1.The Influence of Exogenous Fat and Water on Lumbar Spine Bone Mineral Density in Healthy Volunteers.
Kyu Nam KIM ; Bom Taeck KIM ; Kwang Min KIM ; Sat Byul PARK ; Nam Seok JOO ; Sang Hyeon JE ; Young Sang KIM ; Duck Joo LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2012;53(2):289-293
PURPOSE: Changes in human body composition can affect the accuracy of spine bone mineral density (BMD) measurements. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether fat and water in the soft tissue of the abdomen influence lumbar spine BMD measurements obtained using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Duplicate BMD measurements were carried out on healthy volunteers (10 men and 10 women) and the Hologic anthropomorphic spine phantom had on the same day before and after placement of following 3 materials in the abdominal area: lard 900 g, 1.5 cm thick; oil 1.4 liters in a vinyl bag; and water 1.2 liters in a vinyl bag. RESULTS: In the case of human participants, following the placement of exogenous water to mimic extracellular fluid (ECF), there was a significant decrease in lumbar spine BMD (-0.012 g/cm2, p=0.006), whereas the placement of exogenous lard and oil to mimic abdominal fat produced a slight increase in lumbar spine BMD (0.006 g/cm2, p=0.301; 0.008 g/cm2, p=0.250, respectively). The average percentage of lumbar spine BMD change with and without exogenous lard, oil, and water showed increase of 0.51%, and 0.67%, and decrease of 1.02%, respectively. Using the phantom, BMD decreased with the placement of both lard (-0.002 g/cm2, p=0.699) and water (-0.006 g/cm2, p=0.153); however, there was no difference in BMD after oil placement. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that in cases where changes in fat and ECF volume are similar, ECF exerts a greater influence than fat on DXA lumbar BMD measurements.
Absorptiometry, Photon
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Adult
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Bone Density/*drug effects
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Dietary Fats/pharmacology
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Fats/*pharmacology
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Female
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Humans
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Lumbar Vertebrae/*drug effects/*metabolism
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Male
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Water/*pharmacology
2.Impact of dietary oils and fats on lipid peroxidation in liver and blood of albino rats.
Mohammad El-Sayed Yassin El-Sayed HAGGAG ; Rafaat Mohamed ELSANHOTY ; Mohamed Fawzy RAMADAN
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine 2014;4(1):52-58
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effects of different dietary fat and oils (differing in their degree of saturation and unsaturation) on lipid peroxidation in liver and blood of rats.
METHODSThe study was conducted on 50 albino rats that were randomly divided into 5 groups of 10 animals. The groups were fed on dietary butter (Group I), margarine (Group II), olive oil (Group III), sunflower oil (Group IV) and corn oil (Group V) for 7 weeks. After 12 h of diet removal, livers were excised and blood was collected to measure malondialdehyde (MDA) levels in the supernatant of liver homogenate and in blood. Blood superoxide dismutase activity (SOD), glutathione peroxidase activity (GPx), serum vitamin E and total antioxidant capacity (TAC) levels were also measured to determine the effects of fats and oils on lipid peroxidation.
RESULTSThe results indicated that no significant differences were observed in SOD activity, vitamin E and TAC levels between the five groups. However, there was significant decrease of GPx activity in groups IV and V when compared with other groups. The results indicated that feeding corn oil caused significant increases in liver and blood MDA levels as compared with other oils and fats. There were positive correlations between SOD and GPx, vitamin E and TAC as well as between GPx and TAC (r: 0.743; P<0.001) and between blood MDA and liver MDA (r: 0.897; P<0.001). The results showed also negative correlations between blood MDA on one hand and SOD, GPx, vitamin E and TAC on the other hand.
CONCLUSIONSThe results demonstrated that feeding oils rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) increases lipid peroxidation significantly and may raise the susceptibility of tissues to free radical oxidative damage.
Analysis of Variance ; Animals ; Diet ; Dietary Fats ; pharmacology ; Dietary Fats, Unsaturated ; pharmacology ; Female ; Glutathione Peroxidase ; blood ; Lipid Peroxidation ; drug effects ; Male ; Malondialdehyde ; blood ; Plant Oils ; pharmacology ; Rats ; Superoxide Dismutase ; blood
3.Effect of Alloxan-diabetic Rat Fed with Different Diets on Ureogenesis in Isolated Perfused Liver.
Moo Youn CHO ; Kwang Kyun PARK ; Kyoung Ja CHAI ; Yoon Soo KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 1982;23(2):159-166
The effect of alloxan-diabetic rat fed with normal, high fat, low protein and high protein diets on the rate of urea production and the activities of enzymes associated with the urea cycle (ornithine transcarbamoylase, E.C. 2.1.3.3, OTC; arginase, E.C. 3.5.5.1) have been studied in intact and isolated perfused liver. The amount of urea excretion was the highest in the high protein diet group. When each diet group was treated with alloxan, total urea excretion showed little differences between each diet group and its corresponding control group with the exception being in the normal diet group. However, the enzyme activity of OTC was increased significantly by alloxan treatment in low and high protein diet groups as compared to corresponding control groups. Similar results were obtained in arginase activity, although the magnitude of the change was less marked. In liver perfusion experiments on rats treated with alloxan, the amount of urea production and changes in OTC and arginase activity were very similar with those in the intact liver. These results suggest that alloxan treatment in normal diet group causes an increase in urea excretion both in intact and perfused liver regardless of changes in enzyme activities and total urea excretion, and enzyme activities are affected by changes in dietary components but the changes of enzyme activities may not correlate with total urea excretion.
Alloxan
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Animal
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Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/metabolism*
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Dietary Fats/pharmacology*
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Dietary Proteins/pharmacology*
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In Vitro
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Liver/metabolism*
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Male
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Perfusion
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Rats
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Urea/metabolism*
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Urea/urine
4.Effect of soy isoflavone crude extract supplementation on high fat diet-induced insulin resistance in ovariectomized rats.
Yun Bo ZHANG ; Li Na LI ; Xin Yu ZHAO ; Wen Hua CHEN ; Jing Jing GUO ; Zheng Hai FU ; Yang YANG ; Xiao Lin NA
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2014;27(1):49-51
Animals
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Body Weight
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drug effects
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Dietary Fats
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adverse effects
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Female
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Insulin Resistance
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Isoflavones
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chemistry
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pharmacology
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Ovariectomy
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Plant Extracts
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chemistry
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pharmacology
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Rats
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Rats, Wistar
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Soybeans
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chemistry
5.Emodin inhibits dietary induced atherosclerosis by antioxidation and regulation of the sphingomyelin pathway in rabbits.
Zi-qing HEI ; He-qing HUANG ; Hong-mei TAN ; Pei-qing LIU ; Ling-zhi ZHAO ; Shao-rui CHEN ; Wen-ge HUANG ; Feng-ying CHEN ; Fen-fen GUO
Chinese Medical Journal 2006;119(10):868-870
Animals
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Antioxidants
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pharmacology
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Apoptosis
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drug effects
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Atherosclerosis
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prevention & control
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Ceramides
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analysis
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Dietary Fats
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administration & dosage
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Emodin
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pharmacology
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Lipids
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blood
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Male
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Rabbits
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Signal Transduction
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Sphingomyelin Phosphodiesterase
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metabolism
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Sphingomyelins
;
metabolism
6.Study on seeds dormancy release and physiological change of Thesium chinense.
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2012;37(6):760-763
OBJECTIVETo study the seeds dormancy release and physiological change of Thesium chinense.
METHODTo release dormancy, the seeds of T. chinense were treated with chemical reagent and stratification under 3-5 degrees C.
RESULTWhen washed with flowing water for 24 h, then soaked in 500 mg x L(-1) GA3 for 24 h, finally, treated with stratification method under 3-5 degrees C for 150 day, the split rate of T. chinense seeds reached 22%, crude fat decreased 50%, total sugar and dissolvability sugar increased 3-4 times, ABA decreased more than 90%, GA3 increased more than 5 times.
CONCLUSIONThe seeds dormancy of T. chinense can be released with the method of washing with flowing water for 24 h, then soaking in 500 mg x L(-1) GA3 for 24 h, finally, treated with stratification method under 3-5 degrees C for 150-180 day.
Abscisic Acid ; pharmacology ; Carbohydrates ; analysis ; Cold Temperature ; Fats ; analysis ; Germination ; physiology ; Gibberellins ; pharmacology ; Magnoliopsida ; drug effects ; physiology ; Plant Dormancy ; drug effects ; physiology ; Plant Growth Regulators ; pharmacology ; Plants, Medicinal ; drug effects ; physiology ; Seeds ; drug effects ; physiology ; Time Factors ; Water ; pharmacology
7.Effect of high-lipid diet on glomerular mesangial matrix in adriamycin-induced nephrotic rats.
Hongmei SONG ; Xuewang LI ; Min WEI ; Chuanyou ZHU
Chinese Medical Sciences Journal 2002;17(3):134-139
OBJECTIVETo determine the effect of hypercholsterolemia induced by a high-lipid diet on glomerulosclerosis.
METHODSTwenty nephrotic syndrome (NS) Wistar rats administrated adriamycin (ADR) with a single intravenous dose of 5 mg/kg body weight, were divided into the standard and high-lipid chow groups. Another 20 weight-matched non-NS rats that received a vehicle alone were grouped as control. Urinary protein excretion and serum cholesterol were assayed; image analysis and techniques of pathology, immunohistochemistry, and molecular biology were used to determine morphological changes in glomeruli and the production of glomerular mesangial matrices in different groups.
RESULTSThe serum total cholesterol level was significantly higher in rats with high-lipid chow in both non-NS [(2.2 +/- 0.3) g/L vs. (0.9 +/- 0.1) g/L, P < 0.01] and NS [(9.5 +/- 0.2) g/L vs. (2.3 +/- 0.3) g/L, P < 0.01]. The urinary protein excretion was significantly higher in the high-lipid diet rats than in standard chow rats [(76.2 +/- 24.2) mg/24h vs. (44.8 +/- 13.6) mg/24h, P < 0.05] in NS rats. Although increases in the mesangial matrix and mesangial cells were observed in rats with high-lipid diet in both NS and non-NS group, more obvious pathological changes were found in NS group, such as lipid deposits and foam cell formation in mesangial areas, and progressing to focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis in some glomeruli. The immunohistochemical asay showed that the production of 3 major components (collagen IV, fibronectin, and laminin) was increased in NS group, especially in the rats with high-lipid chow. The increased expression of laminin mRNA was also detected with slot blotting in both NS and non-NS rats with high-lipid chow, and it was more obvious in the rats with NS.
CONCLUSIONOur findings indicated that diet-induced hyperlipidemia can lead to over-production of mesangial matrix components, and further aggravate glomerulosclerosis in ADR-induced nephrosis.
Animals ; Dietary Fats ; pharmacology ; Doxorubicin ; Fibronectins ; metabolism ; Glomerular Mesangium ; metabolism ; pathology ; Hypercholesterolemia ; metabolism ; Laminin ; metabolism ; Male ; Nephrotic Syndrome ; chemically induced ; metabolism ; pathology ; Proteinuria ; urine ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar
8.Diet rich in saturated fat decreases the ratio of thromboxane/prostacyclin in healthy men.
Duo LI ; Raymundo HABITO ; George ANGELOS ; Andrew J SINCLAIR ; Madeleine J BALL
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2003;16(4):333-339
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effect of dietary saturated fat (SFA) from animal sources on the urine excretion 11-dehydro thromboxane B2 (TXB2) and 6-keto prostaglandin F 1alpha (PGF 1alpha) in 27 healthy free-living male subjects aged 30 to 55 years.
METHODSIt was a randomized crossover design. Each volunteer was randomly assigned to one of the two diets (high fat and low fat) for a period of 4 weeks, after which each subject resumed his usual diet for 2 weeks as a 'wash-out period', before being assigned to the other diet for an additional 4 weeks.
RESULTSSerum proportion of 20:4n-6 was 5% lower in the high fat (6.2% of total fatty acid) than in the low fat diet (6.5% of total fatty acid), which was associated with a significantly decreased ratio of the urinary excretion 11-dehydro TXB2 to 6-keto PGF 1alpha (P < 0.05). However, there was no significant fall in the absolute urinary excretion of 11-dehydro TXB2.
CONCLUSIONSDiet rich in SFA from animal sources may influence TXA2 formation via effect on tissue proportion of 20:4n-6.
6-Ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha ; urine ; Adult ; Arteriosclerosis ; physiopathology ; Cross-Over Studies ; Dietary Fats ; pharmacology ; Fatty Acids ; metabolism ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Thrombosis ; physiopathology ; Thromboxane B2 ; analogs & derivatives ; urine
9.Modulating effects of chlorogenic acid on lipids and glucose metabolism and expression of hepatic peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha in golden hamsters fed on high fat diet.
Shu-Yuan LI ; Cui-Qing CHANG ; Fu-Ying MA ; Chang-Long YU
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2009;22(2):122-129
OBJECTIVETo examine the effects of chlorogenic acid (CGA) on lipid and glucose metabolism under a high dietary fat burden and to explore the possible role of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPAR-alpha) in these effects.
METHODSTwenty male golden hamsters were randomly divided into CGA treatment group (n=10, given peritoneal injection of CGA solution prepared with PBS, 80 mg CGA/kg body weight daily), and control group (n=10, given PBS i.p. at the average volume of the treatment group). Animals in both groups were given 15% high fat diet. Eight weeks after treatment with CGA, the level of biochemical parameters in fasting serum and tissues and the expression of hepatic mRNA and protein PPAR-alpha were determined.
RESULTSEight weeks after treatment with CGA, the levels of fasting serum triglyceride (TG), free fatty acid (FFA), total cholesterol (TC), low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), glucose (FSG), and insulin (FSI) were significantly lower in the GGA treatment group than in the control group. CGA also led to higher activity of hepatic lipase (HL), lower contents of TG and FFA in liver, and lower activity of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in skeletal muscle. Furthermore, CGA significantly elevated significantly elevated the expression level of mRNA and protein expression in hepatic PPAR-alpha.
CONCLUSIONCGA can modify lipids and glucose metabolism, which may be attributed to PPAR-alpha facilitated lipid clearance in liver and improved insulin sensitivity.
Animals ; Blood Glucose ; drug effects ; Chlorogenic Acid ; pharmacology ; Cricetinae ; Dietary Fats ; pharmacology ; Gene Expression Regulation ; drug effects ; Glucose ; metabolism ; Hypolipidemic Agents ; pharmacology ; Lipase ; metabolism ; Lipid Metabolism ; drug effects ; Male ; Mesocricetus ; PPAR alpha ; genetics ; metabolism ; RNA, Messenger ; genetics ; metabolism ; Weight Gain
10.Experimental study on effect of jiangya maijing liquid on spontaneous hypertension rats fed with high lipid diet.
Li HUANG ; Zai-xiang SHI ; Jiu-liang ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine 2002;22(7):528-530
OBJECTIVETo observe and identify the effect of Jiangya Maijing Liquid (JYMJL) on spontaneous hypertension rats (SHR) fed with high lipid diet in antagonizing hypertension and hyperlipidemia and improving pathological changes of kidney.
METHODSForty-two SHR were divided into 5 groups, except Group A, the Groups B-E were fed with high lipid diet, and Group C, D and E was treated with JYMJL, western drug and Niuhuang Jiangya pill respectively. Besides, Group F was set up for control with normal rats fed by normal diet. The changes of blood pressure (BP), biological indices and renal pathology were observed in the 14 weeks' period of observation.
RESULTS(1) BP raised significantly in Group A and B, it became stable in Group C from the 5th week on and was lower than the BP in other groups (P < 0.01). BP in Group F was not changed; (2) The highest level of nitric oxide (NO) was shown in Group F, and that in Group B and E was lower than that in Group C and D; (3) Level of cholesterol was lower in Group A and F than that in Group C, D and E (P < 0.01), and that in Group C was lower than that in Group B and E (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05 respectively); (4) Pathologic examination on kidney showed that no change was found in Group F, the most severe change was shown in Group B among Group B-E, and the improvement after treatment in Group C was better than that in group B (P < 0.01).
CONCLUSION(1) Condition of disease in rats with hypertension complicated with hyperlipidemia was more severe than that with simple hypertension; (2) JYMJL could restrain the developing of hypertension in SHR, the mechanism may be related with the raising of NO; (3) JYMJL has effect of lowering blood lipid; (4) JYMJL has kidney protective effect, it could alleviate the pathological changes in kidney by way of lowering BP and blood lipid.
Animals ; Antihypertensive Agents ; pharmacology ; Dietary Fats ; administration & dosage ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; Female ; Hyperlipidemias ; etiology ; pathology ; Hypertension ; complications ; pathology ; Hypolipidemic Agents ; pharmacology ; Kidney ; pathology ; Male ; Phytotherapy ; Rats ; Rats, Inbred SHR ; Rats, Inbred WKY