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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0847097 (
acidity
)
15,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Enteral nutrition (EN) has several advantages over parenteral nutrition (PN) for postoperative/posttrauma patients. Modern technologies for tube-feeding have made early EN possible. Jejunal tube-feeding has advantages over gastric tube-feeding: faster metabolic recovery, less vomiting, and less risk of regurgitation and aspiration. Immediate or early EN stimulates the splanchnic and hepatic circulations, improves mucosal blood flow, prevents intramucosal acidosis and permeability disturbances, and eliminates the need for stress ulcer prophylaxis. Saliva containing important antimicrobial substances and gastric
acidity
are important in sepsis prevention. Chewing, saliva, and gastric
acidity
support gastric nitric oxide (NO) release, important for mucosal blood flow, gastrointestinal (GI) motility, mucus formation, and bacteriostasis. An oral supply of NO-donating substances and chewing of
nitrate
-rich food, such as lettuce or spinach, can be useful. Oral and mucosa-protective lipids are recommended. H2 blockers and saliva-inhibiting drugs are avoided. Immediate EN should be given, starting with 25 ml/hr and increasing to 100 ml/hr over 24 to 48 hours. For the immunocompromised patient special attention should be given to the purity of water. Bottled water can contain bacteria such as Pseudomonas. Food antioxidants such as glutathione, vitamin E, and beta-carotenes are important. Ingredients for the colonic mucosa are important. Approximately 10% of caloric need is satisfied by so-called colonic food (prebiotics), fermented at the level of the colonic mucosa to produce colonic mucosa nutrients and to prevent gut origin sepsis. More than 10 g of fiber per day is recommended. The fermenting flora (probiotic flora) is deranged owing to disease or antibiotic treatment, and resupply of flora is important. A new concept of ecoimmune nutrition is presented for enteral supply of mucosa-reconditioning ingredients: new surfactants, pseudomucus, fiber, amino acids such as arginine, and mucosa-adhering Lactobacillus plantarum 299.
...
PMID:Nutritional support to prevent and treat multiple organ failure. 866 38
Air pollution measurements were conducted over a 1-year period in 24 North American communities participating in a respiratory health study. Ozone, particle strong
acidity
, sulfate, and mass (PM10 and PM2.1) were measured in all communities. In 20 of the communities, sulfur dioxide, ammonia, nitric acid, nitrous acid, and particulate
nitrate
were measured. The sampler was located centrally in the community whenever possible and samples were collected every other day. Concentrations of particle strong
acidity
, mass, sulfate, and ozone were highly correlated both in the region of the country defined as a high-sulfur source area and in the downwind transport regions. These regions of the eastern United States and southern Canada experienced the greatest particle strong
acidity
, sulfate, and particle mass concentrations during the spring and summer months (May-September). The particle strong
acidity
concentrations were highest in regions close to the high sulfur emission areas of the United States; that is, in the area immediately to the west of the Appalachian Plateau and west of the Allegheny Mountains (western Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio, and West Virginia) up through southern Ontario. The frequency of particle strong
acidity
events decreased with transport distance from the region of highest sulfur emissions. Low particle strong
acidity
and sulfates were found at the western and midwestern sites of both the United States and Canada. Substantial concentrations of nitric acid were found in two of the California sites as well as many sites in the northeastern portion of the United States. Sites selected for the epidemiologic study provide a range of annual mean particle strong
acidity
exposures from below the limit of detection to more than 50 nmol/m3.
...
PMID:Health effects of acid aerosols on North American children: air pollution exposures. 874 36
The role of fog in the symptomatology in asthmatic subjects has been assessed by a questionnaire concerning respiratory complaints linked to meteorological conditions and to non-specific irritant factors. In a population of 121 asthmatics (59 men and 62 women) 74.4% complained that fog was a factor aggravating their symptoms while only 3% of a group of 30 non-asthmatic subjects expressed discomfort during episodes of fog. The chemical analysis of fog during 32 episodes of local fog (pH, chloride,
nitrate
, sulphate, sodium, ammonia, potassium, magnesium, calcium) has shown a greater concentration of pollutants and greater
acidity
in the smaller particles (2-6 microns) which are able to penetrate the bronchial tree. This
acidity
could explain the role of fog in respiratory physiology. Certain authors have suggested that the aggravation of respiratory symptoms observed during peaks of pollution could be induced by aerosols containing sulphuric acid while others have described effects on respiratory function at the time of exposure to acid aerosols in asthmatic subjects but the results of the different studies have not all been concordant. Putting aside the role of the susceptible individual, other factors may intervene at the time inhalation of pollutants, notably the ambient humidity, the neutralising effect of endogenous ammonia and the synergystic effect between acid aerosols and atmospheric pollutants.
...
PMID:[Study by questionnaire of the influence of weather conditions, particularly fog, on the symptomatology of asthmatic subjects]. 887 63
Helicobacter pylori acquisition is the main cause of chronic gastritis in humans. In up to half of the infected subjects, chronic gastritis progresses to atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia. During this course, various mechanisms are triggered that may contribute to the pathogenesis of gastric cancer. Such mechanisms include the inflammation-related cascades of cytokine and free radical reactions, up- and downregulation of growth factors and their receptors, and the atrophy-related impairment of acid output and intraluminal
acidity
. An array of other factors may also have become significant including overgrowth of bacteria other than H. pylori in the hypochlorhydric or achlorhydric stomach, a high dietary consumption of salt,
nitrate
, or nitrite, smoking, deficiency of vitamins or micronutrients, influence of sex hormones, or an inherited liability of the dividing epithelial cells to gene errors. These factors may vary in effect between populations and individuals but, if active, may affect the cell genome which may further influence the course and progression of chronic gastritis, and can finally result in overt gastric neoplasia. The molecular biology of gastric cancer has revealed a spectrum of gene errors which vary in type and extent between different histological types of cancer, and between individual cases. There now is evidence that the intestinal metaplasia or the gastric epithelium in atrophic gastritis reveal signs of abnormal expression of various regulatory genes well before the appearance of gastric neoplasia. It is possible that the mechanisms leading to mutation of the genes in epithelial cells are triggered very early in the H. pylori gastritis cascade, and that atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia result from these processes.
...
PMID:Review article: Pathogenesis of the transformation from gastritis to malignancy. 970 Oct 4
To understand the physico-chemical factors that influence the efficacy of B. sphaericus formulation in the breeding sites of Culex quinquefasciatus, a study was carried out in Mayiladuturai area of Tamil Nadu (India). The factors studied were hydrogen ion concentration (pH),
acidity
, alkalinity, chlorides, phosphates, total hardness, sulphates, total solids, dissolved solids, suspended solids,
nitrate
nitrogen, ammoniacal nitrogen, dissolved oxygen, biological oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD). Efficacy of the formulation was assessed in terms of reduction in larval population in the treated habitats. pH of water in the treated sites was around neutral range (mean +/- SD 7.65 +/- 0.23). Phosphate content was low (2.27 +/- 1.34 ppm) whereas chlorides (326.1 +/- 55.8 ppm) and sulphates (38.9 +/- 23.8 ppm) were high. Total hardness ranged from 206 to 462.5 ppm with a mean of 312.1 +/- 80.5 ppm. The chlorides and sulphates, though present in considerable quantity, did not have any influence on the efficacy of B. sphaericus formulation. However, the proportion of insoluble chlorides and sulphates which contribute to total hardness seemed to influence the formulation adversely.
...
PMID:Efficacy of a Bacillus sphaericus formulation as influenced by the quality of Culex quinquefasciatus breeding waters. 991 8
Twenty-four-hour samples of PM10 (mass of particles with aerodynamic diameter < or = 10 microm), PM2.5, (mass of particles with aerodynamic diameter < or = 2.5 microm), particle strong
acidity
(H+), sulfate (SO42-),
nitrate
(
NO3
-), ammonia (NH3), nitrous acid (HONO), and sulfur dioxide were collected inside and outside of 281 homes during winter and summer periods. Measurements were also conducted during summer periods at a regional site. A total of 58 homes of nonsmokers were sampled during the summer periods and 223 homes were sampled during the winter periods. Seventy-four of the homes sampled during the winter reported the use of a kerosene heater. All homes sampled in the summer were located in southwest Virginia. All but 20 homes sampled in the winter were also located in southwest Virginia; the remainder of the homes were located in Connecticut. For homes without tobacco combustion, the regional air monitoring site (Vinton, VA) appeared to provide a reasonable estimate of concentrations of PM2.5 and SO42- during summer months outside and inside homes within the region, even when a substantial number of the homes used air conditioning. Average indoor/outdoor ratios for PM2.5 and SO42- during the summer period were 1.03 +/- 0.71 and 0.74 +/- 0.53, respectively. The indoor/outdoor mean ratio for sulfate suggests that on average approximately 75% of the fine aerosol indoors during the summer is associated with outdoor sources. Kerosene heater use during the winter months, in the absence of tobacco combustion, results in substantial increases in indoor concentrations of PM2.5, SO42-, and possibly H+, as compared to homes without kerosene heaters. During their use, we estimated that kerosene heaters added, on average, approximately 40 microg/m3 of PM2.5 and 15 microg/m3 of SO42- to background residential levels of 18 and 2 microg/m3, respectively. Results from using sulfuric acid-doped Teflon (E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., Wilmington, DE) filters in homes with kerosene heaters suggest that acid particle concentrations may be substantially higher than those measured because of acid neutralization by ammonia. During the summer and winter periods indoor concentrations of ammonia are an order of magnitude higher indoors than outdoors and appear to result in lower indoor acid particle concentrations. Nitrous acid levels are higher indoors than outdoors during both winter and summer and are substantially higher in homes with unvented combustion sources.
...
PMID:Indoor, outdoor, and regional summer and winter concentrations of PM10, PM2.5, SO4(2)-, H+, NH4+, NO3-, NH3, and nitrous acid in homes with and without kerosene space heaters. 1006 53
The anti-ulcer effects of nicorandil [N-(2-hydroxyethyl)nicotinamide
nitrate
ester] were examined on water-immersion plus restraint stress-induced and aspirin-induced gastric ulcers in rats, compared with those of cimetidine. Nicorandil (3 and 10 mg/kg) given orally to rats dose-dependently inhibited the development of acid-related damage (water-immersion- and aspirin-induced gastric lesions) in the models. Cimetidine (50 mg/kg, p.o.) also had anti-ulcer effects in the same models. However, in the presence of glibenclamide (20 mg/kg, i.v.), an antagonist of K(ATP) channels, nicorandil did not inhibit the formation of gastric lesions. Nicorandil (10 mg/kg) given intraduodenally (i.d.), like cimetidine (50 mg/kg), significantly reduced the volume of the gastric content, total
acidity
and total acid output in the pylorus ligation model. Glibenclamide reversed the changes caused by i.d. nicorandil. I.v. infusion of nicorandil (20 microg/kg per min) significantly increased gastric mucosal blood flow, without affecting blood pressure and heart rate, but the increase in the blood flow was not observed after i.v. treatment with glibenclamide (20 mg/kg). These results indicate that nicorandil administered orally to rats produces the anti-ulcer effect by reducing the aggressive factors and by enhancing the defensive process in the mucosa through its K(ATP)-channel-opening property.
...
PMID:Effects of nicorandil on experimentally induced gastric ulcers in rats: a possible role of K(ATP) channels. 1008 17
This study compares the chemical composition of rainwater samples collected at two sampling sites, the first situated in the Rijeka city centre and the second in a suburban site 120 m above the sea level. The rainwater samples were analysed for precipitation weighted average concentrations of hydrogen, sulphate,
nitrate
, chloride, ammonium, sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium. The results suggest that the local washout of the atmosphere enhanced the rainwater
acidity
in the city centre which also received significant marine contributions of sulphate, calcium, magnesium, and potassium content. Rainwater in the suburban site was affected by soil dust and/or fertilizers used in the nearby gardens, resulting in partial neutralization with rising of pH value. While the content of S-SO4 was practically equal at both sites, the quantities of N-
NO3
and N-NH4 nearly doubled at the suburban site.
...
PMID:Chemical composition of rainwater collected at two sampling sites in the city of Rijeka. 1037 56
Amorphous aluminosilicate xerogels with various chemical compositions were prepared by coprecipitation, and their surface
acidity
and hydrophilicity were investigated by NH(3) gas temperature programed desorption (TPD), water vapor adsorption-desorption isotherms, and (27)Al magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR). The xerogels were synthesized by adding conc. NH(4)OH to an ethanol solution of calculated amounts of aluminium
nitrate
nonahydrate and tetraethylorthosilicate, and calcined at 300 degrees C for 4 h. All the NH(3) TPD spectra of the xerogels showed similar asymmetric peak profiles at around 200 degrees C tailing to the higher temperature side. The amount of
acidity
evaluated from the peak area of the TPD spectra showed a maximum at around 10 mol% Al(2)O(3) composition. The change as a function of composition showed a good correlation with the total amount of four and five coordinated Al atoms in the xerogels deduced from the (27)Al MAS NMR spectra. The water vapor adsorption isotherms of the xerogels were all of type IV irrespective of the composition. The maximum amounts of water vapor adsorbed by these xerogels were about 600-700 ml(STP)/g and were relatively high compared with those for various other adsorbents reported so far. Since the thickness of the adsorbed water vapor layer of the xerogels in the low relative pressure region increased with increasing Al(2)O(3) content, the surface of the xerogels is considered to become more hydrophilic with increasing Al(2)O(3) content of the xerogels. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.
...
PMID:Surface Acidity and Hydrophilicity of Coprecipitated Al(2)O(3)-SiO(2) Xerogels Prepared from Aluminium Nitrate Nonahydrate and Tetraethylorthosilicate. 1052 88
Outdoor and indoor fine particulate species were measured at the Lindon Elementary School in Lindon, Utah, to determine which components of ambient fine particles have strong indoor and outdoor concentration correlations. PM2.5 mass concentrations were measured using tapered element oscillating microbalance (TEOM) monitors and by gravimetric analysis of Teflon filter samples. Gas-phase HNO3, sulfur dioxide, particulate
nitrate
, strong acid, and particulate sulfate were measured using annular denuder samplers. Soot was measured using quartz filters in filter packs. Total particulate number was measured with a condensation nucleus counter (CNC). Total particulate number and fine particulate sulfate and soot were correlated for ambient and indoor measurements. Indoor PM2.5 mass showed a low correlation with outdoor PM2.5 mass because of the influence of coarse material from student activities on indoor PM2.5. Fine particle
acidity
and the potentiation of biological oxidative mechanisms by iron were not correlated indoors and outdoors.
...
PMID:Indoor/outdoor relationships for ambient PM2.5 and associated pollutants: epidemiological implications in Lindon, Utah. 1068 Mar 70
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