Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Electron microscopic studies were carried out on rat kidneys during the early phase of "two-kidney" Goldblatt hypertension. Pathologic ultrastructural changes (confluence of foot processes of the podocytes, formation of intercellular juctions between them, etc.) and an enhanced permeability to ferritin were found in the glomeruli of both the ischaemic and the contralateral kidneys. Signs of activation and exhaustion of the lysosomal system appeared in the glomerular epithelial cells of the untouched kidneys. These signs were absent in the kidneys with constricted arteries. The possible significance and pathogenesis of the alteration are discussed in comparison with other pathological conditions showing a similar ultrastructural picture.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural changes of the rat renal glomeruli in the early phase of renovascular hypertension. 53 16

The availability of iron is critical in low-birthweight infants. We followed a group of small preterm infants without iron supplementation who were either exclusively breast-fed or weaned early to industrial infant milk formula or home-prepared cow's milk formula. The gain of iron was compared within the milk groups on the basis of hemoglobin and serum ferritin concentrations at the ages of 3 and 4 mth when only trace amounts of solid foods had been given. Contrary to the reports on term infants we found unsupplemented proprietary infant milk formula and breast milk similar as a source of iron. It is possible that there is no major inhibition of iron absorption from any milk during the time of simultaneously occurring accelerated erythropoiesis and exhaustion of iron stores in preterm infants. The apparent inferiority of cow's milk could be due to increased intestinal loss of blood.
...
PMID:Iron gain in low-birthweight infants: role of milk feeding. 57 31

Knowledge of disturbancies of iron utilization has been considerably extended by histochemical-ultrastructural findings and the results of immunoradiometric assays for serum ferritin. -- In chronic anaemia due to infections or neoplastic diseases hyposideraemia and normal unsaturated iron binding capacity were associated with increased iron retention in macrophages and slightly to highly increased serum ferritin (500--4000 ng/ml). -- 117 patients with sideroblastic anaemia formed a heterogenous group of diverse aetiology. The iron granules of ringed sideroblasts contained nonferritin iron in mitochondria. At diagnosis, a normal iron status was found in single cases. More frequently, praelatent and latent iron overload with ferritin levels up to more than 2000 ng/ml were observed. Manifest iron overload with tissue damage was mostly the result of numerous transfusions (ferritin 4700 bis 9500 ng/ml). -- After i.v. application of colloidal iron endothelial siderosis was a regular finding. The typical uniform granules representing nonferritin-iron in lysosomes disappeared in the course of 1--3 years completely. In contrast, the colloidal iron taken up simultaneously by the macrophages was rapidly transformed into ferritin and easily used up for haemoglobin synthesis when required. The corresponding increase of serum ferritin up to maximal 4000 mg/ml was dose related. Continued blood losses lead to residual endothelial siderosis after exhaustion of macrophageal iron and recurrence of iron deficiency anaemia. The serum ferritin fell to low levels (0--12 ng/ml) as observed in untreated cases.
...
PMID:[Disturbancies of iron utilization: chronic anaemia, sideroblastic anaemia, and residual endothelial siderosis (author's transl)]. 73 33

To determine the effects of depleted iron stores on endurance performance and blood lactate concentration, eight active women with normal (> 26 ng/ml) and eight with low (< 12 ng/ml) plasma ferritin concentrations were studied while performing a VO2max and an endurance test (80% VO2max) on a cycle ergometer. The low ferritin group had significantly lower serum iron concentration and transferrin saturation and higher TIBC than the normal ferritin group. Mean VO2max was not significantly different between groups. No significant difference was found in total time to exhaustion during the endurance test for low (23.2 min) and normal (27.0 min) ferritin groups; however, the normal ferritin group exercised 14% longer. Blood lactate concentrations following the VO2max and endurance test did not differ significantly between groups. Food diaries revealed lower daily absorbable iron intake by the low ferritin group compared to the normal ferritin group. Ferritin concentration was significantly related to absorbable iron (r = .72) and total iron (r = .70) intake. The results suggest that women with depleted iron stores who are not anemic may have less endurance, but do not have higher blood lactate during exercise than women with normal iron stores.
...
PMID:Effects of low ferritin concentration on endurance performance. 129 7

The purpose of this investigation was to examine the effects of oral iron supplementation on endurance performance in initially iron-depleted, nonanemic female distance runners. Eighteen iron-depleted (serum ferritin less than 20 ng.ml-1, hemoglobin greater than or equal to 12 g.dl-1) women (22-39 yr) performed a VO2max test and an endurance run to exhaustion. Subjects were pair-matched on the basis of endurance time and then randomly assigned to an iron supplement or a placebo group. Following supplementation, the iron group had a significantly higher (P = 0.03) mean serum ferritin concentration (23.4 vs 15.7 ng.ml-1) and lower (P = 0.04) mean total iron-binding capacity than the placebo group. Both groups increased their time to exhaustion (25.5% and 22.2% for the iron and placebo groups, respectively) but were not significantly different (P = 0.72) from each other. There were also no differences (P greater than 0.05) between the groups with respect to lactate concentrations and physiological measures taken during the two exercise tests. The results of this study suggest that 8 wk of oral iron supplementation improves iron status in iron-depleted female distance runners, but does not enhance endurance capacity.
...
PMID:Effect of iron supplementation on endurance capacity in iron-depleted female runners. 150 68

Five subjects undertook 10 days of twice daily interval training sessions on a treadmill followed by 5 days of active recovery. On days 1, 6, 11, and 16 the subjects were required to undertake a test of submaximal and maximal work capacity on a treadmill combined with a performance test consisting of a run to exhaustion with the treadmill set at 18 km.h-1 and 1% gradient. Also on these days a pre-exercise blood sample was collected and analysed for a range of haematological, biochemical and immunological parameters. The subjects experienced a significant fall in performance on day 11 which had returned to pretraining levels on day 16. Serum ferritin concentrations were depressed significantly from pretraining concentrations at the conclusion of the recovery period while the expression of lymphocyte activation antigens (CD25+ and HLA-DR+) was increased both after the training phase and the recovery phase. The number of CD56+ cells in the peripheral circulation was depressed at the conclusion of the recovery period. Several parameters previously reported to change in association with overload training failing to reflect the decrease in performance experienced by subjects in this study, suggesting that overtraining may best be diagnosed through a multifactorial approach to the recognition of symptoms. The most important factor to consider may be a decrease in the level of performance following a regeneration period. The magnitude of this decreased performance necessary for the diagnosis of overtraining and the nature of an "appropriate" regeneration period are, however, difficult to define and may vary depending upon the training background of the subjects and the nature of the preceding training. It may or may not be associated with biochemical, haematological, physiological and immunological indicators. Individual cases may present a different range of symptoms and diagnosis of overtraining should not be excluded based on the failure of blood parameters to demonstrate variation. However, blood parameters may be useful to identify possible aetiology in each separate case report of over-training. An outstanding factor to emerge from this study was the difficulty associated with an objective diagnosis of overtraining and this is a possible reason why there have been new accounts of overtraining research in the literature.
...
PMID:Biological responses to overload training in endurance sports. 159 59

A multicentre study was carried out in a sample population of healthy volunteers in order to assess the usefulness of assaying serum ferritin to monitor the extent of reserves in subjects with a risk of iron deficiency. A total of 317 subjects were included in the study. Ninety-nine were children with a mean age of 19 months, 121 were adolescents with a mean age of 18 years and 7 months, and 97 were women with a mean age of 28 years and 9 months. Levels of serum ferritin below the normal minimum levels for each age bracket, an indication of the exhaustion of the body's reserves, were found in 29% of children, 32.2% of adolescents and 27.8% of women. This study therefore confirm the frequent onset, even in our modern society, of iron-deficient states at particular times of life and that these are easily overlooked. The measurements of serum ferritin levels, in addition to being a confirmatory test in cases of suspected sideropenic anemia, has the peculiar characteristic of being the only test able to identify risk subjects before they become symptomatic. This enables rapid treatment to be commenced or better, efficient prevention.
...
PMID:[Multicenter study of serum ferritin assay for the surveillance of subjects at risk of iron deficiency]. 194 3

Serum ferritin levels were determined in 170 healthy Norwegian women (18-48 y, median age 36 y) including 23 blood donors. Exhausted iron stores, defined by serum ferritin levels less than 17 micrograms/l, were found in 21.8% of the non-donors, and in 30.4% of the donors. Women with serum ferritin levels less than or equal to 20 micrograms/l participated in a bioavailability study. They were randomized to one of three groups and given one of three different low dose iron supplements (18-20 mg iron per day) for six months. One of the supplements contained heme iron and non-heme iron, the other two contained non-heme iron only. Mean serum ferritin increase was significant for two of the supplements, the one containing heme iron giving the best result. All the supplements resulted in a significant decrease in TIBC.
...
PMID:[Women and iron deficiency--a problem? Iron levels in a group of fertile Norwegian women and the bioavailability of 3 low-dose iron supplements in women with low iron stores]. 266 80

Bio-availability and therapeutic efficacy of two oral ferrous preparations in the form of effervescent tablets (A and A*) were compared. In a randomly controlled trial, postabsorption rise of serum iron was compared intraindividually after oral intake of the effervescent tablets and of an optimally bio-available ferrous ascorbate standard solution (80.5 mg). Afterwards the therapeutic efficacy of both preparations (161 mg daily) was compared with a proprietary iron preparation (B: 150 mg daily) for three months. The trial was conducted on 24 male subjects (aged 20-38 years) who underwent weekly phlebotomies of 500 ml until exhaustion of body iron reserves and development of a mild iron-deficiency anaemia (standard phlebotomy protocol). Relative bioavailability, related to the standard iron solution, was 89% and 104%, respectively, for tablets A and A*. The rise in haemoglobin and ferritin during the three-months treatment was relatively the same for all three preparations: the average daily haemoglobin rise (means +/- SD) was 1.4 +/- 0.5 g/l (A), 1.5 +/- 0.4 g/l (A*) and 1.2 +/- 0.5 g/l (B), respectively, the differences not being statistically significant.
...
PMID:[Oral iron therapy. Bioavailability and therapeutic effectiveness of ferrous iron in effervescent tablets in posthemorrhagic iron deficiency anemia]. 266 80

Serum ferritin, an index of iron stores, was studied in 60 patients with porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT), in 21 patients who had other liver diseases without siderosis (cirrhosis [LC] and chronic active hepatitis [CAH]), and in 32 patients with associated liver siderosis (alcoholic LC, LC and CAH in minor thalassemia). Ferritin levels were higher in patients with porphyria than in healthy controls and patients without liver siderosis (P less than 0.001), whereas no statistical difference was observed between patients with porphyria and those with liver siderosis. Because iron removal is considered the treatment of choice for PCT, some patients with PCT underwent phlebotomy and others received chelating therapy with subcutaneous infusion of deferoxamine. Follow-up of the patients showed a correlation between serum ferritin level and urinary porphyrin excretion; when the clinical and biochemical syndrome became normal, serum iron and ferritin had fallen to normal values (t test pair data analysis before and after: P less than 0.001 in each group). No appreciable difference was found between controls and patients with PCT whose conditions had been normalized, irrespective of the chronic liver damage always present in PCT. Our results suggest that serum ferritin increase in PCT is related more to liver iron overload than to liver damage, and ferritin follow-up is recommended to indicate the exhaustion of hepatic iron stores during iron depletion therapy, as well as to detect an early replenishment after remission.
...
PMID:Serum ferritin in the assessment of liver iron overload and iron removal therapy in porphyria cutanea tarda. 394 Dec 93


1 2 3 Next >>