Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P56851 (epididymal)
11,273 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An incubation of uremic human serum with normal rat adipose tissue will make the subsequently isolated adipocytes less responsive to insulin. To examine the extent of insulin resistance, we obtained sera from nondiabetic, uremic patients, who had not undergone dialysis therapy. The sera were then dialyzed (3500 molecular-weight cutoff) for 18 hr against a defined culture medium to eliminate possible in vitro effects of altered levels of end-product metabolites, electrolytes, and metabolic substrates. After an incubation of epididymal fat tissue from normal rats, for 3 hr with the dialyzed sera (50% vol/vol), cells were isolated and washed. The insulin stimulation of 14C-glucose (0.2 mM) incorporation to 14CO2 and total lipids was significantly reduced in the adipocytes pretreated with sera from 19 of the 29 uremic patients. Although elevated in the uremic patients, the sera levels of insulin, and parathyroid and growth hormones were not correlated to insulin resistant activity. Furthermore, incubation of adipose tissue for 3 hr with insulin, glucagon, or PTH did not produce resistance. The uremic sera reduced glucose utilization equally at 0.2 and 50 mM glucose, suggesting that the insulin resistance was induced additionally at a site distal to the glucose transport system. However, the concentration of insulin (22 microunits/ml) required for half-maximal stimulation of glucose metabolism was not altered by pretreatment with uremic serum. Also, neither the isoproterenol-stimulated lipolysis nor the inhibition of this cellular event was influenced by pretreatment with uremic sera.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Induction of insulin resistance in normal adipose tissue by uremic human serum. 637 54

Microlithiasis of the epididymis is a rare ultrasound finding in the general population, but the incidence of calcifications in various organs of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is extremely high. The aim of this study was to describe epididymal microlithiasis in 22 previously dialysed patients who received kidney transplantations at a median age of 19 years (range 9-30). The patients underwent scrotum ultrasonography, semen analysis and laboratory tests (renal function, sexual hormones, Ca, P and PTH) and were administered the International Index of Erectile Function questionnaire. Seventeen presented calcifications of the epididymis, two of whom had concomitant testicular calcifications; a further three patients had isolated testicular calcifications without epididymis involvement. It was not possible to investigate the fertility of all of the patients but 12 of the 13 whose semen was analysed showed abnormalities: five were azoospermic and seven oligospermic with various degrees of morphological anomalies. To the best of our knowledge, these are the first published data concerning the prevalence of epididymal calcifications in young dialysed patients undergoing renal transplantation. Epididymal microlithiasis and infertility were common findings and so performing a spermiogram and preserving semen before ESRD for future paternity may be good advice in this selected population.
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PMID:Epididymis microlithiasis and semen abnormalities in young adult kidney transplant recipients. 2313 Oct 6