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1.
Maturitas ; 74(1): 10-3, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23122539

ABSTRACT

The ketogenic diet was first developed in the 1920s as a treatment for epilepsy in an attempt to create a prolonged physiologic starvation state. Since that time, the diet has been found to have other therapeutic effects, most of which are neurologic. Other diets, mostly based on the principals of caloric restriction, have been shown to improve fertility in certain populations. We explore the data, both clinical and laboratory, for potential fertility enhancing benefits of the ketogenic diet, beyond just caloric restriction or weight loss.


Subject(s)
Diet, Ketogenic , Infertility, Female/diet therapy , Caloric Restriction , Epilepsy/diet therapy , Female , Glycolysis , Humans , Ketone Bodies/metabolism , Weight Loss
2.
J Exp Zool ; 284(7): 717-28, 1999 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10589504

ABSTRACT

Sperm nuclear basic proteins (SNBPs) that condense chromatin are very diverse. In animals, evolution of SNBPs has proceeded from lysine-rich histone H type in sponges to more arginine-rich protamine-like PL and protamine P types. Yet sporadic PL/P to H reversions are known to occur in both protostomes and deuterostomes. To determine why this is the case, we have examined SNBPs in eleven anuran species. We find that sperm of the primitive, internally fertilizing archeobatrachian frog A. truei (family Ascaphidae) has PL/P type (42 mol % arginine), with an electrophoretic profile similar to SNBPs in another archeobatrachian, externally fertilizing Leiopelma hochstetteri (family Leiopelmatidae). Cytochemistry of sperm nuclei in the advanced, externally fertilizing neobatrachian frogs Crinia signifera and C. deserticola (family Myobatrachidae) indicates that they have reverted to H type SNBPs. This is also known to be the case in externally fertilizing Rana (family Ranidae) and Silurana, a subgenus of Xenopus (family Pipidae). Such a trend, from PL/P type SNBPs in two archeobatrachians to sporadic reversions to H type in more advanced frogs, parallels the ultrastructural simplification from complex A. truei introsperm to neobatrachian aquasperm that Jamieson et al. (1993. Herpetologica 49:52-65) attribute as a secondary reversion to external fertilization.


Subject(s)
Anura/metabolism , Histones/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Protamines/metabolism , Spermatozoa/metabolism , Xenopus/metabolism , Animals , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Electrophoresis , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Histocytochemistry , Histones/analysis , Male , Protamines/analysis , Species Specificity , Testis/metabolism
3.
Biol Bull ; 185(2): 186-196, 1993 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27768440

ABSTRACT

Seven basic proteins can be isolated from sperm nuclei of the holocephalan ratfish Hydrolagus colliei. Two of these proteins (R3 and m0) are devoid of cysteine, whereas five of them (R1, R2, m1, m2, and m3) contain low levels of this amino acid residue. The proteins R1, R2, and R3 are major ones in the sperm nuclei of H. colliei, and they are analogous to basic proteins Z1, Z2, and Z3 (scylliorhinines) from the sperm of the elasmobranch Scyliorhinus canicula. However, taking into account the partial sequence of R3 protein and the number of cysteines in R1 and R2, these proteins do not seem to be homologous to the scylliorhinines. A comparison of sperm basic proteins between H. colliei (a holocephalan) and S. canicula (an elasmobranch) suggests a remarkable divergence of these proteins from a common ancestral pattern during the evolution of Chondrichthyes.

5.
Res Nurs Health ; 10(4): 245-51, 1987 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3503318

ABSTRACT

In an evaluation experiment, 80 registered nurses (64% of whom had cared for at least one rape victim) read an account of a rape involving a woman who drove to a drugstore on her way home from work. By random assignment, the nurses read one of four versions of the rape which varied in terms of whether or not the victim locked her car door (carelessness manipulation) and time of attack (5:00 p.m. or midnight). Subjects evaluated the victim on a series of 0 to 9 bipolar adjective scales. MANOVA showed a significant main effect for the locked/unlocked conditions: Nurses who read the unlocked version, as compared to those reading the locked version, showed differences in terms of more negative ratings of the victim on such variables as less liking for her, less identification with her, and assigning greater responsibility for the rape to her (p less than or equal to .005). Time of attack and the interaction were not significant.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Nurses/psychology , Rape , Adult , Age Factors , Analysis of Variance , Behavior , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Prejudice , Surveys and Questionnaires , Time Factors
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