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Journal Article•DOI•

Practical Clinical Biochemistry

01 Nov 1954-Journal of Clinical Pathology (BMJ Group)-Vol. 7, Iss: 4, pp 356-356
About: This article is published in Journal of Clinical Pathology.The article was published on 1954-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 326 citations till now.
Citations
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Journal Article•DOI•
01 Apr 1984-Gut
TL;DR: Observations show the existence in man of an inhibitory intestinal control mechanism, whereby ileal fat perfusion inhibits jejunal motility and delays caudal transit of jeJunal contents.
Abstract: The possibility that malabsorbed fat passing through the human ileum exerts an inhibitory feedback control on jejunal motility has been investigated in 24 normal subjects by perfusing the ileum with a fat containing solution designed to produce ileal luminal fat concentrations similar to those in steatorrhoea (30-40 mg/ml). Mean transit times through a 30 cm saline perfused jejunal segment were measured by a dye dilution technique. Thirty minutes after ileal fat perfusion, mean transit times rose markedly to 18.9 +/- 2.5 minutes from a control value of 7.5 +/- 0.9 minutes (n = 5; p less than 0.05). This was associated with an increase in volume of the perfused segment which rose to 175.1 +/- 22.9 ml (control 97.6 +/- 10.3 ml, n = 5; p less than 0.05). Transit times and segmental volumes had returned towards basal values 90 minutes after completing the fat perfusion. Further studies showed that ileal fat perfusion produced a pronounced inhibition of jejunal pressure wave activity, percentage duration of activity falling from a control level of 40.3 +/- 5.0% to 14.9 +/- 2.8% in the hour after ileal perfusion (p less than 0.01). Ileal fat perfusion was associated with marked rises in plasma enteroglucagon and neurotensin, the peak values (218 +/- 37 and 68 +/- 13.1 pmol/l) being comparable with those observed postprandially in coeliac disease. These observations show the existence in man of an inhibitory intestinal control mechanism, whereby ileal fat perfusion inhibits jejunal motility and delays caudal transit of jejunal contents.

440 citations

01 Feb 2000
TL;DR: The studies reported here assessed pathophysiologic mechanisms that result from exposure to concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) in animals with and without cardiopulmonary compromise to determine the biologic plausibility of epidemiologic observations of increases in particulate air pollution associated with increases in human morbidity and mortality.
Abstract: The studies reported here assessed pathophysiologic mechanisms that result from exposure to concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) in animals with and without cardiopulmonary compromise. These studies were carried out to determine the biologic plausibility of epidemiologic observations of increases in particulate air pollution associated with increases in human morbidity and mortality. Dogs were exposed two at a time to CAPs or filtered air via tracheostomy for six hours per day on three consecutive days. The electrocardiogram (ECG) and breathing pattern were recorded continuously, and indicators of inflammation were also assessed. In one experimental design, normal dogs were exposed in pairs to CAPs and subsequently to filtered air or to filtered air and subsequently CAPs (the double CAPs/double sham design). Comparisons were made between the CAPs measurements and each dog's own sham responses. In another design, one dog was exposed to CAPs while the chambermate received a sham exposure; these experiments were followed by crossover of the protocol the subsequent week (the crossover design). Comparisons were made between the CAPs exposure and both the chambermate's sham and each dog's own sham responses. The crossover experiments were conducted in normal animals and in animals who had undergone balloon occlusion of the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery to induce myocardial compromise. The effects of CAPs in animals with induced chronic bronchitis were part of the original specific aims; because these studies were not fully pursued, the results are presented only in Appendix A. In normal dogs, analyses of all double CAPs and crossover studies revealed low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF) powers for heart rate variability (HRV) that were significantly higher for CAPs exposure compared to sham exposure. Variation in day-to-day exposure concentrations, aerosol composition, and pathophysiologic responses were also found. The crossover design, continuous measures of aerosol mass, and biologic responses were incorporated in the development of a statistical model that allowed isolation of changes associated with CAPs from changes due to animal variations. Comparison of individual exposures with this model revealed a range from no response in any measured parameter to statistically significant changes in cardiac autonomic balance, pulmonary air flow, and breathing pattern. On days in which dogs showed statistically significant changes in responses, the findings were consistent in both cardiac and respiratory parameters. Days associated with significant increases in LF and HF HRV, LF/ HF HRV ratio, and heart rate standard deviation (HR SD) were also associated with decreases in average heart rate. These same days had decreases in respiratory frequency, tidal volume, minute volume, and peak flows with corresponding increases in respiratory cycle times and enhanced pause (Pauenh), a measure of bronchoconstriction. These cardiac and respiratory changes suggest an effect mediated via both the sympathetic nervous system and the vagus nerve. Alternatively, days associated with increased heart rate had decreases in the HR SD; decreases or no change in HF and LF HRV; increases in respiratory flows and volumes; and decreases in breathing cycle times, all suggesting only sympathetic nervous system mediation. When all data from the crossover design experiments were assessed with this model, the heart rate and respiratory rate were significantly decreased in relation to both cumulative and actual exposure and the LF HRV, LF/HF HRV ratio, HR SD, and all other respiratory parameters were significantly increased (p < 0.0001 for all). When cardiac data were grouped by days in which the air mass trajectory came from the north or northwest (versus west, south, east, or northeast), significant increases in HR SD and HF HRV and significant decreases in average heart rate were associated with the northwest trajectory. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

285 citations


Cites background from "Practical Clinical Biochemistry"

  • ...These precautions precluded any apparent deficit in the coronary vasoconstrictor response to neurogenic stimuli (Varley 1967; Vatner et al 1971; Vatner and McRitchie 1975; Denn and Stone 1976; Billman and Randall 1981)....

    [...]

Journal Article•DOI•
TL;DR: Genetic polymorphism has shown in the isoniazid and it has been shown that this polymorphism may be passed on to the next generation of cells in the immune system.
Abstract: A genetic polymorphism has been shown in man for the metabolism of isoniazid (Knight, Selin, and Harris, 1959; Evans, Manley, and McKusick, 1960; Sunahara et al., 1963a, b), and has been shown to control acetylation (Evans, 1962; Jenne, 1963; Evans and White, 1964; Peters, Miller, and Brown, 1965). The acetylation of sulphadimidine (sulfamethazine) has been found to be under the same genetic control as isoniazid (Evans, 1962; Evans and White, 1964; Peters, Gordon, and Brown, 1965). This communication presents evidence that the acetylator phenotype can be simply determined using sulphadimidine as a test drug.

244 citations

Journal Article•DOI•
24 Sep 1983-BMJ
TL;DR: Estimation of fructosamine concentrations is a fully automated procedure and may provide a simple means of screening for diabetes mellitus, and a longitudinal study suggested that fructsamine concentration was an index of intermediate term blood glucose control.
Abstract: Fructosamine, a putative measure of serum glycosylated proteins, was measured in 74 subjects referred for oral glucose tolerance tests. A normal range (mean (2 SD] of 1.6 (0.4) mmol/l (40(10) mg/100 ml) derive from results obtained in 83 healthy non-diabetic volunteers permitted the detection of 15 out of 17 (88%) subjects with proved diabetes and yielded only five (9%) false positive diagnoses. Fructosamine concentrations correlated significantly (p less than 0.001) with fasting plasma glucose concentrations (r = 0.76) and glycosylated haemoglobin concentrations (r = 0.70). A longitudinal study suggested that fructosamine concentration was an index of intermediate term (one to three weeks) blood glucose control. Fructosamine concentration was not related to uraemia and did not depend on albumin or total protein concentrations, provided that serum albumin concentrations remained above 30 g/l. Estimation of fructosamine concentrations is a fully automated procedure and may provide a simple means of screening for diabetes mellitus.

219 citations

Journal Article•DOI•
01 Sep 1994-Gut
TL;DR: The normal human small intestine has very limited ability to digest undegraded phytates, and the presence of undigested phytate in the colon may protect against the development of colonic carcinoma.
Abstract: Phytate is the major storage form of phosphorus in seeds and so is a common dietary constituent. Excessive ingestion of undegraded phytates can cause mineral deficiencies in humans. In addition, phytic acid is antineoplastic in animal models of both colon and breast carcinoma. There have been no previous studies quantifying phytase activity in the human small intestine although it is present in animals. Small intestinal phytase and alkaline phosphatase activity and distribution was measured in vitro in mucosal homogenates from two human small intestinal specimens obtained from transplant donors. Rat intestine was also studied for comparison. Phytase activity was found in human small intestine at low values (30 times less than that in rat tissue and 1000-fold lower than alkaline phosphatase in the same tissue). The activity was greatest in the duodenum and lowest in the ileum. In conclusion, the normal human small intestine has very limited ability to digest undegraded phytates. Although this may have adverse nutritional consequences with respect to metabolic cation imbalances, the presence of undigested phytate in the colon may protect against the development of colonic carcinoma.

209 citations

References
More filters
Journal Article•DOI•
01 Apr 1984-Gut
TL;DR: Observations show the existence in man of an inhibitory intestinal control mechanism, whereby ileal fat perfusion inhibits jejunal motility and delays caudal transit of jeJunal contents.
Abstract: The possibility that malabsorbed fat passing through the human ileum exerts an inhibitory feedback control on jejunal motility has been investigated in 24 normal subjects by perfusing the ileum with a fat containing solution designed to produce ileal luminal fat concentrations similar to those in steatorrhoea (30-40 mg/ml). Mean transit times through a 30 cm saline perfused jejunal segment were measured by a dye dilution technique. Thirty minutes after ileal fat perfusion, mean transit times rose markedly to 18.9 +/- 2.5 minutes from a control value of 7.5 +/- 0.9 minutes (n = 5; p less than 0.05). This was associated with an increase in volume of the perfused segment which rose to 175.1 +/- 22.9 ml (control 97.6 +/- 10.3 ml, n = 5; p less than 0.05). Transit times and segmental volumes had returned towards basal values 90 minutes after completing the fat perfusion. Further studies showed that ileal fat perfusion produced a pronounced inhibition of jejunal pressure wave activity, percentage duration of activity falling from a control level of 40.3 +/- 5.0% to 14.9 +/- 2.8% in the hour after ileal perfusion (p less than 0.01). Ileal fat perfusion was associated with marked rises in plasma enteroglucagon and neurotensin, the peak values (218 +/- 37 and 68 +/- 13.1 pmol/l) being comparable with those observed postprandially in coeliac disease. These observations show the existence in man of an inhibitory intestinal control mechanism, whereby ileal fat perfusion inhibits jejunal motility and delays caudal transit of jejunal contents.

440 citations

01 Feb 2000
TL;DR: The studies reported here assessed pathophysiologic mechanisms that result from exposure to concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) in animals with and without cardiopulmonary compromise to determine the biologic plausibility of epidemiologic observations of increases in particulate air pollution associated with increases in human morbidity and mortality.
Abstract: The studies reported here assessed pathophysiologic mechanisms that result from exposure to concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) in animals with and without cardiopulmonary compromise. These studies were carried out to determine the biologic plausibility of epidemiologic observations of increases in particulate air pollution associated with increases in human morbidity and mortality. Dogs were exposed two at a time to CAPs or filtered air via tracheostomy for six hours per day on three consecutive days. The electrocardiogram (ECG) and breathing pattern were recorded continuously, and indicators of inflammation were also assessed. In one experimental design, normal dogs were exposed in pairs to CAPs and subsequently to filtered air or to filtered air and subsequently CAPs (the double CAPs/double sham design). Comparisons were made between the CAPs measurements and each dog's own sham responses. In another design, one dog was exposed to CAPs while the chambermate received a sham exposure; these experiments were followed by crossover of the protocol the subsequent week (the crossover design). Comparisons were made between the CAPs exposure and both the chambermate's sham and each dog's own sham responses. The crossover experiments were conducted in normal animals and in animals who had undergone balloon occlusion of the left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery to induce myocardial compromise. The effects of CAPs in animals with induced chronic bronchitis were part of the original specific aims; because these studies were not fully pursued, the results are presented only in Appendix A. In normal dogs, analyses of all double CAPs and crossover studies revealed low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF) powers for heart rate variability (HRV) that were significantly higher for CAPs exposure compared to sham exposure. Variation in day-to-day exposure concentrations, aerosol composition, and pathophysiologic responses were also found. The crossover design, continuous measures of aerosol mass, and biologic responses were incorporated in the development of a statistical model that allowed isolation of changes associated with CAPs from changes due to animal variations. Comparison of individual exposures with this model revealed a range from no response in any measured parameter to statistically significant changes in cardiac autonomic balance, pulmonary air flow, and breathing pattern. On days in which dogs showed statistically significant changes in responses, the findings were consistent in both cardiac and respiratory parameters. Days associated with significant increases in LF and HF HRV, LF/ HF HRV ratio, and heart rate standard deviation (HR SD) were also associated with decreases in average heart rate. These same days had decreases in respiratory frequency, tidal volume, minute volume, and peak flows with corresponding increases in respiratory cycle times and enhanced pause (Pauenh), a measure of bronchoconstriction. These cardiac and respiratory changes suggest an effect mediated via both the sympathetic nervous system and the vagus nerve. Alternatively, days associated with increased heart rate had decreases in the HR SD; decreases or no change in HF and LF HRV; increases in respiratory flows and volumes; and decreases in breathing cycle times, all suggesting only sympathetic nervous system mediation. When all data from the crossover design experiments were assessed with this model, the heart rate and respiratory rate were significantly decreased in relation to both cumulative and actual exposure and the LF HRV, LF/HF HRV ratio, HR SD, and all other respiratory parameters were significantly increased (p < 0.0001 for all). When cardiac data were grouped by days in which the air mass trajectory came from the north or northwest (versus west, south, east, or northeast), significant increases in HR SD and HF HRV and significant decreases in average heart rate were associated with the northwest trajectory. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

285 citations

Journal Article•DOI•
TL;DR: Genetic polymorphism has shown in the isoniazid and it has been shown that this polymorphism may be passed on to the next generation of cells in the immune system.
Abstract: A genetic polymorphism has been shown in man for the metabolism of isoniazid (Knight, Selin, and Harris, 1959; Evans, Manley, and McKusick, 1960; Sunahara et al., 1963a, b), and has been shown to control acetylation (Evans, 1962; Jenne, 1963; Evans and White, 1964; Peters, Miller, and Brown, 1965). The acetylation of sulphadimidine (sulfamethazine) has been found to be under the same genetic control as isoniazid (Evans, 1962; Evans and White, 1964; Peters, Gordon, and Brown, 1965). This communication presents evidence that the acetylator phenotype can be simply determined using sulphadimidine as a test drug.

244 citations

Journal Article•DOI•
24 Sep 1983-BMJ
TL;DR: Estimation of fructosamine concentrations is a fully automated procedure and may provide a simple means of screening for diabetes mellitus, and a longitudinal study suggested that fructsamine concentration was an index of intermediate term blood glucose control.
Abstract: Fructosamine, a putative measure of serum glycosylated proteins, was measured in 74 subjects referred for oral glucose tolerance tests. A normal range (mean (2 SD] of 1.6 (0.4) mmol/l (40(10) mg/100 ml) derive from results obtained in 83 healthy non-diabetic volunteers permitted the detection of 15 out of 17 (88%) subjects with proved diabetes and yielded only five (9%) false positive diagnoses. Fructosamine concentrations correlated significantly (p less than 0.001) with fasting plasma glucose concentrations (r = 0.76) and glycosylated haemoglobin concentrations (r = 0.70). A longitudinal study suggested that fructosamine concentration was an index of intermediate term (one to three weeks) blood glucose control. Fructosamine concentration was not related to uraemia and did not depend on albumin or total protein concentrations, provided that serum albumin concentrations remained above 30 g/l. Estimation of fructosamine concentrations is a fully automated procedure and may provide a simple means of screening for diabetes mellitus.

219 citations

Journal Article•DOI•
01 Sep 1994-Gut
TL;DR: The normal human small intestine has very limited ability to digest undegraded phytates, and the presence of undigested phytate in the colon may protect against the development of colonic carcinoma.
Abstract: Phytate is the major storage form of phosphorus in seeds and so is a common dietary constituent. Excessive ingestion of undegraded phytates can cause mineral deficiencies in humans. In addition, phytic acid is antineoplastic in animal models of both colon and breast carcinoma. There have been no previous studies quantifying phytase activity in the human small intestine although it is present in animals. Small intestinal phytase and alkaline phosphatase activity and distribution was measured in vitro in mucosal homogenates from two human small intestinal specimens obtained from transplant donors. Rat intestine was also studied for comparison. Phytase activity was found in human small intestine at low values (30 times less than that in rat tissue and 1000-fold lower than alkaline phosphatase in the same tissue). The activity was greatest in the duodenum and lowest in the ileum. In conclusion, the normal human small intestine has very limited ability to digest undegraded phytates. Although this may have adverse nutritional consequences with respect to metabolic cation imbalances, the presence of undigested phytate in the colon may protect against the development of colonic carcinoma.

209 citations