Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Measurement of energy expenditure with indirect calorimetry allows determination of caloric balance. The present study was done to determine the predictive value of caloric and nitrogen balances for nutritional outcome. Energy expenditure was obtained weekly and interpolated between measurements for daily caloric balance. Nitrogen balance was obtained weekly. Because nitrogen output fluctuated, interpolation of daily values was not possible. Nutritional outcome was defined by whether body weight was lost or maintained and by levels of visceral proteins (albumin, prealbumin, and transferrin). The study group included 12 patients with 7% to 82.5% total body surface area burns. Eleven patients survived their burn injuries, and one died of congestive heart failure at 38 days, after her burn wounds had healed. Nine patients had good nutritional outcomes (group 1) and three had poor nutritional outcomes (group 2) (including the one who died). Nitrogen balance was 1.3 +/- 1.0 gm/day in group 1 and 4.5 +/- 1.7 gm/day in group 2 (mean +/- SEM; p > 0.10). Caloric balance was 515 +/- 130 kcal/day in group 1 and -667 +/- 140 in group 2 (p < 0.001). Caloric balance was significantly different between the two groups, whereas nitrogen balance was not. Caloric intake correlated positively with nitrogen intake (r = 0.92). Nitrogen intake was 16% of total caloric intake. Nitrogen intake from blood products was appreciable and averaged 15% of total nitrogen intake (range, 0% to 47%); 11.3 +/- 1.6 gm/day in group 1 and 14.8 +/- 3 gm/day in group 2 (p > 0.10).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Caloric and nitrogen balances as predictors of nutritional outcome in patients with burns. 146 36

A freely mobile jacket and tether system was developed for the investigation of total parenteral nutrition (TPN)-induced metabolic bone disease and complications of prolonged TPN in 12 Macaca fascicularis nonhuman primates. The animals received TPN for 49 +/- 7 d (means +/- SEM), providing 82 +/- 2 kcal.kg-1.d-1. Serum glucose increased from 3.6 +/- 0.2 mmol/L at baseline to 8.3 +/- 1.9 mmol/L (p less than 0.01) during TPN, and serum albumin decreased from 38 +/- 1 g/L at baseline to 29 +/- 1 g/L (p less than 0.001) during 2.75% amino acid TPN and 30 +/- 2 g/L (p less than 0.01) during 5% amino acid TPN infusion. No significant changes were seen in serum prealbumin, total protein, bilirubin, alanine aminotransferase, and 5'-nucleotidase during TPN infusion. Major complications included catheter sepsis, hyperglycemia, diarrhea, and premature death in six animals. Thus, metabolic complications of prolonged TPN support may be investigated in a freely mobile nonhuman primate.
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PMID:Long-term parenteral nutrition in unrestrained nonhuman primates: an experimental model. 210 76

Preoperative nutritional assessment was carried out on 39 consecutive patients with bronchial carcinoma who underwent thoracotomy. For 18 patients the body mass index and triceps and subscapular skinfold thickness fell below the 25th centile. In 23 patients the creatinine height index was less than 80% of the predicted value. The mean (SEM) serum albumin concentration was 40.3 (0.57) g/l (reference range 35-50 g/l) and mean (SEM) serum transferrin 1.77 (0.1) g/l (reference range 2.0-3.0 g/l). Although only three patients were hypoalbuminaemic, transferrin concentrations were depressed in 26 patients. There was a significant fall in the serum concentrations of both prealbumin and transferrin in the first postoperative week. Nutritional insufficiency was particularly severe in the four patients who developed an early bronchopleural fistula. It is concluded that protein-energy malnutrition is common in patients with operable bronchial carcinoma and that routine postoperative feeding does not prevent further depletion of circulating proteins. A larger prospective study is needed to examine the relation between preoperative nutritional state and outcome.
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PMID:Nutritional state of patients with lung cancer undergoing thoracotomy. 210

Severely malnourished young children (n = 72) were treated with intravenous fibronectin to assess its efficacy as an adjunct treatment for kwashiorkor and/or marasmus. The protein was given in a double-blind study during the first 4 d of hospitalization together with standard nutrition and supportive therapy. Fibronectin concentrations as well as albumin, transferrin, prealbumin, and alpha-2-macroglobulin were monitored in samples taken before each dose of fibronectin and in samples taken five times thereafter. Sick individuals had significantly lower concentrations of all five proteins than did healthy control individuals of matching ages. Mean fibronectin concentrations were 98 +/- 7 mg/L (mean +/- SEM) for sick vs 303 +/- 21 mg/L for healthy individuals. Concentrations of all five proteins increased at a greater daily rate in patients treated with fibronectin than in patients who received placebos. Eighty-seven percent of the treated children survived to the end of the treatment and observation periods (mean hospitalization 14.7 d) whereas only 56% of the control subjects survived (P = 0.004). These data support the use of intravenous fibronectin as an adjunct in the treatment of severe malnutrition at a dosage of 7.5 mg.kg-1.d-1 over a 4-d period.
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PMID:Improvement in plasma protein concentrations with fibronectin treatment in severe malnutrition. 211 55

A radioimmunoassay for human plasma retinol-binding protein (RBP) has been developed utilizing a double antibody precipitation technique. RBP was purified 1500- to 2000-fold by procedures described previously. A specific anti-human RBP antiserum was prepared in rabbits by three once-weekly injections of purified RBP emulsified with Freund's adjuvant. RBP was iodinated with (131)I and the RBP-(131)I was purified by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100 after complex formation with human plasma prealbumin. The RBP-(131)I was completely (> 95%) immunoprecipitable in the presence of an excess of specific antiserum, it was not (< 5%) immunoprecipitable in the absence of specific antiserum, and it could be completely displaced from antibody by excess unlabeled RBP. The standard curve obtained in the immunoassay with normal plasma was identical to that with pure RBP. Duplicate samples differed from their mean by 5 +/-5% (+/-SD). There was a quantitative recovery of pure RBP added in varying amounts to normal plasma. The immunoassay accurately measured RBP in amounts of 10-100 ng per assay tube. There was no significant difference in the immunoreactivity of apo-RBP as compared to holo-RBP. The mean plasma values (+/-SEM) for a group of 76 normal subjects were 47.2 +/-1.6 mug/ml for males and 41.6 +/-1.6 mug/ml for females. Plasma RBP levels were markedly depressed (15 +/-2.3 mug/ml) in 14 patients with acute viral hepatitis. There was a highly significant correlation between the plasma levels of RBP and of vitamin A in both normal subjects and patients with hepatitis. In all subjects plasma RBP was generally saturated with retinol. The data suggest that under normal circumstances RBP circulates almost exclusively as the holoprotein.
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PMID:Radioimmunoassay of human plasma retinol-binding protein. 498 83

The effects of liver transplantation involving living-related donors were investigated in 20 pediatric cases in terms of protein and lipid metabolism using the extent of cholesterol esterification and the levels of total cholesterol, lecithine-cholesterol acyltransferase, apolipoprotein A-I, cholinesterase, and rapid turnover proteins as parameters. Cholesterol esterification increased from preoperative values of 39% +/- 4% to 67% +/- 1% (mean +/- SEM, n = 17) at 3 weeks after liver transplantation in successful cases but decreased from the preoperative value of 45% +/- 10% to 26% +/- 6% (n = 3) at 3 weeks in unsuccessful cases. Cholinesterase, transferrin, and prealbumin levels remained low after 3 weeks even in successful cases. Patients who had partial liver transplantations from living-related donors showed rapid recovery of cholesterol esterification. However, patients with graft livers required an extensive period before normalization of protein metabolism occurred, indicating the necessity for long-term follow-up of recipient development.
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PMID:Short-term changes in lipid and protein metabolism in liver transplants from living-related donors. 810 Oct 49

We compressed 16 test-pattern classes of albumin (ALB), cholesterol (CHOL), and total protein (TPR) in 545 chemistry profiles to 4 classes by converting decision values to a number code to separate malnourished (1 or 2) from nonmalnourished (NM) (0) patients, using as cutoff values for nonmalnourished (0), mild (1), and moderate (2): ALB 35, 27 g/L; TPR 63, 53 g/L; CHOL 3.9, 2.8 mmol/L; and BUN 9.3, 3.6 mmol/L. The BUN was found to have too low an S-value to make a contribution to the compressed classification. The cutoff values for classifying the data were assigned prior to statistical analysis, after examining information in the structured data. The data was obtained by a natural experiment in which the test profiles routinely done by the laboratory were randomly extracted. The analysis identifies the values for the variables used that best classify the data and are not dependent on distributional assumptions. The data were converted to 0, 1, or 2 as outcomes, to create a ternary truth table (each row is nnnn, the n value is 0 to 2). This allows for 3(4) (81) possible patterns, without the inclusion of prealbumin (PAB). The emerging system has much fewer patterns in the information-rich truth table formed (a purposeful, far from random, event). We added PAB, coded, and examined the data for 129 patients. The classes are a compressed truth table of n-coded patients with outcomes of 0, 1, or 2 with protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) increasing from an all-0 to all-2 pattern. Pattern class (F = 154), PAB (F = 35), ALB (F = 56), and CHOL (F = 18) were different across PEM class and predicted PEM class (R2 = 0.7864, F = 119, p < E-5). Kruskal-Wallis analysis of class by ranks was significant for pattern class (1E-18), PAB (6.1E-15), ALB (1E-16), CHOL (9E-10), and TPR (5.3E-13). The medians and standard error (SEM) for PAB, ALB, and CHOL of all four PABCLASSES (NM, mild, moderate, severe) are: PAB = 209, 8.7; 159, 9.3; 137, 10.4; 72, 11.1 mg/L, ALB = 36, 0.7; 30.5, 0.8; 25.0, 0.8; 24.5, 0.8 g/L; CHOL = 4.43, 0.17; 4.04, 0.20; 3.11, 0.21; 2.54, 0.22 mmol/L. PAB and CHOL values show the effect of nutrition support on PAB and CHOL in PEM. Moderately malnourished patients receiving nutrition support have PAB values in the normal range at 137 mg/L and at 159 mg/L when the ALB is at 25 g/L or at 30.5 g/L.
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PMID:Prealbumin in nutrition evaluation. 886 31