Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Crossed affinoimmunoelectrophoresis with Con A as a ligand was used to examine the microheterogeneity of alpha1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) and
alpha1-antichymotrypsin
(ACT) in sera of patients with child-onset and adult-onset Still's disease. The reactivity of both proteins was increased in sera of adults and decreased in sera of children with active disease, when compared with normal values. We also found statistically significant differences in serum concentration of ACT and
ferritin
in both diseases. This result suggests different pathogenic mechanisms of Still's disease in children and adults. Serum concentration of
ferritin
and ACT could be of value as a combined marker for the adult, but not the juvenile form of Still's disease.
...
PMID:Still's disease in children and adults: a distinct pattern of acute-phase proteins. 969 67
Inflammation influences the assessment of nutritional status. For example, inflammation reduces plasma retinol concentrations and vitamin A deficiency is overestimated. Conversely inflammation increases plasma
ferritin
concentrations and Fe deficiency is underestimated. Blood samples were obtained from 163 free-living HIV-1-infected adults, not on continuous medication, anti-retroviral drugs or micronutrients, not unwell and who had not reached WHO stage IV of HIV/AIDS. We used four markers of inflammation, C-reactive protein (CRP), alpha1-acid glycoprotein (AGP),
alpha1-antichymotrypsin
and erythrocyte sedimentation rate but mainly CRP and AGP were used to separate the subjects into four groups: 'healthy' where both CRP and AGP were normal; 'incubation phase' where CRP was elevated; 'early convalescence' where AGP and CRP were elevated and 'late convalescence' where only AGP was elevated. Correction factors were calculated to remove the influence of inflammation from each biomarker and group where inflammation was present and the data are shown before and after recalculation. The correction increased median plasma retinol concentrations of the whole group from 1.16 to 1.33 micromol/l, comparable with values (mean 1.29 micromol/l) in HIV-negative Kenyan women. Median
ferritin
concentrations fell by about 50% in both sexes and the number of women with plasma
ferritin
concentrations < or = 12 microg/l increased from eleven to twenty. The correction also increased plasma carotenoids and Hb but not alpha-tocopherol concentrations. We suggest that the method described to remove the influence of inflammation from nutritional biomarkers should be generally applicable in apparently healthy people and prevents discarding valuable data because of mild inflammation. The method does now need to be tested in other populations.
...
PMID:Using plasma acute-phase protein concentrations to interpret nutritional biomarkers in apparently healthy HIV-1-seropositive Kenyan adults. 1817 14
Fe status is difficult to assess in the presence of infections. To assess the role of the acute- phase response (APR) and other predictors of serum
ferritin
and transferrin receptor, we conducted a cross-sectional study among pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) patients in Mwanza, Tanzania. The acute- (serum
ferritin
) phase protein, serum
alpha1-antichymotrypsin
(ACT) and serum
ferritin
and serum soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) were measured, and data on smoking, soil and alcohol intake, and infection status were collected. Linear regression analysis was used to assess the role of elevated serum ACT and other predictors of serum
ferritin
and serum sTfR. Of 655 patients, 81.2 % were sputum positive (PTB+) and 47.2 % HIV+. Mean serum ACT was 0.72 g/l, with 91.1 % above 0.4 g/l. Among females and males, respectively, geometric mean serum
ferritin
was 140.9 and 269.1 microg/l (P < 0.001), and mean serum sTfR 4.3 and 3.8 mg/l (P < 0.001). Serum sTfR was increased 0.5 mg/l and log serum
ferritin
increased linearly with serum ACT >0.4 g/l. PTB+ and HIV infection, alcohol drinking and smoking were the positive predictors of serum
ferritin
, and female sex, soil eating, Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm infection were the negative predictors. Similarly, smoking and HIV infection were the negative predictors of serum sTfR, and female sex, soil eating and PTB+ were the positive predictors. Serum
ferritin
and serum sTfR are affected by the APR, but may still provide information about Fe status. It may be possible to develop algorithms, based on the markers of the APR and Fe status, to assess the Fe status among the patients with tuberculosis or other infections eliciting an APR.
...
PMID:Acute- phase response and iron status markers among pulmonary tuberculosis patients: a cross-sectional study in Mwanza, Tanzania. 1917 46