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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Palmar and plantar keratoses developed in seven patients many years after ingeston of trivalent inorganic arsenic. Six had basal cell carcinoma (superficial multicentric type in five), carcinoma "in situ" or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin. Two had systemic carcinoma--one, bilateral breast adenocarcinoma and one, carcinoma of the colon. From these observations and from the findings of a review of the literature, there seems no question that long-term arsenic ingestion can cause palmar and plantar keratoses and skin cancer, particularly basal cell carcinoma of the superficial multicentric type, usually on the torso. It is suspected but not proved to cause other cancers. Although over the last 50 years general exposure to arsenic has greatly decreased, particularly that from insecticides, this element is still found occasionally in drinking water (naturally or as a smelter byproduct), in certain foods and in cigarette smoke.
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PMID:Arsenic and cancer. 12 22

The effect on colonic function of adding wheat fiber for 3 weeks to the metabolically-controlled diets of six healthy volunteers has been studied. Increasing dietary fiber intake from 17 to 45 g/day increased fecal weight from 79 +/- 6.6 g/day to 228 +/- 29.9 g/day and shortened mean transit time, measured by a continuous marker method, from 57.8 +/- 8.3 hr to 40.3 +/- 8.9 hr. The increase in fecal weight was largely due to water. Fiber caused a dilution of fecal marker and an increase in fecal fat, nitrogen, and calcium output. Fecal sodium, potassium, and chloride showed only small changes but volatile fatty acid output increased significantly without concentrations changing. Fecal bile acid output increased from 199 +/- 46 mg/day to 279 +/- 46 mg/day. These changes are discussed in light of current views of the role of dietary fiber in protecting against colon cancer.
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PMID:Changes in fecal composition and colonic function due to cereal fiber. 99 55

The role which the human colon fulfils in digestion and metabolism remains largely undocumented. Its capacity to conserve water and electrolytes is well known although how this is controlled is uncertain. In the animal kingdom, calcium and magnesium absorption from the colon are improtant as are absorption and synthesis of vitamins. The abundant microflora of the human colon gives it unique properties. Dietary residue is metabolised forming short-chain fatty acids, hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane; whilst 20% of urea synthesised in man is broken down in the colon to ammonia, which is reabsorbed, and carbonic acid. The microflora also degrades a wide variety of organic compounds including food additives, drugs, bile salts, and cholesterol which may be relevant to the development of colon cancer. Regional differences in colonic function also exist making interpretation of data from this relatively inaccessible organ more difficult.
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PMID:The colon: Absorptive, seccretory and metabolic functions. 120 9

Although selenium is an essential trace element, it is often not routinely added to total parenteral nutrition (TPN) formulations. When selenium is not added, patients are at risk for selenium deficiency. This report describes such a patient. He had several operations for colon cancer, including a massive resection of the small bowel that resulted in a short bowel and a fistula. TPN was started after his last operation. After he was discharged, he had a normal, active lifestyle, except that he limited oral intake to water and an occasional soft drink. After 3 years of almost exclusive nourishment by TPN, he developed whitened nail beds. Investigation for possible trace element deficiency resulted in a finding that he had very low levels of selenium in his blood. He did not have any of the cardiac or skeletal muscle abnormalities that have been associated with selenium deficiency. After supplementation with selenium, his blood levels of selenium rose and the nail bed changes were reversed.
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PMID:Selenium deficiency in long-term total parenteral nutrition. 129 86

This is an investigation of the effects of a shift from a well-balanced mixed diet to a lacto-vegetarian diet on the mutagenic activity in urine and feces. The participants were 20 normal-weight, non-smoking subjects (4 men and 16 women, mean age 44 years, range 27-61 years). The fecal samples were assayed for direct-acting mutagens with the fluctuation test for weak mutagens and the urinary samples were assayed with the same assay but with a metabolic activation system, a so-called S9 fraction. The switch from a mixed diet to a lacto-vegetarian diet was not a shift from a so-called high to a low risk diet for colon cancer but rather from a 'medium high risk diet' to a 'low risk diet', even though there were significant changes in nutrients and food components between the two diets. There was a decrease in fat (P = 0.009) and protein intake (P = 0.04) and an increase in total carbohydrate (P = 0.001), fiber (P = 0.001), calcium (P = 0.006) and vitamin C intake (P = 0.019). Among the food preparation methods the use of frying decreased (P = 0.02) and the habit of eating a new vegetable meal increased (P = 0.05). Three months after the dietary shift the concentration of fecal direct-acting mutagens decreased significantly (P less than 0.05), though the total mutagenic activity excreted in feces per 24 h was not different between the two diet periods. Both the concentration and the total amount of promutagens in the urine were decreased after 3 months on the lacto-vegetarian diet. The decrease in fecal mutagenic activity might be explained by a higher fiber intake, which leads to higher water content in feces and thereby a dilution of fecal mutagenic compounds.
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PMID:The effect of a shift from a mixed diet to a lacto-vegetarian diet on human urinary and fecal mutagenic activity. 131 Sep 3

The effect of dietary supplementation with pectin and/or guar gum on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH)-induced colon carcinogenesis was studied using 120 male Sprague-Dawley rats. The rats were given a weekly injection of DMH for 8 weeks and were maintained on a basal fiber-free diet supplemented with 5% cellulose. The rats were then subdivided into four groups and kept on the basal fiber-free diet supplemented with either no fiber, 10% pectin, 10% guar gum or a combination of 5% pectin/5% guar gum for a period of 24 weeks. The 8 weeks of DMH administration were defined as the initiation stage of carcinogenesis and the next 24 weeks were defined as the promotional stage of carcinogenesis. Food and water were available ad libitum. The rats were killed 32 weeks after the start of the experiment and tumor incidence, location and frequency in the colon were determined. Other parameters measured were body weight and caloric intake. Dietary fiber supplementation with 10% pectin or with 10% guar gum but not with the combination of 5% pectin/5% guar gum (fed during the promotional stage of carcinogenesis), was found to suppress colon cancer incidence to a significant extent.
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PMID:Dietary supplementation with pectin and guar gum on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine-induced colon carcinogenesis in rats. 131 14

It has been hypothesized that bile acids and fatty acids promote colon cancer. A proposed mechanism is a lytic effect of these surfactants on colonic epithelium, resulting in a compensatory proliferation of colonic cells. To investigate the first step of this hypothesis, we studied the lytic activity of fatty acids and physiological mixtures of fatty acids and bile acids. Experiments were performed in both erythrocytes and cultured Caco-2 cells, a model system for intestinal epithelium. Fatty acids with a chain length of 10 C atoms or more were lytic, and the hemolytic activity increased in the order C10:0 less than C18:0 less than C16:0 less than C12:0 less than C14:0 much less than C18:1 approximately C18:2 but was not dependent on their critical micellar concentration. Addition of a sublytic, submicellar concentration of cholate resulted in the formation of highly lytic mixed micelles. Lytic activity of these mixed micelles was closely associated with their micellar aggregation as determined in parallel incubations using a fluorescent micellar probe. With use of identical concentrations of fatty acids and mixed micelles, lysis of erythrocytes was highly correlated (r greater than 0.95) with lysis of Caco-2 cells measured by either release of the apical membrane-marker alkaline phosphatase or the cytosolic marker lactate dehydrogenase. This indicates that the cytolytic activity of these surfactants is not cell-type dependent. Addition of bile acids in concentrations corresponding with the total bile acid concentration in human fecal water resulted in an increased lytic activity of fatty acids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Lytic effects of mixed micelles of fatty acids and bile acids. 141 45

Six members of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology provide a discussion of the presentations of the authors of six studies dealing with the potential chronic disease side effects of water disinfection. This symposium, which was jointly sponsored by the Society and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) also involved state epidemiologists and engineers from state drinking water programs. This article summarizes the results of the studies and the comments about them. There was a general consensus that the recent EPA sponsored studies of cancer endpoints have strengthened the evidence linking bladder cancer with long term exposure to chlorinated drinking water. The evidence for links with colon cancer is not convincing and that for serum lipid changes is quite weak. Any risks, if real, are low when compared to the risk of infection from not disinfecting water. This is particularly true for small water systems where chlorination may be the only practical option.
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PMID:An evaluation of the role of epidemiology in assessing current and future disinfection technologies for drinking water. 148 Sep 62

We have previously reported that phytic acid (inositol hexaphosphate or InsP6), a natural constituent of cereal diet, when administered in drinking water exerts a consistent antitumor effect on experimental colon cancer in vivo. The objective of this study was to determine whether InsP6 has similar anti-neoplastic effect on other tumor models, such as murine fibrosarcoma. We report that intraperitoneal injection of InsP6 reduces growth of subcutaneously transplanted fibrosarcoma (FSA-1) in mice, prolongs survival of tumor-bearing mice and reduces the number of pulmonary metastases. Since InsP6 is a common constituent of our diet and has very little or no toxic effects, in addition to being chemopreventive, it could have potential use in therapy of cancer as well.
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PMID:Antitumor activity of phytic acid (inositol hexaphosphate) in murine transplanted and metastatic fibrosarcoma, a pilot study. 151 13

Precise estimation of the volume and growth rate of hepatic metastases would represent an important step forward not only in clinical oncology but also for the evaluation of experimental treatments in animal models. In the present study, an original method of volumetry of hepatic metastatic tumors in vivo has been tested in rats using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Three different hepatic tumor models mimicking liver metastases were established in syngeneic BDIX rats by injection of DHD/K12 rat colon cancer cells either directly under the liver capsule or via the portal system. The liver tumor volumes were estimated in vivo by using MR imaging of the liver and summing the individual tumor volumes in the sequential MR liver sections. The values of the tumor volumes measured by MRI were compared with those determined by a classical method of water displacement in vitro after killing the animals and excising the tumors. At 3 weeks after tumor implantation, liver tumors as small as 1 mm in diameter could be detected by MRI. The difference between the tumor volumes estimated by MRI in vivo and those measured by water displacement in vitro was 9% for single liver tumors and 16% for multiple liver tumors. Close correlation between the values of the tumor volumes measured by MRI and those determined by water displacement was observed in solitary liver tumors (r = 0.985, p less than 0.01) as well as in multiple liver tumors (r = 0.985, p less than 0.01), indicating the high accuracy of MRI volumetry for liver tumors. Estimation of the liver tumor volumes by MRI in the same animals at successive time intervals made it possible to construct tumor growth curves and to calculate tumor growth parameters. These data suggest that MRI volumetry represents an effective means of evaluating the efficacy of experimental treatments in small animals and may have potentially important applications in clinical patients.
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PMID:Quantitative study of the growth of experimental hepatic tumors in rats by using magnetic resonance imaging. 160 27


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