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Query: UMLS:C0847097 (
acidity
)
15,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum gastrin levels in patients with
pernicious anaemia
were measured by immunoassay in the fasting state, following gastric perfusion with 0.9% saline, 0.1N hydrochloric acid, and solutions of increasing
acidity
, and after the intravenous injection or infusion of secretin. The fasting serum gastrin level was measured in 21 patients with
pernicious anaemia
and found to be elevated at 1,036 +/- 215 pg per ml. Gastric perfusion with saline (pH 4.7) caused a mean fall in serum gastrin of 30% in four patients; perfusion with hydrochloric acid caused a further slight fall. Perfusion with solutions of increasing
acidity
resulted in a sharp fall in serum gastrin levels when the
acidity
was changed from pH 6 to pH 4. A single intravenous injection of secretin produced a mean maximal fall of 44% in the serum gastrin level in four patients, whereas continuous infusion of secretin produced a fall of 35% in four other patients. These studies suggest that the gastrin-secreting cells of the stomach are not affected by the atrophic process in
pernicious anaemia
and remain subject to the regulating control of acid and secretin.
...
PMID:Radioimmunoassay of gastrin: studies in pernicious anaemia. 554 65
Seven children ages 1 1/2 to 12 years with congenital
pernicious anemia
were detected in an extended Mexican family. All affected children had megaloblastic anemia accompanied by low serum B12 and normal serum folate levels. Gastric fluid analysis in six patients revealed normal gastric
acidity
and absent intrinsic factor. Serum antibodies to intrinsic factor or parietal cells were also absent. Schilling tests performed in six of the seven patients yielded abnormal results. Of the three patients in whom gastric biopsy was done, two had normal histologic findings (including examination by electron microscopy) and one had mild atrophy. All patients responded rapidly to parenterally administered vitamin B12 therapy. In addition, 170 family members were screened for the defect with complete blood counts and serum B12 levels. Such screening detected
pernicious anemia
in two of the children, but no other abnormalities that could be attributed to
pernicious anemia
were found in other family members. Based on the family pedigree, autosomal recessive inheritance is likely. The variability of age of presentation in this family is noteworthy and suggests that expression may be modified by still undefined factors.
...
PMID:Congenital pernicious anemia: report of seven patients, with studies of the extended family. 648 32
Since calcium solubility is a prerequisite to calcium absorption, and since solubility of calcium is highly pH-dependent, it has been generally assumed that gastric acid secretion and gastric
acidity
play an important role in the intestinal absorption of calcium from ingested food or calcium salts such as CaCO3. To evaluate this hypothesis, we developed a method wherein net gastrointestinal absorption of calcium can be measured after ingestion of a single meal. A large dose of cimetidine, which markedly reduced gastric acid secretion, had no effect on calcium absorption in normal subjects, and an achlorhydric patient with
pernicious anemia
absorbed calcium normally. This was true regardless of the major source of dietary calcium (i.e., milk, insoluble calcium carbonate, or soluble calcium citrate). Moreover, calcium absorption after CaCO3 ingestion was the same when intragastric contents were maintained at pH 7.4 (by in vivo titration) as when intragastric pH was 3.0. On the basis of these results, we conclude that gastric acid secretion and gastric
acidity
do not normally play a role in the absorption of dietary calcium. Other possible mechanisms by which the gastrointestinal tract might solubilize ingested calcium complexes and salts are discussed.
...
PMID:An evaluation of the importance of gastric acid secretion in the absorption of dietary calcium. 670 97
Uric acid is the end-product of purine nucleotide metabolism in man. The renal handling of urate is a complicated process, resulting in a fractional clearance of 8.2-10.3%. The anhydrous form is thermodynamically the most stable uric acid crystal. Uric acid is a weak acid that ionizes with a Pka at pH 5.75. At the normal acidic region, uric acid solubility is strongly increased by urinary pH. The prevalence of uric acid stones varies between countries, reflecting climatic, dietary, and ethnical differences, ranging from 2.1% (in Texas) to 37.7% (in Iran). The risk for uric acid stone formation correlates with the degree of uric acid supersaturation in the urine, depending on uric acid concentration and urinary pH. Hyperuricosuria is the major risk factor, the most common cause being increased purine intake in the diet. Acquired and hereditary diseases accompanied by hyperuricosuria and stone disease include: gout, in strong correlation with the amount of uric acid excreted, myelo- and lymphoproliferative disorders, multiple myeloma, secondary polycythemia,
pernicious anemia
and hemolytic disorders, hemoglobinopathies and thalassemia, the complete or partial deficiency of HGPRT, superactivity of PRPP synthetase, and hereditary renal hypouricemia. A common denominator in patients with idiopathic and gouty stone formers is a low urinary pH. Uric acid nephrolithiasis is indicated in the presence of a radiolucent stone, a persistent undue urine
acidity
and uric acid crystals in fresh urine samples. A radiolucent stone in combination with normal or acidic pH should raise the possibility of urate stones.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Uric acid nephrolithiasis. 778 6
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