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1.
J Fish Dis ; 37(7): 619-27, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23952965

ABSTRACT

Serum biochemical analysis was undertaken to study the pathophysiological details of emaciation disease of the tiger puffer fish Takifugu rubripes (Temminck and Schlegel). Serum parameters were measured by biochemical analysis using automated dry chemistry and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Serum concentrations of albumin, amylase, calcium, creatinine, glucose and total protein were significantly lower in the emaciated fish when compared with those of normal fish. Regression analyses found close correlation between concentrations of total protein, albumin, amylase, glucose and progress of the disease. In contrast, serum alanine aminotransferase increased significantly in emaciated fish indicating liver function disorder. Further, GC/MS metabolic profiling of the puffer serum showed that the profile of the emaciated fish was distinct to that of non-infected control. The serum content of amino acids including glycine, 5-oxo-proline and proline, and ascorbic acid, fumaric acid and glycerol increased significantly in serum in moderately emaciated fish. The serum glucose, linolenic acid and tyrosine level decreased significantly in the late phase of the disease. Our results clearly show that prolonged intestinal damage caused by myxosporean infection impairs absorption of nutrients, resulting in extreme emaciation.


Subject(s)
Emaciation/veterinary , Fish Diseases/physiopathology , Metabolome , Myxozoa/isolation & purification , Myxozoa/microbiology , Parasitic Diseases, Animal/physiopathology , Takifugu , Animals , Blood Chemical Analysis/veterinary , Emaciation/enzymology , Emaciation/parasitology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Enzymes/blood , Fish Diseases/enzymology , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/veterinary , Intestines/enzymology , Intestines/parasitology , Intestines/physiopathology , Parasitic Diseases, Animal/enzymology , Parasitic Diseases, Animal/parasitology
2.
J Neurol ; 257(8): 1293-7, 2010 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20221769

ABSTRACT

Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET) tend to lose weight progressively over years. Weight gain following deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) for treatment of PD has been documented in several studies that were limited by small sample size and exclusive focus on PD patients with STN stimulation. The current study was undertaken to examine weight change in a large sample of movement disorder patients following DBS. A retrospective review was undertaken of 182 patient charts following DBS of the STN, ventralis intermedius nucleus of the thalamus (VIM), and globus pallidus internus (GPi). Weight was collected preoperatively and postoperatively up to 24 months following surgery. Data were adjusted for baseline weight and multivariate linear regression was performed with repeated measures to assess weight change. Statistically significant mean weight gain of 1.8 kg (2.8% increase from baseline, p = 0.0113) was observed at a rate of approximately 1 kg per year up to 24 months following surgery. This gain was not predicted by age, gender, diagnosis, or stimulation target in a multivariate model. Significant mean weight gain of 2.3 kg (p = 0.0124) or 4.2% was observed in our PD patients. Most patients with PD and ET gain weight following DBS, and this gain is not predicted by age, gender, diagnosis, or stimulation target.


Subject(s)
Deep Brain Stimulation/methods , Movement Disorders/physiopathology , Movement Disorders/therapy , Weight Loss/physiology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Emaciation/etiology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Emaciation/therapy , Essential Tremor/complications , Essential Tremor/physiopathology , Essential Tremor/therapy , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Movement Disorders/complications , Parkinson Disease/complications , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Parkinson Disease/therapy , Retrospective Studies , Weight Gain/physiology
3.
Comp Biochem Physiol C Toxicol Pharmacol ; 149(1): 97-103, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18761108

ABSTRACT

We investigated the impact from dietary OC (organochlorine) exposure and restricted feeding (emaciation) on bone mineral density (BMD; g hydroxy-apatite cm(-2)) in femoral, vertebrate, skull and baculum osteoid tissue from farmed Arctic blue foxes (Vulpes lagopus). For femur, also biomechanical properties during bending (displacement [mm], load [N], energy absorption [J] and stiffness [N/mm]) were measured. Sixteen foxes (EXP) were fed a wet food containing 7.7% OC-polluted minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) blubber in two periods of body fat deposition (Aug-Dec) and two periods of body fat mobilisation (Jan-July) in which the food contained less energy and only 2% blubber. SigmaOC food concentration in the food containing 7.7% whale blubber was 309 ng/g wet mass. This corresponded to a SigmaOC exposure of ca. 17 microg/kg body mass/d and a responding SigmaOC residue in subcutaneous adipose tissue of ca. 1700 ng/g live mass in the 8 EXP fat foxes euthanized after 16 months. A control group (CON) composed of 15 foxes were fed equal daily caloric amounts of clean pork (Sus scrofa) fat. After 16 months, 8 EXP and 7 CON foxes were euthanized (mean body mass=9.25 kg) while the remaining 8 EXP and 8 CON foxes were given restricted food rations for 6 months resulting in a body weight reduction (mean body mass=5.46 kg). The results showed that only BMD(skull) vs. BMD(vertebrae) were significantly correlated (R=0.68; p=0.03; n=10) probably due to a similar composition of trabecular and cortical osteoid tissue. No difference in any of the BMD measurements or femoral biomechanical properties was found between EXP and CON foxes although BMD baculum was 1.6-folds lower in the EXP group. However, lean summer foxes had significantly lower femoral biomechanical properties measured as displacement (mm), energy absorption (J) and time (s) biomechanical properties than fat winter foxes (all p<0.004). This indicates lower stiffness and softer bones from fasting which is in agreement with previous studies. Further, it should be kept in mind when studying bone tissues in Arctic mammals also in order to avoid confounding effects from body condition.


Subject(s)
Bone Density/drug effects , Bone and Bones/drug effects , Emaciation/complications , Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Foxes , Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated/toxicity , Osteoporosis/chemically induced , Animal Feed , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Body Constitution , Body Weight , Bone and Bones/chemistry , Bone and Bones/pathology , Bone and Bones/physiopathology , Compressive Strength , Durapatite/analysis , Elasticity , Emaciation/pathology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Male , Osteoporosis/pathology , Osteoporosis/physiopathology , Seasons
4.
J Comp Pathol ; 133(4): 261-6, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16213515

ABSTRACT

A strain of Trypanosoma evansi isolated from an equine case of surra in Mindanao, Philippines was used to infect intravenously two groups (A and B) of five male goats aged 8-10 months. Animals of groups A and B received 5000 and 50 000 trypanosomes, respectively, and five further animals (group C) served as uninfected controls. Four of the 10 infected goats died 8-78 days after inoculation. Group C goats gained weight (mean 22.8 g/day) while infected goats in groups A and B lost weight (means of 21.4 and 45.0 g/day, respectively). Parasitaemia fluctuated regularly between peaks and troughs, with repeated periods of about 6 days during which no trypanosomes were detected in the blood. Clinical signs and clinico-pathological changes in infected goats were not pathognomonic in the absence of parasites in the blood, and leucocytosis was not a reliable indicator of infection. It was concluded that in endemic areas fluctuating fever, progressive emaciation, anaemia, coughing, testicular enlargement and diarrhoea are suggestive of surra; confirmation, however, may necessitate examination of blood every few days for trypanosomes, and possibly other diagnostic tests.


Subject(s)
Goat Diseases , Trypanosoma , Trypanosomiasis/veterinary , Anemia/diagnosis , Anemia/veterinary , Animals , Diarrhea/physiopathology , Diarrhea/veterinary , Emaciation/physiopathology , Emaciation/veterinary , Erythrocyte Count , Fever/physiopathology , Fever/veterinary , Goat Diseases/diagnosis , Goat Diseases/parasitology , Goat Diseases/physiopathology , Goats , Hemoglobins/analysis , Leukocytosis/diagnosis , Leukocytosis/pathology , Leukocytosis/veterinary , Lymphocyte Count , Male , Testis/pathology , Trypanosoma/isolation & purification , Trypanosomiasis/parasitology , Trypanosomiasis/physiopathology
5.
J Wildl Dis ; 38(3): 558-65, 2002 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12238373

ABSTRACT

Recent research demonstrated the utility of fecal progestagens (P4) for detecting pregnancy in elk (Cervus elaphus) during mid- to late gestation. Several factors, however, may influence fecal P4 excretion and limit its use in free-ranging animals. We investigated the effects of nutrition and body condition (percent ingesta-free body fat) on fecal P4 concentrations and incidence of abortion. During mid-gestation (late December 1997 through early March 1998), 40 gravid cow elk varying in body condition were placed on three diets (high, medium, and low) in which the amount of food offered varied. Feces were collected periodically and analyzed for P4 via radioimmunoassay. We found no significant effect of dietary treatment on P4 concentrations, but as body condition declined, P4 concentrations declined significantly. This decline did not impede the ability to detect pregnancy based on previously reported criteria, even for elk in such poor condition that they aborted. However, fecal P4 concentrations in 10% (4/39) of samples collected from 13 non-pregnant animals maintained on a high plane of nutrition were false-positive for pregnancy. We suggest alternate criteria for determining pregnancy in elk using fecal P4 values: > 1.25 micrograms/g feces as pregnant, < 1.0 microgram/g feces as non-pregnant, and 1.0-1.25 micrograms/g feces as inconclusive. Finally, two cows that aborted did not abort until weeks after being classified as emaciated and near death, suggesting that nutrition-associated abortion in elk may not occur during mid-gestation except under extremely harsh conditions.


Subject(s)
Deer/physiology , Diet/veterinary , Feces/chemistry , Nutritional Status/physiology , Progestins/analysis , Abortion, Veterinary/diagnosis , Abortion, Veterinary/epidemiology , Abortion, Veterinary/physiopathology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Deer/anatomy & histology , Diet/standards , Emaciation/epidemiology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Emaciation/veterinary , Female , Incidence , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Tests/veterinary , Random Allocation
6.
Sao Paulo Med J ; 119(2): 72-7, 2001 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11276170

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: The loss of body weight and fat late in life is associated with premature death and increased risk of disability, even after excluding elderly subjects who have a preexisting disease. Although it is important to recognize that periods of substantially positive or negative energy balance and body weight fluctuation occur as a normal part of life, weight losses greater than 5% over 6 months should be investigated. We can divide the major causes of weight loss in the elderly into 4 categories: social, psychiatric, due to medical conditions, and age-related. The clinical evaluation should include a careful history and physical examination. If these fail to provide clues to the weight loss, simple diagnostic tests are indicated. A period of watchful waiting is preferable to blind pursuit of additional diagnostic testing that may yield few useful data, if the results of these initial tests are normal. The first step in managing patients with weight loss is to identify and treat any specific causative or contributing conditions and to provide nutritional support when indicated. Non-orexigenic drugs have found an established place in the management of protein-energy malnutrition. Early attention to nutrition and prevention of weight loss during periods of acute stress, particularly during hospitalization, may be extremely important, as efforts directed at re-feeding are often unsuccessful. DESIGN: Narrative review.


Subject(s)
Emaciation/etiology , Weight Loss/physiology , Age Factors , Aged , Aging/physiology , Cause of Death , Diagnosis, Differential , Emaciation/physiopathology , Emaciation/therapy , Female , Humans , Male
8.
Tohoku J Exp Med ; 173(3): 311-20, 1994 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7846683

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: The effect of prolonged diabetic state on catecholamine-induced adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) response in the rat liver was examined using isolated liver perfusion. Epinephrine- or isoproterenol-induced cAMP production was enhanced (10-fold of the control) in the liver from extremely emaciated (intraperitoneal adipose tissue was absent completely) diabetic rats 4 weeks after streptozotocin-injection kept without insulin, but not from adipose tissue-present diabetic rats. Glucagon-induced cAMP production was decreased in the diabetic rat liver 4 weeks after streptozotocin regardless of the presence or absence of adipose tissue. Secretin-induced cAMP production was also decreased in the adipose tissue-absent diabetic rat liver. Plasma levels of glucose or insulin were not different between adipose tissue-present and -absent diabetic rats. Liver dysfunction (elevated AST and ALT levels) was observed 1 week after streptozotocin-injection, and worsened at 4 weeks. Forskolin-induced production of cAMP, and oxymetazoline (an alpha 2-adrenergic agonist)-induced suppression of it were not different among the control, newly diabetic (1 week after streptozotocin-injection), and the adipose tissue-absent diabetic rat liver. IN CONCLUSION: 1) enhanced beta-adrenergic, and decreased glucagon- or secretin-induced cAMP production seems to be caused by different mechanisms; 2) the prolonged severe diabetic state losing adipose tissue may cause a considerable change in metabolism and the characteristics of hepatocyte, and lead to enhanced beta-adrenergic cAMP production.


Subject(s)
Cyclic AMP/biosynthesis , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/metabolism , Epinephrine/pharmacology , Liver/drug effects , Adipose Tissue/physiology , Animals , Colforsin/pharmacology , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/complications , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/drug therapy , Emaciation/etiology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Glucagon/pharmacology , Glucose/analysis , Insulin/therapeutic use , Isoproterenol/pharmacology , Lactates/pharmacology , Lactic Acid , Liver/metabolism , Male , Oxymetazoline/pharmacology , Phenylephrine/pharmacology , Propranolol/pharmacology , Pyruvates/pharmacology , Pyruvic Acid , Rats , Receptors, Adrenergic, beta/drug effects , Receptors, Adrenergic, beta/physiology , Streptozocin
9.
Ann N Y Acad Sci ; 653: 274-96, 1992 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1320842

ABSTRACT

Infant cats were inoculated intracranially with rabies or feline leukemia viruses in an experimental study of wasting syndrome. The daily pre- and postinoculation body weights were recorded until kittens were moribund. Affected animals in both groups manifested growth failure or wasting syndrome. Immunodepression, manifested by a conspicuous depletion of thymic cortex, the thymus dependent areas of the spleen, and growth hormone producing-alpha adenopituicytes was significantly (p less than 0.01) related to the wasting status of the animals. The ability of pituitary glands from these animals to produce growth hormone was studied by in situ immunoperoxidase staining and showed a significant (p less than 0.01) difference between healthy and wasted animals. Rabies and feline leukemia viruses were each found responsible for the low immunoreactivity of growth hormone producing alpha adenopituicytes. Because the hypothalamus and the hypophysis were both found infected, it was concluded that regardless of the triggering agent in primary wasting, the hypothalamic-hypophyseal-thymic axis was always involved through a decrease in growth hormone production.


Subject(s)
Disease Models, Animal , Emaciation/physiopathology , Feline Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/physiopathology , Leukemia Virus, Feline/physiology , Rabies virus/physiology , Rabies/physiopathology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Cats , Emaciation/etiology , Growth Hormone/metabolism , Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System/physiopathology , Immune Tolerance , Regression Analysis , Syndrome , Thymus Gland/physiopathology
10.
Nihon Ronen Igakkai Zasshi ; 26(4): 353-60, 1989 Jul.
Article in Japanese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2514307

ABSTRACT

The circadian rhythm of the heart rate was assessed using 24 hour electrocardiographic recordings in 18 hospitalized elderly patients with wasting diseases receiving total parenteral nutrition. The nutrient solutions were administered at doses ranging from 360 to 1640 kcal/day. To determine if the heart rate fluctuates rhythmically with a circadian period, the mean hourly heart rate on 24 hour electrocardiographic recordings was used to fit cosine curves by the statistical technique of least squares, and three parameters of the rhythm--designated the mesor, amplitude, and acrophase--were estimated. The cosine curves fitted with a P value of 0.01 or less in all patients before and after insertion of central venous catheters. The mesor represented the rhythm--adjusted mean of the heart rate. The mesor increased significantly with increase in the energy infusion rate (p less than 0.01). The amplitude values were derived from one half of the total diurnal variation of heart rate and the acrophase indicated the time when heart rates were at their peak above the mean. Neither amplitude nor acrophase changed significantly with increase in the energy infusion rate. Furthermore, neither norepinephrine nor epinephrine plasma levels changed with nutrient administration. There were no significant changes in thyroid hormone concentrations. There was a significant positive correlation between mesor changes and rectal temperature with increase in the energy infusion rate (r = 0.76, p less than 0.01). In severely malnourished subjects, changes in the level of feeding can profoundly affect cardiac functions and thermogenic response.


Subject(s)
Circadian Rhythm , Emaciation/therapy , Heart Rate , Parenteral Nutrition, Total , Aged , Body Temperature , Electrocardiography, Ambulatory , Emaciation/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Male
11.
Kangogaku Zasshi ; 53(4): 316-9, 1989 Apr.
Article in Japanese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2761090
13.
Pol Arch Weter ; 24(4): 515-28, 1987.
Article in Polish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3697339

ABSTRACT

The studies were carried out on 60 cows of the lowland black-and-white breed at about 4 years of age, which were divided into 4 groups according to the degree of fatness: well-fed, lean, moderately and completely emaciated. The basic composition, water holding capacity, miofibrillar protein, collagen, amino acid composition of proteins, biological value of muscle proteins, DNA level, pH, physical parameters of muscle fibres and sensory properties of meat were determined. It was found that: a) with the decrease of the fatness degree changes in the basic composition of muscle tissue follow; the most significant is the decrease in the content of total protein, particularly that of miofibrillar protein, b) the water to protein ratio over 4 to 1 is a good index for determination of emaciation, c) the biological value of protein is the same regardless the degree of fatness, d) distinct organoleptic changes of meat occur only in extreme cases of emaciation.


Subject(s)
Body Weight , Cattle Diseases/physiopathology , Cattle/physiology , Emaciation/veterinary , Meat/analysis , Animals , Emaciation/physiopathology , Female , Meat/standards , Nutritive Value
14.
Arch Dermatol ; 121(8): 1053-6, 1985 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4026345

ABSTRACT

A 5-year-old boy had a nodular erythema, elongated and thickened fingers, and emaciation. His condition was a rare congenital disease inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. Eleven cases have been previously reported in the Japanese literature. The onset is early in childhood, and nodular erythema is an essential and initial finding. Growth retardation and emaciation progress slowly with age. The characteristic clinical features include large eyes, nose, lips, and ears, disproportionately long and thick fingers, and the loss of adipose tissue from the upper half of the body. Cardiomegaly and hypertrophy of the periosteum of the phalanges have been described in some cases.


Subject(s)
Emaciation/pathology , Erythema Nodosum/pathology , Fingers/pathology , Child, Preschool , Emaciation/genetics , Emaciation/physiopathology , Erythema Nodosum/genetics , Erythema Nodosum/physiopathology , Humans , Male , Skin/pathology , Syndrome
15.
Surg Neurol ; 23(6): 581-8, 1985 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3992458

ABSTRACT

Three cases of diencephalic syndrome are reported. Two of them, which have been observed postoperatively for more than 7 years, showed typical clinical and endocrinologic features at the time of their first admission, but showed mass signs uncharacteristic of diencephalic syndrome after recurrence of the tumor. Recent data showed a normal baseline for plasma growth hormone but abnormalities in provocation tests. The significance of age in the manifestation of the syndrome is briefly discussed, especially in relation to the tendency toward normalization in the growth hormone level at a later age.


Subject(s)
Diencephalon , Emaciation/physiopathology , Astrocytoma/complications , Astrocytoma/surgery , Brain Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Brain Diseases/etiology , Brain Diseases/mortality , Brain Diseases/physiopathology , Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms/complications , Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms/surgery , Emaciation/diagnostic imaging , Emaciation/etiology , Emaciation/mortality , Growth Hormone/blood , Humans , Infant , Male , Syndrome , Time Factors , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
16.
Surg Neurol ; 17(2): 141-6, 1982 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6803375

ABSTRACT

Diencephalic syndrome of emaciation (Russell's syndrome) characteristically presents with the symptoms of marked emaciation in spite of normal linear growth and marked increased of serum growth hormone in infancy and early childhood. It is usually caused by a low-grade glioma, most often an astrocytoma, of the anterior third ventricle including the optic nerve and chiasm. Usually it is not associated with von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis. We describe two unusual cases of diencephalic syndrome; one case was caused by a low-grade astrocytoma involving the anterior third ventricle associated with neurofibromatosis, and the other by a malignant astrocytoma of the anterior third ventricle.


Subject(s)
Emaciation/etiology , Astrocytoma/complications , Brain Neoplasms/complications , Cerebral Ventricles , Child, Preschool , Emaciation/blood , Emaciation/physiopathology , Humans , Infant , Male , Neurofibromatosis 1/complications , Syndrome
18.
Helv Paediatr Acta ; 33(4-5): 393-400, 1978 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-711500

ABSTRACT

A 10-month-old boy with the clinical features of the diencephalic syndrome of emaciation due to a suprasellar spongioblastoma is described. The patient showed high basal levels of growth hormone (GH greater than 80 muU/ml on several occasions). In addition, elevated concentration of plasma testosterone (125.5 ng/100ml) was combined with a relatively high LH-increase to LHRH (45.6 mU/ml). After completion of irradiation basal GH-levels had been normalized, and GH responses to insulin induced hypoglycemia (IIH) and propranolol-glucagon (PG) were adequate. Complete clinical remission of emaciation occurred soon after radiation therapy and went parallel with the normalization of GH-regulation.


Subject(s)
Astrocytoma/physiopathology , Brain Neoplasms/physiopathology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Hypothalamus/physiopathology , Blood Glucose/analysis , Brain Neoplasms/blood , Emaciation/blood , Emaciation/therapy , Follicle Stimulating Hormone/blood , Growth Hormone/blood , Humans , Hydrocortisone/blood , Infant , Luteinizing Hormone/blood , Male , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/physiopathology , Prolactin/blood , Syndrome , Testosterone/blood , Thyroid Hormones/blood
20.
Arch Dis Child ; 53(6): 511-3, 1978 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-686781

ABSTRACT

In an infant of 15 months with the diencephalic syndrome, urinary excretion of norepinephrine was moderately raised and epinephrine greatly so. It is suggested that catecholamine secretion may be due to sympathetic stimulation at the level of the diencephalon, by a space-occupying lesion pressing on the thalamohypothalamic pathway. Some of the symptoms of the diencephalic syndrome such as euphoria, irritability, skin pallor, and hypertension may be the result of catecholamine secretion.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/urine , Diencephalon/physiopathology , Emaciation/urine , Epinephrine/urine , Norepinephrine/urine , Brain Neoplasms/physiopathology , Emaciation/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Infant , Syndrome
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