Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0847097 (
acidity
)
15,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Effects of removal of the submandibular salivary glands on gastric secretion and excretion were studied in 103 nonlinear white rats. Gastric secretion was discovered to be reduced and gastric
acidity
to be increased. These phenomena were accompanied by little marked changes in the pepsin content in gastric juice. Excretion of
urea
and sugar was decreased, while that of neutral red increased.
...
PMID:[Secretory and excretory functions of the stomach following removal of the submaxillary glands]. 677 34
The renal effects of dopamine have been studied in preterm infants with RDS. Dopamine has been given in doses of 0.5-2.0 microgram/kg/min as a continuous intravenous infusion in cases of peripheral circulatory disturbances. As a result, the circulation became stable and some renal parameters improved. There was a + 106% increase of urine output as well as a + 73%, + 140%, + 21% increase in Na-excretion, FeNa, creatinine clearance respectively. In accordance with the marked increase in phosphorus excretion the titratable
acidity
was also increased. There was a significant decrease in the renal
urea
excretion and free water clearance. These alterations were probably caused by an intrarenal hemodynamic redistribution. The possible mechanism of the renal changes are also discussed. The observations demonstrate the functional maturity of renal dopaminergic receptors in the preterm infants.
...
PMID:Effects of dopamine on renal functions in premature neonates with respiratory distress syndrome. 685 36
A potentiometric difference titration (PDT) method is used to study the ionization behavior of the thiol group in bovine serum albumin and in the following less complex compounds: glutathione, cysteine, 2-mercaptoethanol, 3-mercaptopropionic acid, 2-mercaptoethylamine, cis-2-mercaptocyclobutylamine, 2-aminothiophenol, and 5-mercapto-2-nitrobenzoic acid. In the PDT method the pH dependence of the amount of protons released in the reaction RSH + CH3SO2SCH3 leads to RSSCH3 + CH3SO2- + H+ is measured in order to obtain the pH dependence of the molar proton content of the thiol (hu) relative to the molar proton content of its methylthio derivative (hm). The pH dependence of hu--hm reflects the ionization behavior of the thiol group and of other groups whose ionization is thermodynamically linked to that of the thiol group. Data presented here indicate that the ionization behavior of the single thiol group in albumin is strikingly different in the native and the
urea
-denatured proteins. Three ionizable groups appear to affect ionization of the thiol in the native protein whereas only one group appears to affect ionization of the thiol in the
urea
-denatured protein. Furthermore, the measured PDT curves are consistent with an abnormally high
acidity
(pK less than 5) for the thiol in native albumin and a normal
acidity
for the thiol in the
urea
-denatured protein. Comparisons of microscopic ionization constants determined for cysteine by using the PDT method with those determined by other methods indicate that the PDT method should be useful in characterizing the ionization behavior of thiol groups in proteins and other polyprotic substances.
...
PMID:Determination of interactive thiol ionizations in bovine serum albumin, glutathione, and other thiols by potentiometric difference titration. 700 29
Past studies of norepinephrine-stimulated protein phosphorylation in intact C-6 glioma cells had identified a 58,000 molecular weight, 5.7 isoelectric point protein (58K-5.7) as a cyclic AMP-dependent phosphoprotein and had shown that 58K-5.7 was one of the most abundant proteins of the nuclear fraction. Initial experiments of present studies showed that the 58K-5.7 protein remained with the nuclear ghost, or matrix structure, after removal of chromatin. Based on the size,
acidity
, abundance, nonsolubilization by nonionic detergent and salt, and solubilization by
urea
, the hypothesis was advanced that the 58K-5.7 protein was the vimentin-type intermediate filament protein. The hypothesis was tested by two types of immunochemical experiments. Antisera against hamster vimentin reacted selectively with only the 58K-5.7 protein in polyacrylamide gels of
urea
-solubilized cellular residues (i.e., nonionic detergent and 0.6 M salt-insoluble material) as determined by immunoautoradiography. Antisera against the pure 58K-5.7 protein of C-6 cells bound selectively to a fibrous array of cellular material typical of vimentin filaments as determined by indirect immunofluorescence. It is concluded that the 58K-5.7 protein is vimentin.
...
PMID:Vimentin: a phosphoprotein under hormonal regulation. 702 79
A solid-phase reagent for determination of urinary specific gravity (relative density) is described. This reagent strip, similar to others in the "N-Multistix" series (Ames), contains a polyacid whose
acidity
is sensitive to the ionic concentration in the urine in which it is immersed. As the
acidity
of the polyacid changes, pH changes are detected by a pH indicator within the reagent strip. In comparison studies, 84.4% of relative densities as measured with these reagent strips were within 0.005 of the corresponding results with a total-solids meter, and 89.9% were within 0.005 of the corresponding urinometer results. Adding a correction of +0.005 to the reagent-strip results for urines with high pH increased the percentage of results within 0.005 of the comparison method to 90.7% (TS meter) and 92.9% (urinometer). Lot-to-lot variability and reader-to-reader variability were both low. Reagent strip results are not affected by glucose, may be increased by albumin, and correlate with
urea
concentrations.
...
PMID:A reagent strip for measuring the specific gravity of urine. 712 35
From each of 2 tetanic herds and 1 control herd 20 cows were randomly selected to determine serum levels of Mg, Ca, inorganic P, Na, K, Cl-, total protein,
urea
, GOT-activity and blood-glucose level. In rumen fluid the number of ciliates, ammonia, level, pH and total
acidity
were examined. Haematological investigations were carried out. Moreover dry matter and height of the herbage were measured, and meteorological measurements were utilized. The investigations were carried out before grazing and than on the 4th, 8th, 12th, and 16th day of grazing. Symptoms of metabolic disturbances and alcalic indigestion were found to be more distinct in the tetanic herds than in control herd. The method of MgO-pulverization on pastures was found to be useless. On the other hand, MgO-food-supplementation according to generally known methods was found to be of high usefulness. MgO-treatment at a dose of 50 g per cow and day in a period of 14 days before grazing effectively prevented the outbreak of hypomagnesaemia in spite of such tetanogenic factors as unfavourable weather, insufficience of dry matter in the herbage and subclinical alcalic indigestion with disturbed nitrogen metabolism.
...
PMID:[Effect of preventive treatment of acute hypomagnesemia on the biochemical and morphological indicators in cows during the grazing period]. 716 97
1 The acute effects of a high dose of piretanide, a new potent diuretic were studied in eight patients with severely impaired renal function (GFR between 0.09 and 0.17 ml s-1 1.73 m-2). 2 After hydration and following two control periods, a single dose of 48 mg piretanide was ingested. Thereafter, urine was collected every 30 min for 2 h and every hour for the next 4 h. Urinary fluid losses were replaced orally (100 ml of water ever hour) and intravenously (isotonic saline + glucose infusion). 3 The following measurements were made: urine flow rate, clearances of inulin, PAH,
urea
, creatinine, uric acid, osmolar and free water clearances, excretion rates of sodium, chloride, potassium, calcium, phosphate, bicarbonate, ammonium, titratable
acidity
and urine pH. 4 Piretanide (48 mg) appeared to be effective in advanced renal insufficiency, producing a significant increase in urine flow rate, in sodium, chloride, potassium and calcium excretion and in Cosm. 5 There was no significant change in GFR, as measured by inulin clearance, or in the other measured parameters.
...
PMID:Acute effect of high dose (48 mg) of piretanide in advanced renal insufficiency. 721 11
Patch tests with a cream (Calmuril) containing 10%
urea
were performed on 79 patients with eczematous skin disease; seven (9.9%) had positive tests. Patch tests with the ingredients of the cream were negative. It is suggested that the positive patch test reactions are toxic, due to hypertonicity and
acidity
of the cream.
...
PMID:Skin reactions to a urea-containing cream. 732 22
1 The pharmacological actions of piretanide, a new high efficiency diuretic, were studied in sixteen patients with GFR (inulin clearance) varying from 0.1--2.5 ml/s. 2 After hydration and following two control periods, a single dose of 6 mg piretanide was ingested. Thereafter, urine was collected every 30 min for 2 h and every hour for the next 4 h. Fluid losses were replaced. 3 The following measurements were made: urine flow rate, clearances of inulin, PAH,
urea
, creatinine, uric acid, osmolar and free water clearances, excretion rates of sodium, chloride, potassium, calcium, phosphate, bicarbonate, ammonium, titratable
acidity
and urine pH. 4 Main results showed piretanide was efficient in the group with normal GFR (inulin clearance greater than 1.5 ml/s) and in the group with slightly decreased GFR (1.0 less than inulin clearance less than 1.4 ml/s), in terms of diuresis, natriuresis, kaliuresis and calciuresis. It was inefficient in the group with severe renal insufficiency (inulin clearance less than 0.3 ml/s). 5 Free water clearance showed preservation of diluting ability to a large extent. 6 In the three groups, no significant change in inulin clearance and PAH clearance occurred.
...
PMID:Activity of a new high efficiency diuretic in man: piretanide (HOE 118). 738 13
The stomach serves as a barrier to enteric infection because of the antibacterial effect of the hydrochloric acid in gastric juice. In this study, we tested the ability of the enteric pathogen Yersinia enterocolitica to tolerate a pH range of 2.0 to 6.0 and found that under the conditions of a normal human fasting stomach (pH < 3 and a gastric emptying time of 2 h), Y. enterocolitica is highly acid resistant, showing approximately 85% survival. The resistance of Y. enterocolitica to acid in vitro depended on the bacterial growth phase and the concentration of
urea
in the medium, being maximal during stationary phase in the presence of at least 0.3 mM
urea
. Urease-negative mutants of Y. enterocolitica were constructed by disrupting the urease gene complex of a virulent strain of serogroup O9. Compared with the wild type, these mutants showed an approximately 1,000-fold decrease in the ability to tolerate acid in vitro (< 0.08% survival) and a 10-fold reduction in viability after passage through the stomachs of mice. Complementation of the disrupted urease genes in trans restored the ability of urease-negative mutants to tolerate low pH in vitro and gastric
acidity
to approximately wild-type levels. These findings indicate that urease is responsible for acid resistance in Y. enterocolitica and suggest that urease contributes to the virulence of Y. enterocolitica by enhancing the likelihood of bacterial survival during passage through the stomach.
...
PMID:Contribution of urease to acid tolerance in Yersinia enterocolitica. 755 81
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>