Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The renal effect of cyclic somatostatin was studied on healthy subjects. The somatostatin was used at therapeutical dose in intravenous infusion. Somatostatin decreases the renal plasma flow, glomerular filtration rate, osmotic and free water clearances, sodium and potassium excretion and the tubular reabsorption of phosphorus while urinary osmolality increases. Under somatostatin infusion the urinary excretion of catecholamines, PGE2, PGF2 alfa and the plasma renin activity and the plasma concentration of glucagon and growth hormone decrease. The antidiuretic activity of somatostatin is due to a) a direct haemodinamic effect, b) an influence on the renal tubular transport as well and also c) because of change the water handling in the collecting ducts.
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PMID:[Effect of somatostatin on kidney function]. 168 89

We have followed the hormonal response to exercise in twelve normal males cycling at a constant moderate load for ten minutes. Plasma concentrations of a variety of hormones were measured at set times before and during exercise and for twenty minutes afterward. The plasma concentration of norepinephrine and epinephrine and plasma activity of renin rose to a maximum at the end of exercise and then declined. The plasma concentrations of neurotensin and atrial natriuretic peptide followed a similar course. Plasma vasopressin rose to a peak at the end of exercise and then fell transiently below the initial value ten minutes after exercise. The plasma concentrations of aldosterone, prolactin and adrenocorticotropin increased during exercise but continued to do so, reaching a peak at ten minutes after exercise. Plasma growth hormone increased during exercise and continued to increase throughout the period of twenty minutes' recovery. Cortisol did not change during exercise but rose progressively during the recovery period. Plasma concentrations of glucagon did not change while that of insulin decreased during exercise. The plasma concentration of bombesin slowly increased during exercise and declined during recovery, reaching a basal value 10 minutes later.
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PMID:Temporal relations of the endocrine response to exercise. 187 87

Eleven hemodialyzed patients with uremia were examined for the effect of erythropoietin (EP) treatment carried out for 3 months on functions of different endocrine organs. EP treatment resulted in a decrease of the initial plasma levels of somatotropin, prolactin, follicle-stimulating and luteinizing hormones. EP treatment being over, there was a decrease in the plasma content of ACTH, cortisol and aldosterone. The treatment with EP was also associated with an insignificant rise of the plasma levels of parathyroid hormone and testosterone. EP treatment did not influence the plasma concentration of calcitonin and 25-OH-D. EP was found to exert no significant effect on the pituitary-thyroid reverse relationship. The 3-month treatment with EP eventuated in plasma renin activity inhibition as well as in an increase of the atrial level of natriuretic peptide in the plasma. EP treatment stimulated insulin secretion and reduced glucagon secretion. Finally, EP decreased the gastrin level and to a less degree the plasma level of pancreatic polypeptide.
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PMID:[The effect of erythropoietin treatment on endocrine organ function in patients with terminal-stage kidney failure on hemodialysis]. 194 56

Ten patients with chronic renal failure (GFR 29-97 ml/min), on free diets providing 1 g/kg B.W. of proteins, ingested an oral protein load (meat meal, 2 g/kg B.W.). GFR and RPF increased significantly over baseline with no change in filtration fraction. Within 30 min of the meal and for the next 3 h a statistically significant increase was observed in the plasma concentrations of the following amino acid groups: essential, non-essential, total, branched-chain, ketogenic, glycogenic, glycogenic and ketogenic, basic, acid, polar and non-polar. At 30 min the smallest increase was seen in acid and polar amino acids (6.7% and 7.6%, respectively). At 180 min the largest increase (78.8%) was seen for glycogenic and ketogenic amino acids and total plasma amino acids were 1.58 times baseline. After the meat meal plasma glucagon and insulin rose significantly, while growth hormone, plasma renin activity and aldosterone did not vary.
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PMID:Renal hemodynamics, plasma amino acids and hormones after a meat meal in progressive nephron loss. 204 91

Plasma levels of a variety of hormones have been measured in patients within two hours of the onset of symptoms of myocardial infarction and before commencement of any treatment. Increased plasma concentrations were found for norepinephrine, epinephrine, glucagon, aldosterone, vasopressin, atrial natriuretic peptide, corticotrophin, prolactin, cortisol and substance P while plasma renin activity was raised. The plasma concentrations of insulin, growth hormone, neurotensin, bombesin and vasointestinal peptide were normal.
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PMID:Hormonal response in untreated myocardial infarction. 210 97

Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) were fed 6 different diets. The baseline diet (I) derived equal calories from sucrose, proteins, and fats. Three other diets (II, III, VI) derived the majority of calories from refined CHO, sucrose or glucose, with decreases in calories from proteins or fats. The last two diets (IV, V) were relatively low in sucrose with a higher percentage of the total calories from proteins and fats, respectively. From 3 to 15 weeks on the diets, the highest average BP was in rats consuming high concentrations of sucrose or glucose (II, III, VI). Urinary excretory rates of norepinephrine (NE) at 5, 10 and 15 weeks and epinephrine at 5 and 10 weeks were significantly elevated in rats ingesting diets high in refined CHO, and NE positively correlated with blood pressure (BP) at 5 and 10 weeks of the study. At the end of the study, serum insulin levels were not different, but plasma renin and serum glucagon levels were lower in SHR consuming the diets with high CHO concentrations. We conclude that equally elevated BP are seen with relatively high intakes of either sucrose or glucose, whether the balance of calories is derived from lessening fat or protein. This is secondary, at least in part, to alterations in NE metabolism.
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PMID:Excess sucrose and glucose ingestion acutely elevate blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 235 Apr 77

After burn trauma, a very marked endocrine response occurs. Almost all the known hormones take part in it. Their response influences very much the postburn metabolic changes and participates in the integration of the body's response with the nervous and immune systems. In this review, mainly the changes in various hormone levels are described, as well as the possible role of the acute phase response after burn trauma, and the communications between the endocrine and immune systems, the cells of the latter are able to respond to various hormonal stimuli and to secrete various hormones themselves. Some of the hormones are very sensitive indicators of the burn stress, e.g., the T3 levels (very low), testosterone in males (very low), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) (very low), ADH, catecholamines, renin and angiotensin II, cortisol (high), 17-beta-estradiol in males (usually elevated). Other hormones are usually elevated, but not always (ACTH, aldosterone, prolactin, glucagon, immunoreactive insulin, beta-endorphin, rT3, 11-beta-hydroxyandrostenedione), but there are hormones that are unually low (T4, FSH, androstenedione, progesterone--the latter especially in females). Calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, growth hormone are sometimes elevated, as well as LH (measured with RIA methods). TSH is usually normal, the biologically measured LH was reported to be low. The levels of the sensitive indicators of burn stress may be used to evaluate the effect of treatment: if the burn patient is properly treated, the indicators may become earlier normal.
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PMID:Endocrine changes after burn trauma--a review. 251 73

Data presented in this study suggest existence of hyperendorphinism in uraemic patients. This hyperendorphinism may be regarded both as a primary beneficial compensatory mechanism counteracting disturbances of the internal environment, while causing secondary harmful side effects, which contribute to the uraemic state. Erythropoietin treatment of uraemic, haemodialyzed patients is followed by marked endocrine alterations (suppression of plasma levels of STH, ACTH, prolactin, glucagon, aldosterone, cortisol and plasma renin activity, elevation of plasma insulin and atrial natriuretic levels, lack of influence on plasma PTH, CT and AVP). It remains to be clarified whether the erythropoietin induced endocrine alterations are due to correction of the existing anaemia or reflect a specific effect of this hormone.
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PMID:Endocrine abnormalities in patients with endstage renal failure. 256 Mar 46

A hypotensive effect of an orally-administered cyclopeptide somatostatin analog, MK-678, has been demonstrated in a hypertensive diabetic rat model. Sustained blood pressure reduction failed to occur when the drug was administered to the spontaneously hypertensive rat. The mechanism of hypotension appears independent of effects on a variety of hormones including insulin, glucagon, growth hormone, and components of the renin-angiotensin system including renin activity, plasma angiotensin converting enzyme, and aldosterone.
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PMID:Blood pressure reduction in hypertensive-diabetic rats by the somatostatin analog MK-678. 256 53

Beta-blockers can precipitate hypoglycemia and mask its warning signs. Ten male insulin-dependent, otherwise healthy diabetic patients underwent two submaximal exercise tests and two insulin-induced hypoglycemic events (0.2 u/Kg short-acting insulin IV) after six days administration of placebo followed by tertatolol, a non selective beta-blocker (5 mg once daily). Tertatolol modified neither the exercise-induced changes in blood glucose, lactate and plasma unesterified fatty acid levels, nor those of counter regulatory hormones (glucagon, growth hormone, cortisol), while blood pressure, heart rate and plasma renin activity were significantly reduced, proving that tertatolol had actually been ingested, and was active. During the insulin-induced hypoglycemia, similarly tertatolol did not modify the course of the plasma fuels and hormones. Particularly, hypoglycemia was neither deeper nor more prolonged in the presence than in the absence of tertatolol. Warning symptoms were not affected except for palpitations which were not perceived. These results suggest that tertatolol did not precipitate hypoglycemia following exercise, and did not aggravate insulin-induced hypoglycemia in short term administration, and in otherwise healthy diabetic patients.
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PMID:Short tertatolol treatment does not impair the hormone and metabolic responses to exercise and hypoglycemia in diabetics. 257 24


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