasmin in inducing increases in plasma iron. These observations suggest that ceruloplasmin acts by virtue of its ferroxidase activity. Eight patients with Wilson's disease were evaluated in order to investigate iron metabolism in a disorder characterized by reduced ceruloplasmin levels. Evidence of iron deficiency was found in six of these, and in five of the six, plasma ceruloplasmin was less than 5% of normal. In comparison, the two patients without evidence of iron deficiency had ceruloplasmin levels of 11 and 18% of normal. It is suggested that iron deficiency tends to occur in those patients with Wilson's disease who have the severest degrees of hypoceruloplasminemia, possibly because of defective transfer of iron from intestinal mucosal cells to plasma.
...
PMID:The role of ceruloplasmin in iron metabolism. 548 Aug 64

Severe copper deficiency was induced in rats by rearing nursing dams and their offsprings on a semisynthetic diet comprising all the requisite nutrients and trace metals except copper. The copper-deprived rats exhibited growth retardation, severe anaemia, loss of caeruloplasmin, decrease of cytochrome oxidase, accumulation of salt-soluble collagen and a drastic decrease in iron in plasma and liver. Apart from these characteristic signs of deficiency, a marked inhibition of protein synthesis was found to occur both in vivo and in cell-free liver preparations. The curtailed ability to carry out endogenously coded amino acid incorporation into protein contrasted with the unimpaired poly(U)-acid-directed phenylalanine polymerization. This inhibition pattern, as well as the attendant disaggregation of the liver polyribosomes, suggested that the primary biosynthetic lesion was located at the stage of peptide-chain initiation. Concurrently with this alteration there was a pronounced depletion of the hepatic ATP content, associated with a parallel depression of mitochondrial respiration and an enhancement of ATPase activity. Supplementation of the copper-deficient diet with a 2-4-fold excess of iron (relative to the standard diet) prevented growth retardation and anaemia and restored normal energy metabolism, as well as unimpaired protein-synthesizing capacity. The conclusion that these disturbances were primarily determined by the secondary iron deficiency was also borne out by the finding that similar alterations occurred in rats maintained on a copper-sufficient but iron-deficient diet. On the other hand, the iron-fortified diet failed to reverse the other signs of copper deficiency, namely the loss of caeruloplasmin, the diminished rate of cytochrome oxidase and the increase of soluble collagen. The interrelations between the various biochemical lesions induced by deprivation of copper or iron are discussed and the possible role of ATP depletion in determining the derangement of protein synthesis is considered.
...
PMID:Biochemical lesions in copper-deficient rats caused by secondary iron deficiency. Derangement of protein synthesis and impairment of energy metabolism. 625 58

Groups of rats were fed diets providing 8 ppm iron (-Fe) and 250 ppm iron (+Fe) throughout pregnancy and lactation. In spite of the increase in apparent absorption of iron in pregnant -Fe dams, iron deficiency anemia developed, resulting in decreased iron levels in placenta, amniotic fluid and fetal liver. Copper concentration of amniotic fluid was elevated in -Fe dams. On day 17 of lactation, -Fe dams and their suckling pups had hematologic evidence of iron deficiency. While liver and spleen iron decreased in 17-day-old pups, levels of copper increased. Subcellularly, the greatest increase in hepatic copper in -Fe pups was found in the cytosol, thus the increased copper deposition is not similar to copper loading. Serum ceruloplasmin activity was significantly elevated in -Fe lactating dams and was slightly, but not significantly, increased in -Fe pregnant dams and suckling pups.
...
PMID:Copper metabolism in iron-deficient maternal and neonatal rats. 669 92

The report is concerned with the levels of 17 specific serum proteins in 46 women using plastic nonmedicated Dana-Super IUDs. Blood samplings were carried out 3 times: just before IUD introduction, and 30 and 54 weeks after the insertion of IUD. The following proteins except haptoglobin were quantitatively determined by radial immunodiffusion: prealbumin, albumin, orosomucoid, alpha1-antitrypsin, ceruloplasmin, alpha2-HS-glycoprotein, alpha2-macroglobulin, hemopexin, C3-component, transferrin, beta2-glycoprotein 1, C-reactive protein and immunoglobulins IgG, IgA, IgM and IgD. Moderately increased values were found for alpha2HS-glycoprotein and beta2-glycoprotein 1 in sera taken 30 weeks after the insertion of IUD. At the same time the augmentation of alpha1-antitrypsin was established. This might be evoked by the raised protease activity in biological fluids of genital region. The raise in consequence of IUD application of transferrin and the decrease of haptoglobin at the 1st postinsertion examination and the decrease of hemopexin and albumin at the 2nd may be associated with higher menstrual bleeding followed by iron deficiency. All other proteins as well as the acute phase proteins showed only minor if any differences as compared with the corresponding start values. Similarly, there is no evidence of a systemic immunoglobulin response to IUD use.
...
PMID:Specific serum protein levels in women using intrauterine contraceptive device. 696 68


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>