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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The copper, iron and zinc contents of early milk from 102 American mothers is examined in relation to stage of lactation, intake of prenatal mineral supplements, maternal age, parity, and previous history of lactation. A total of 412 samples were collected at 3 stages of lactation: early transitional (4-7 days postpartum); transitional (10-14 days postpartum); and mature (30-45 days postpartum). For the transitional and mature stages, representative samples of late evening (PM) and early morning (AM) feedings were collected. Diurnal variation in concentration is observed only for iron. Concentrations of all elements decreased significantly at successive stages of lactation with zinc showing the greatest decline. Copper, iron and zinc contents (means plus or minus SEM) were 104.1 +or- 5.4, 96.5 +or- 6.5 and 520 +or- 20 ug/100 gm in early transitional milk; 93.9 +or- 3.6, 85.4 +or- 4.5, and 410 +or- 10 ug/100 gm in transitional milk, and 84.7 +or- 3.8, 76.1 +or- 3.8, and 290 +or- 10 ug/100 gm in mature milk, respectively. No significant relationship is found between levels of copper and zinc in milk and whether mothers had taken dietary supplements containing these elements. In addition, no significant correlations are found between maternal age, parity, or previous history of lactation and the elemental content of milk. Based on these data, it is estimated that fully breast fed infants would receive approximately 0.11, 0.10, and 0.50 mg/kg per day of copper, iron and zinc, respectively, during the neonatal period.
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PMID:Copper, iron, and zinc contents of human milk at early stages of lactation. 668 32

The nature of the metal-tissue interface following the implantation of five pure metals, lead, copper, nickel, aluminium and cobalt, in rats has been observed by scanning electron microscopy. The general conclusion, derived from light microscopy that the tissue response to pure metals is characteristic of and specific to individual pure metals has been confirmed in this study. However, far more detailed observations of factors such as the extent of metallic corrosion, the distribution of red blood cells, platelets and other cells in the capsule and adherent to the metal surface, have been possible with SEM.
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PMID:Scanning electron microscopy of the metal-tissue interface. II. Observations with lead, copper, nickel, aluminium, and cobalt. 711 61

The apparent absorption of copper was determined in seven elderly men using the stable isotope 65Cu. Analysis of isotopic ratios of copper was done using thermal ionization, magnetic sector mass spectrometry after separation of copper from fecal samples by ion exchange chromatography. Mean apparent copper absorption during the first metabolic period in five men was 23.9 +/- 1.4% (mean +/- SEM) when fed a semipurified diet containing 3.3 mg of copper daily and 9 to 19 g nitrogen from egg albumin. Mean apparent copper absorption in five men during the second metabolic period was slightly but significantly higher, 27.7 +/- 0.31% (mean +/- SEM) when their diet contained 3.3 mg of copper per day and 4.0 to 5.7 g of nitrogen from egg albumin. The quantity of copper absorbed was equivalent to 0.8 mg per day in the first metabolic period and 0.9 mg during second metabolic period and was sufficient to maintain copper balance in these elderly men.
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PMID:Copper absorption in elderly men determined by using stable 65Cu. 712 60

Back hairs of +/+ and Moto/+ female Mus musculus generally exhibited identical form when examined by SEM. However, the hair shafts of Moto/+ female mice were beaded in appearance (monilethrix), twisted (pili torti) or exhibited a rough nodular appearance. Also, some hairs of Moto/+ female mice which were devoid of pigment appeared enlarged and bitubular. The whiskers of +/+ and Moto/+ female mice were identical in form. The hair abnormalities of Moto/+ female mice resulted from a copper deficiency and were similar to those hair anomalies observed in other mottled mice and in copper-deficient crinkled mice.
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PMID:SEM analysis of body hairs and whiskers of heterozygous tortoiseshell (Moto/+) female mice (Mus musculus). 713 53

Children with phenylketonuria (PKU) are treated with semi-synthetic diets restricted in phenylalanine. Low or phenylalanine-free formulae provide the majority of protein and energy in the diet while phenylalanine requirements are met by low-protein natural foods. Because of the restriction of natural protein sources in this diet, the study assessed the zinc and copper nutriture of treated children with PKU and correlated linear growth with zinc status. The plasma zinc of the PKU population was 66.6 +/- 3.3 micrograms/dl (mean +/- SEM). The hair zinc was 70.2 +/- 11.5 micrograms/g (mean +/- SEM). The mean plasma and hair zinc of the PKU population were significantly different (p less than 0.05) when compared to normal values of 84.2 +/- 2.9 micrograms/dl and 130.7 +/- 8.3 micrograms/g (mean +/- SEM), respectively. The dietary zinc intake of 10 PKU patients was 8.56 +/- 2.68 mg/day (mean +/- SD). No significant differences (p less than 0.123) were found when the mean zinc intake was compared with recommended dietary allowances for age of 10 mg/day. No significant correlations were found when plasma and hair zinc were plotted with height percentiles. Plasma copper of the PKU subjects (87.6 +/- 6.6 micrograms/dl, mean +/- SEM) was significantly less than that of normal young children (121.5 +/- 3.1 micrograms/dl, mean +/- SEM) despite a copper intake a 1.45 +/- 0.35 mg/day (mean +/- SD).
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PMID:Zinc and copper status of treated children with phenylketonuria. 719 57

The 64Cu incorporation into uncloned fibroblast cultures from 16 Menkes disease mothers and 19 first and second degree female relatives was examined. The mean incorporation for the Menkes disease mothers (36.2 +/- 3.6 SEM) differed significantly from that of 25 normal subjects (21.7 +/- 0.9 SEM) suggesting the presence of a significant proportion of mutant cells. In addition, the results suggested a heterozygous state in a number of the female relatives. Uncloned fibroblast cultures from four Menkes disease heterozygotes showed increasingly abnormal copper uptake values after repeated freezing procedures. Manipulation of tissue cultures may help to identify a number of female carriers.
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PMID:Menkes X linked disease: heterozygous phenotype in uncloned fibroblast cultures. 720

One of the main concerns of dental research is the observation of the oral tissues and the materials applied to the dentition. The changes in composition and structure of the outer surfaces and the materials deposited on these surfaces are of special interest. In the literature, a variety of replica techniques for these purposes is described (Grundy in 1971 [12]; Saxton in 1973 [25]). The use of these techniques is limited because of artifacts in the samples, and a restricted resolution power resulting from useful magnifications in the order of 800x. An accurate and universal replica technique for the examination of specimens to be viewed under the SEM has been developed. The first impression is made by a light body silicone elastomer (President Coltene). The positive replica is made by electrodeposition of copper in an electro plating bath (Acru plat 5 electronic, Dr. Th. Wieland, D-7530 Pforzheim). The reliability and accuracy of this replica technique was verified by a scanning electron microscopic comparison of the replicas and the actual structures of etched enamel. To illustrate the applicability of the replica technique to structures with much lower hardness, also high resolution images of dental plaque were produced. The copper surface offers a perfect, original and proper electroconductive medium that withstands the bombardment of electrons and the relatively severe conditions in the scanning electron microscope. Reproducibility was accurate as judged by the duplication in position, size, and shape of the fine detail at magnifications of 7500x offering a resolution of 25 nm.
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PMID:An universal and accurate replica technique for scanning electron microscope study in clinical dentistry. 730 Jun 96

Two-3-wk balance studies for zinc, copper, and iron were carried out in six elderly male subjects who were confined to a metabolic unit for a long-term study (12 wk) with constant dietary mineral intake. Average zinc balance was 0.1 +/- 0.05 (mean +/- SEM) and serum zinc increased in all subjects during the course of the study. Average copper balance was 0.06 +/- 0.06 (mean +/- SEM). There was no significant change in serum copper ceruloplasmin, but all were within normal ranges except for elevated serum copper in one subject who appeared to be in negative copper balance. Iron balance appeared to be negative, -0.44 +/- 0.16 (mean +/- SEM), despite improved blood iron parameters in five of six subjects. Results of this long-term balance study suggests that current dietary recommendations of 15 mg of zinc and 2 to 3 mg of copper are adequate for elderly as well as younger adults. However, balance data for individuals must be interpreted with caution, should be used only with other parameters, and should not be relied on exclusively as a basis for dietary recommendations. Additional data are needed to evaluate dietary iron recommendations for elderly men.
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PMID:Zinc, copper, and iron balance in elderly men. 731 65

Scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were used to examine the effect of dietary copper deficiency and hyperbaric hyperoxia, alone and in combination, on lung structure. Male, weanling Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a copper-deficient (CuD, 0.2 microgram/g) or copper-adequate diet (CuA, 5.1 micrograms/g). After 35-41 d on their respective diets, rats from each group were placed inside a pressure vessel kept at 27 degrees C under one of two pressure protocols. Air controls were maintained at 1 atm for 75 min. Rats exposed to oxygen were maintained at 1 atm of air plus 3 atm of oxygen for 1 h and then decompressed for 15 min. Under SEM, none of the treated lungs (CuD, CuA-O2 exposed, or CuD-O2 exposed) showed abnormal lung morphology from the conducting bronchioles down to the alveoli. Copper-deficient red blood cells were abnormally shaped. Under TEM, CuA-O2-exposed lungs showed thicker respiratory membranes, especially basement membranes and endothelial cells, and alveolar Type II cells having more than the usual number of surfactant vacuoles. CuD lungs also showed thicker endothelial and basement membrane components of the respiratory membrane, but normal looking Type II cells. CuD-O2-exposed lungs showed greatly thickened respiratory membranes and severe disruption of both endothelium and basement membrane and, judging by the increased number of nuclei per field, an increase in the number of both Type I and Type II cells. We conclude that copper deficiency enhances the damage caused by O2 toxicity, an effect that may be caused by reduced antioxidant status.
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PMID:Hyperbaric hyperoxia exaggerates respiratory membrane defects in the copper-deficient rat lung. 750 51

Since copper [Cu(II)] is a necessary cofactor for both intra-mitochondrial enzymes involved in energy production and hydroxyl scavenger enzymes, two hypothesised mechanisms for action of interleukin-I beta (IL-1 beta), we studied whether Cu(II) addition could prevent the inhibitory effect of IL-1 beta on insulin release and glucose oxidation in rat pancreatic islets. Islets were incubated with or without 50 U/ml IL-1 beta, in the presence or absence of various concentrations of Cu(II)-GHL (Cu(II) complexed with glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine, a tripeptide known to enhance copper uptake into cultured cells). CuSO4 (1-1000 ng/ml) was used as a control for Cu(II) effect when present as an inorganic salt. At the end of the incubation period, insulin secretion was evaluated in the presence of either 2.8 mmol/l (basal insulin secretion) or 16.7 mmol/l glucose (glucose-induced release). In control islets basal insulin secretion was 92.0 +/- 11.4 pg.islet-1 h-1 (mean +/- SEM, n = 7) and glucose-induced release was 2824.0 +/- 249.0 pg.islet-1 h-1. In islets pre-exposed to 50 U/ml IL-1 beta, basal insulin release was not significantly affected but glucose-induced insulin release was greatly reduced (841.2 +/- 76.9, n = 7, p < 0.005). In islets incubated with IL-1 beta and Cu-GHL (0.4 mumol/l, maximal effect) basal secretion was 119.0 +/- 13.1 pg.islet-1 h-1 and glucose-induced release was 2797.2 +/- 242.2, (n = 7, p < 0.01 in respect to islets exposed to IL-1 beta alone).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Copper addition prevents the inhibitory effects of interleukin 1-beta on rat pancreatic islets. 774 28


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