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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
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Parathyroid hormone and calcitonin, two major calcium-regulating hormones, were measured in the plasma of five experimental groups of rats to evaluate postflight calcium homeostasis after the 14-day COSMOS 2044 flight. Parathyroid hormone values were slightly higher in the flight animals (F) than in the appropriate cage and diet controls (S) (44 +/- 21 vs. 21 +/- 4 pg/ml, P less than 0.05), but they were the same as in the vivarium controls (V), which had different housing and feeding schedules. Neither V nor S showed the increase in plasma creatinine phosphorus and magnesium found in F, features of early renal insufficiency. F showed the lowest mean plasma calcitonin that was statistically different from V only. This difference in F and V (22 +/- 11 vs. 49 +/- 16 pg/ml, P less than 0.05) was most likely due to failure of circulating calcitonin in F to show the normal age-dependent increase we demonstrated in age-matched controls in a separate experiment. Basal values for parathyroid hormone and calcitonin were unchanged after 2 wk of hindlimb suspension, a flight simulation model, in age-matched and younger rats. From a time course experiment serum calcium was higher and parathyroid hormone lower after 4 wk than in ambulatory controls. Postflight circulating levels of parathyroid hormone appear to reflect disturbances in calcium homeostasis from impaired renal function of undetermined cause, whereas levels of calcitonin reflect depression of a normal growth process.
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PMID:Circulating parathyroid hormone and calcitonin in rats after spaceflight. 152 47

A study was conducted to evaluate the effects of diets containing 3% of either palmitic acid (Diet PA), oleic acid (Diet OA), or linoleic acid (Diet LA) on reproductive performance, fatty acid composition of egg yolk, plasma, and liver, and total plasma phosphorus of Japanese quail. Each diet was fed to 20 individually caged hens from 5 wk of age. A 24-wk production period started at 8 wk of age. Fertile eggs for incubation were obtained by placing at random a male in the cage with the female for 15 to 20 min twice per week. The males were kept in separate individual cages and fed a turkey grower diet throughout. Feed consumption, egg production, egg output, and the number of chicks per hen were higher (P less than .05) in birds fed Diet PA than in those fed Diet OA or Diet LA. Hatchability was not different (P greater than .05) between Diet PA and Diet OA, but they were higher (P less than .05) than that of Diet LA. Quail weight at hatch from birds fed Diet LA was heavier (P less than .05) than those from Diet OA, but not different (P greater than .05) from those fed Diet PA. Total plasma phosphorus concentration was higher (P less than .05) in birds fed Diet PA than in those fed Diet LA. High levels of oleic and linoleic acids were found in egg yolk, plasma, and liver lipids from birds fed Diet OA and Diet LA, respectively. Feeding Diet PA resulted in elevated levels of palmitoleic acid in all three tissues. The highest overall reproductive performance on Diet PA suggests that palmitic acid has some physiological role in reproduction. The sustained near-maximal levels of egg production and fertility achieved in this trial indicate the superiority of the mating procedure, which would also permit testing the response of male and female birds while minimizing injuries incurred by the females.
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PMID:Effect of feeding palmitic, oleic, and linoleic acids to Japanese quail hens (Coturnix coturnix japonica). 1. Reproductive performance and tissue fatty acids. 178 70

1. In a 6 x 7 factorial experiment using 2688 22-week-old laying hens of the Lohmann-SL strain kept in cages (4 birds/cage), diets containing six calcium (20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45 g calcium/kg) and seven phosphorus concentrations (3.2, 4.2, 5.2, 6.2, 7.2, 8.2, 16.2 g total phosphorus/kg (Pt)) were combined orthogonally. The resulting 42 treatments were replicated 8 times so that a replicate consisted of a double cage of 2 x 4 hens. The experiment lasted 40 weeks (10 x 28 days). 2. The experimental diets, based on maize and soyabean meals contained 11.5 MJ metabolisable energy/kg and 175 g/kg protein. Different dietary calcium and phosphorus contents were obtained by substituting oat hulls with limestone and dicalcium phosphate. 3. Mortality, egg production, egg weight, egg mass, food intake and food conversion efficiency were determined as well as the breaking strength, thickness of shells and the percentage of eggs with defective shells. 4. All responses measured were significantly influenced by the variance sources (calcium, phosphorus, interaction). Most of the production traits responded asymptotically to increasing dietary phosphorus concentration, the greatest increases or decreases generally being seen between 3.2 and 5.2 g Pt/kg. Further but weaker increases were seen between 5.2 and 8.2 or 16.2 g Pt/kg. 5. Increases in dietary calcium content always resulted in curvilinear responses. In all cases optimal effects were obtained with diets containing 25 g calcium/kg and the worst values at 45 g calcium/kg. The interaction between calcium and phosphorus was recognised by strong performance depressions and a high mortality at combinations of the lowest phosphorus concentration (3.2 g/kg) with high calcium contents (35 to 45 g/kg). These were largely offset by increasing dietary phosphorus. Thus, between 7.2 and 16.2 g Pt/kg and 25 and 45 g Ca/kg a plateau was formed where only small differences in egg production were observed. 6. From the three egg shell characteristics measured, breaking strength and shell thickness responded differently to the percentage of eggs with defective shells. While breaking strength and shell thickness were respectively negatively and positively influenced by increasing dietary phosphorus and calcium contents, both elements affected the proportion of eggs with defective shells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Evaluation of the dietary interaction of calcium and phosphorus in the high producing laying hen. 224 45

In 50 consecutive patients with cancer-associated hypercalcemia, we measured nephrogenous cyclic AMP, tubular phosphorus threshold, fasting calcium excretion, plasma 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and immunoreactive parathyroid hormone as determined by four region-specific antiserums. Nephrogenous cyclic AMP excretion was elevated in 41 patients and suppressed in nine (means, 5.85 vs. 0.51 nmol per 100 ml of glomerular filtrate). There was no overlap between these groups. When compared with 15 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, the group with increased cyclic AMP excretion had similar reductions in tubular phosphorus threshold; higher fasting calcium excretion (means, 0.66 vs. 0.25 mg per 100 ml of glomerular filtrate, P < 0.01); marked reductions in 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (means, 20 vs. 83 pg per milliliter, P < 0.001); and lower levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone in all four assays. The data suggest that elevated excretion of nephrogenous cyclic AMP may be a useful marker of humorally mediated cancer-associated hypercalcemia, that this type of hypercalcemia is common, that the humoral factor responsible for this syndrome is not native 1-84 parathyroid hormone, and that the various subtypes of cancer-associated hypercalcemia are biochemically distinguishable from primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:Biochemical evaluation of patients with cancer-associated hypercalcemia: evidence for humoral and nonhumoral groups. 625 85

Four strains of laying hens, including one brown egg strain, were force-rested in February at approximately 62 weeks of age. Hens from the same four strains, which were the same age, were also force-tested under similar conditions during August of the same year. In each of the two trials, a total of 2300 hens were housed at the rate of two per 25.4 x 45.7-cm cage. The resting procedure for both studies included feed withdrawal for 9 or 10 days followed by feeding a 8.6% protein diet for 25 days. Water was supplied at all times. After the 35-day resting period, the hens were assigned to four calcium and phosphorus combinations, which varied from the duplication of a first-year pullet phase feeding program to the feeding of a final phase type diet for the entire postrest production period. Nutrient level within each dietary system was adjusted periodically based on daily feed intake. Strain performance differences were observed in both seasons. Rate of return to production and postrest production rates were similar to the patterns observed within the respective strain's performance during the pullet year. This was noted in both studies. Relative strain production performance, however, when compared to the other strains, was not consistent between the two rest seasons. There was no difference in performance due to calcium and phosphorus treatment utilized in either postrest production season.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The performance of four strains of laying hens subjected to various postrest combinations of calcium and phosphorus after forced rest in winter or summer. 663 9

Caged Sex-Sal (DeKalb Warren) replacement pullets were fed diets containing .30%, .35%, or .41% available phosphorus from 0 to 20 weeks of age; in a second study pullets were fed the above levels plus a level of .25% available phosphorus from 2 to 20 weeks of age. Some of the pullets were fed diets restricted by 11 to 16% from 8 weeks of age. Reducing the dietary phosphorus did no harm weight gain, feed intake, feed conversion efficiency, bone ash or total calcium and inorganic phosphorus levels in plasma. There was a very small but significant reduction in weight gain and feed intake when .30% or .35% available phosphorus was fed from 0 to 4 weeks of age, but this difference disappeared at the later ages. With the nonstimulatory lighting schedule used, plasma phosphorus decreased markedly in the latter phase of the studies at all levels of dietary phosphorus and thus represented a nondietary age effect. These results show that dietary available phosphorus for cage, brown egg type pullets on full or restricted feeding programs can be decreased to a level as low as .25% from 2 to 20 weeks, and .30% from hatching to 20 weeks without adverse effect.
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PMID:Dietary phosphorus levels during growth of brown egg type replacement pullets. 737 28

Three experiments were conducted to compare limestone to fly fly ash from a coal-fired generator station as a calcium source for broilers. In Experiment 1, 5 male and 5 female broiler chicks were placed in each of 32 cages. Sixteen cages of birds were fed a ration with limestone supplying 30% of the total calcium and 16 cages were fed a ration with 30% of the total calcium supplied by fly ash. The total calcium and phosphorus levels of the rations were 1.0% and .5% respectively. In this experiment no significant difference (P < .05) was found for 8-week body weight between diets where the added calcium was from limestone or fly ash. In Experiment 2 a group of 40 male and 40 female cage reared broilers and 40 male and 40 female floor reared broilers were fed a basal diet of limestone providing 33% of the total calcium. Three diets with increasing fly ash levels were fed to three cage groups of 40 male and 40 female broilers providing 33, 46, and 45% of the total calcium of .9, 1.1, and 1.8%, respectively. Broilers fed the highest fly ash level weighed significantly less (P < .05) at 8 weeks than the caged controls but did not differ from the other treatments. Bone breaking strength as measured by the Allo Kramer Shear Press was similar between the basal and low level fly ash group and increased with higher fly fly ash levels. Humerus and radius bone strength were greatest in floor broilers when compared with cage broilers. Tibia ash content of the floor-reared broilers and higher fly ash level of caged broilers were similar and greater than that of the basal cage group. Humerus and radius ash content were higher for the higher calcium groups. In Experiment 3 four groups of 40 male broilers in cages were fed limestone diets with graded levels of limestone for the calcium source. Another four groups of 40 caged male broilers were fed fly ash diets with equivalent graded levels of fly ash for the calcium source. Both limestone and fly ash diets provided .17, .34, .51, and .68% calcium of a total calcium content of .28, .45, .62 and .79%, respectively. The four limestone groups exhibited a definite linear improvement in both 3-week body weight and bone weight (tibia and femur combined) as the dietary calcium level was upgraded. The two low fly ash groups were similar in body and bone weight to their counterpart limestone groups, but further increases in the fly ash component did not improve body or bone weight. Bone ash values for both limestone and fly ash groups showed a similar improvement with each calcium increase, except the high value for the second level of fly ash.
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PMID:The use of fly ash in diets of cage and floor broilers. 743 65

We have developed a simple model of osteopenia in rats which is induced by confinement without requiring surgical operation. Each rat was maintained for 8 weeks in a compartment of a commercially-available wire netting cage subdivided into 10 areas (compartment size, 9 x 16 x 14 cm) to restrict exercise. The femora isolated from the confined rats showed significant decreases in mineral (calcium and phosphorus) content, compared with the level in normal rats, 2 weeks after the start of their confinement. Confined rats showed significantly lower values for the physical properties of bones such as breaking energy and breaking force and also density composed with normal rats 4 weeks after the start of confinement. KCA-098 (1 mg/kg), a new benzofuroquinoline derivative that inhibits bone resorption and at the same time stimulates bone mineralization in organ culture, protected against these decreases when given orally for 8 weeks. All these results show that confinement of rats offers a simple and useful animal model of osteopenia.
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PMID:Induction of osteopenia in confined rats. 800 Mar 85

Two inhalation-chamber studies were conducted to assess acute (2-h out-of-chamber) and subacute (< or = 6 d postexposure) spontaneous activity effects of whole-body phosphoric acids aerosol exposure(s) in black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) and rock doves (Columba livia). The aerosol was generated using a red phosphorus/butyl rubber (RP/BR) mixture under development as a military obscurant. Each study involved (1) 3 RP/BR target concentration groups [0.0 (controls), 1.0, and 4.0 mg/L], (2) 24 prairie dogs or rock doves (8/group), with gender included as a factor, (3) a successive 3-phase paradigm (2 d preexposure; 4 and 2 d of about 80 min/d exposures to RP/BR for prairie dogs and rock doves, respectively; and 6 d postexposure), and (4) infrared detection of the rodents'/birds' home-cage movements. In-chamber atmospheres were uniform and acceptable for all exposures; median aerosol mass concentrations ranged from 0.76 to 0.89 mg/L and 3.46 to 3.74 mg/L for the 1.0 and 4.0 mg/L groups, respectively, with median phosphoric acid (H3PO4) readings of between 67.2 and 74.3%; median particles were < or = 0.85 microns. Mortality was negligible; no prairie dogs died, but 1 male rock dove died on d 3 postexposure to two 4.0 mg/L target concentrations of RP/BR aerosol. Group x session interactions were significant for the acute activity counts of both species. The acute mean ambulatory (e.g., walking) counts of prairie dogs and the acute mean ambulatory and horizontal (e.g., preening) counts of rock doves exposed to 4.0 mg/L RP/BR aerosol were relatively less than those of the other groups after the first 2 or 1 exposures, respectively. Nevertheless, acute session means for all groups approximated or exceeded the 23 h/d activity measured during the pre- and postexposure phases--data indicating that chamber confinement caused a temporary, sharp increase in activity for both species irrespective of RP/BR aerosol concentrations. No RP/BR concentration-related, subacute shifts in the activity of the rodents/birds were observed.
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PMID:Whole body exposures to a phosphoric acids aerosol: I. Spontaneous activity effects in wild rodent and avian species. 850 71

This study was designed to compare the renal effects of atrial (A-type) natriuretic peptide (ANP) on control (saline-injected) rats and rats with non-oliguric acute renal failure induced by cisplatin. The results obtained here are summarized as follows: (1) In the metabolic cage study, cisplatin-treated rats showed increases in blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine while creatinine clearance decreased to the lowest levels on day 4. A transient increase in urinary protein was observed at day 4. (2) ANP infusion significantly increased urine flow rate (UFR), creatinine clearance (CCr), fractional excretion rates of sodium (FENa) and chloride (FECl), and urinary phosphorus and magnesium (Mg) excretions in a dose-dependent manner without affecting renal plasma flow and fractional excretion rates of potassium and urea in cisplatin-treated rats. (3) Renal effects of ANP on UFR, CCr, FENa, FECl and excretion of Mg were more pronounced in cisplatin-treated rats compared to control rats although markedly blunted responses to ANP have been reported in nephrotic patients and nephrotic animals induced by adriamycin and aminonucleoside. (4) Histological examination showed extensive necrosis of the S3 segment of the proximal tubule located in the outer stripe of the outer medulla with minimal glomerular abnormalities in the kidney of cisplatin-treated rats. In conclusion, the main mechanism of the increased renal responses to ANP is considered to be due to an increased delivery of sodium, fluid and ANP itself to the inner medullary collecting duct which is the major renal site of action of ANP under the condition of acute proximal tubular necrosis by cisplatin.
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PMID:Renal responses to atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in rats with non-oliguric acute renal failure induced by cisplatin. 872 36


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