Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 961
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Baijal P K - - 1996
Weanling male rats were fed low (LP, 7.5%), standard (SP, 15%) or high protein (HP, 45%) diet for 7 or 14 days ad libitum, and cytochrome c reductase (CYC) and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) enzyme activities were determined in intestine, kidney and liver microsomes. HP diet increased CYC activity in intestine and ...
Yamauchi K - - 1996
1. The fine structural alterations of villi and epithelial cells in each part of the small intestine were investigated in layer-type hens fasted for 12 h to 20 d or refed for one day after each fasting period. 2. Within the first 24-h-fasting, villi of the duodenum showed a remarkable ...
Helmrath M A - - 1996
BACKGROUND: Transgenic mice represent powerful tools for studying the role of genes and their expression under multiple conditions, and they may provide a unique model for studies of intestinal adaptation after massive small bowel resection (SBR). This study characterized a successful model for SBR and intestinal adaptation in the mouse. ...
Ziegler T R - - 1996
Intestinal adaptation after extensive small bowel resection in rats is augmented by the provision of diets supplemented with the amino acid glutamine (Gln) or by administration of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I). The goal of this study was to investigate potential synergistic effects of Gln and IGF-I on postresection ileal hyperplasia. ...
Deloyer P - - 1996
We questioned whether polyamines coming from the diet or produced by intestinal microflora or by intracellular metabolism influence intestinal functions. Therefore, we compared pathogen-free rats and germ-free rats receiving a diet with low polyamine content and either treated or not treated with difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) and/or methylglyoxal bis (guanylhydrazone) (MGBG). Wet ...
Townsley M I - - 1996
The question addressed in this study was whether enterostatin, the pancreatic procolipase activation peptide, modulates intestinal hyaluronan turnover via lymph. In anesthetized cats, segments of ileum were surgically isolated from the proximal and distal gut, the draining lymphatic was cannulated, and the segment was autoperfused in situ. In several groups, ...
Serizawa H - - 1996
We have previously demonstrated that elemental diet (ED) induces decreased lymphocyte transport in intestinal lymph and significant changes in T cell subsets and the number of IgA-containing cells in gut-associated lymphoid tissues of rats. In order to examine whether the low fat content contributes to the induction of immunological changes ...
Thompson J S - - 1996
BACKGROUND: Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) reportedly have a trophic effect on the small intestine. However, it is unclear if this is a local or primarily systemic effect. Loss of the ileocolonic junction (ICJ) may result in increased SCFAs and bacteria in the small intestine from colonic reflux. Our aim was ...
Heijnen M L - - 1996
Dietary raw (RS2) vs. retrograded resistant starch (RS3) raises apparent magnesium absorption in rats. The mechanism proposed is that RS2 enhances magnesium avaibility for absorption; it does this by increasing ileal solubility of magnesium due to a reduction in pH as a consequence of RS2 fermentation in the gut. The ...
Rhoads J M - - 1996
This study was designed to screen several treatments for their effects on mucosal repair in an established model of piglet rotavirus enteritis. Six ingredients selected to facilitate repair were added to the oral rehydration solution (ORS) and subsequently to the diet: L-glutamine (GLN); rice solids; a soluble fiber (carboxymethylcellulose); nucleotides; ...
Iqbal T H - - 1996
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Asymptomatic residents of tropical countries have differences in small intestinal morphology and permeability compared with residents of temperate zones. The aim of this study was to investigate small intestinal permeability and morphology in three ethnic groups resident in Birmingham, UK. METHODS: 28 white patients, 101 Indian (Indian subcontinent), and ...
Pakarinen M - - 1996
Cholesterol absorption occurs primarily in the upper small intestine. Our aim was to assess absorption of cholesterol during ileal adaptation after proximal small intestinal resection. In vivo absorption and elimination of cholesterol, plasma cholesterol, cholesterol precursors, and plant sterols were related to intestinal morphology and transit 4 (n = 5), ...
Lin H C - - 1996
Since the intubation study of B. Borgstrom, A. Dahlqvist, and G. Lundh (J. Clin. Invest. 36: 1521-1536, 1957) in humans, the completion of fat absorption within the proximal small intestine has been widely accepted. Based on this report, it has been assumed that the distal small intestine is exposed to ...
Mao Y - - 1996
BACKGROUND: Administration of methotrexate (MTX) to rats fed an elemental diet results in a high mortality from severe enterocolitis. Previous studies have shown that pectin is an important precursor of substrates for intestinal structure and function and may facilitate intestinal recovery after enterocolitis. The aim of this study is to ...
Krinke A L - - 1996
Groups of 90 male broilers each were administered the antibiotic avoparcine mixed into feed in concentrations of 7.5, 10, and 15 ppm and achieved a higher mean body weight than the controls fed without this admixture. At the end of the 70-d fattening period, histological examination was carried out on ...
Wirén M E - - 1996
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of intraluminal glutamine on the adaptation of intestinal mucosa after resection compared with transsection and un-operated on control animals. DESIGN: Open, controlled, experimental study. SETTING: University hospital, Sweden. SUBJECTS: 123 Sprague-Dawley rats. INTERVENTION: Daily isonitrogenous oral diet was given either free of glutamine or supplemented ...
Carr T P - - 1996
This study was conducted to test the hypothesis that increased intestinal contents viscosity lowers plasma cholesterol concentrations by decreasing cholesterol absorption. Male Golden Syrian hamsters were fed for 4 wk diets containing 0.12% cholesterol, and either 4% cellulose or four different viscosity grades of hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC). Dietary HPMC confers ...
Aper R L - - 1996
Surgical treatments for chronic, painful hallux sesamoid disorders typically involve partial or complete resection of 1 or both sesamoids. Although these approaches generally result in satisfactory symptom relief, their effect on biomechanical function of the major hallux flexors is not completely understood. The effects of selective sesamoid resections on the ...
Keelan M - - 1996
The authors tested the hypothesis that the intestinal morphology and uptake of nutrients after resection of the distal half of the small intestine of rats responds to alterations in the dietary content of saturated (SFA) and polyunsaturated (PUFA) fatty acids. Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to a sham operation ...
Barna J - - 1996
The absorption rate of radiolabelled nutrients (22Na, 45Ca, [35S]methionine, [3H]leucine) was investigated in vivo in Sprague-Dawley rats at the end of a feeding period of 135 days on a semisynthetic diet containing 32% sweet paprika powder. No effect was seen on the intestinal absorption of these compounds, nor on the ...
Welters C F - - 1996
Previously, short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) infused into the hindgut or administered intravenously have been shown to stimulate intestinal adaptation after massive small bowel resection. To study the effects of enterally supplemented n-butyrate on food digestion and absorption in growing pigs with short bowel syndrome, the authors examined the portal efflux ...
Horvath K - - 1996
BACKGROUND: The importance of L-glutamine as metabolic fuel for enterocytes and its role in prevention of mucosal atrophy during total parenteral nutrition is well documented. No data are available to date that document whether a glutamine-free complete enteral diet, requiring full energy expenditure for hydrolysis and absorption, is associated with ...
Iijima S - - 1996
The effects of supplementing a total parenteral nutrition solution with a nucleoside and nucleotide mixture on mucosal adaptive processes after massive bowel resection were studied. Male Wistar rats (n=30) underwent 80% small intestine resection, were randomized into two groups and received either standard total parenteral nutrition (TPN) or TPN supplemented ...
Lin H C - - 1996
Optimal absorption of fat requires adequate time of contact with the absorptive sites of the small intestine. In order to prevent steatorrhea, intestinal transit must be slowed in response to the fat that has emptied into the small intestine. Intestinal transit is known to be inhibited by fat in the ...
Liu C D - - 1996
Peptide YY (PYY), a 36-amino-acid polypeptide, is found in abundance in the colon, a region where its physiologic roles are unknown. Previous studies have revealed a substantial increase in plasma PYY after cholecystokinin (CCK) administration. PYY is released from the hindgut in response to a meal and inhibits CCK release. ...
Kalfarentzos F - - 1996
The effect of dietary ornithine a-ketoglutarate (OKG) on intestinal mucosal integrity and bacterial translocation was studied in rats following administration of a single dose of abdominal radiation (1100 cGy). Following the radiation injury the rats were randomized to receive a nutritionally incomplete diet which contained only water and OKG or ...
Alférez M J - - 1996
The effects of dietary fat and supplementation with cholecalciferol on calcium absorption at different luminal concentrations (2.07 mmol/l and 2.07 mmol/l with 0.5 mmol/l 2,4-dinitrophenol and 8.20 mmol/l) were studied in vivo in the perfused duodenum, residual jejunum and proximal colon of rats with resection of 50% of the distal ...
Nonaka Y - - 1996
Ebelactones A and B, natural products from Streptomyces aburaviensis are potent inhibitors of pancreatic lipase. Lipase is the key enzyme required for the absorption of dietary triglycerides (TG). Ebelactone B inhibited, in a dose-dependent manner, the intestinal absorption of fat after fat-feeding in the rat. The most effective inhibition was ...
Wang T - - 1996
To investigate what factors lead to rapid postnatal tissue growth and functional maturation in the newborn intestine, we compared intestinal tissue mass and digestive enzyme activities between newborn unsuckled piglets and piglets bottle fed for 3 days with either 5% lactose solution, intact porcine colostrum or trypsinized porcine colostrum. Bottle ...
Quraishy M S - - 1996
Increased amounts of intestinal endotoxin are absorbed in obstructive jaundice. The precise mechanism is not known but the increased absorption may arise from alterations in the luminal contents, in the intestinal flora, in the gut wall or in interactions between all three. To examine the effects of the intestinal flora ...
Sharma R - - 1995
Elucidation of the mechanisms that alter the biosynthesis, turnover, and degradation of intestinal mucins is relevant to the understanding of both the normal gut ecosystem and various intestinal diseases. In this study image analysis was used to quantify the effects of diet and microbial flora on the mucin composition of ...
Zhi J - - 1995
Orlistat, a lipase inhibitor, acts locally in the gastrointestinal tract. Systemic absorption is not required for its efficacy, but knowledge of the extent of its systemic absorption is important for its safe use in obese patients, the intended target population. Pharmacokinetic screening was carried out by monitoring plasma concentrations of ...
Michail S - - 1995
Glutamine is the major fuel for enterocytes and prevents mucosal atrophy in certain animal models. Previous studies in our laboratory have failed to show a trophic effect of glutamine on the small-bowel mucosa following massive resection when added to a chow diet. However, the complexity of the chow diet might ...
Catassi C - - 1995
The aim of the study was to investigate the effect of age and feeding pattern on intestinal permeability during the first month of life. The subjects were 72 full-term, healthy neonates who were (a) exclusively breast-fed (BF group, n = 36) or (b) artificially fed (CM group, n = 36) ...
Sharma R - - 1995
BACKGROUND: The mechanisms responsible for the biosynthesis, storage, secretion, or degradation of intestinal mucins are still unclear. Little is known about the carbohydrate composition of mucins in response to changes in the intestinal lumen, so lectin histochemical techniques were used to study the alterations in glycoconjugate synthesis of mucins in ...
Byrne T A - - 1995
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to initially determine if growth hormone or nutrients, given alone or together, could enhance absorption from the remnant small bowel after massive intestinal resection. If clinical improvement were observed, this therapy would then be used to treat patients with the short-bowel syndrome over ...
Jenkins D J - - 1995
The rate of absorption of carbohydrate from the small intestine plays a major role in determining the metabolic effects of dietary carbohydrate. Factors which reduce the rate of absorption include the nature of the starch and sugars, and the presence of vegetable proteins, fats, viscous fibre, and antinutrients, including lectins ...
Greenberg D - - 1995
The early time course of the absorption of duodenally infused 14C-labeled Intralipid into either the hepatic portal circulation or systemic circulation was measured. Plasma radioactivity did not increase significantly at either site until 30 min after the intestinal infusion began and was maximal between 60 and 120 min. In studies ...
Takahashi F - - 1995
Intestinal ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is strongly induced by dietary amino acid and protein feeding. However, the consequence of this induction is unknown. In this study, we analyzed the relationship between intestinal ODC activity and DNA synthesis in villus and crypt cells of rat intestine. Single amino acid diets and protein ...
Byrne T A - - 1995
BACKGROUND: Massive loss of intestinal surface area results in the short bowel syndrome characterized by malabsorption of fluid, electrolytes, and other nutrients. Although the remaining bowel undergoes morphological and functional adaptation, often these changes are inadequate to support the individual by enteral feedings, and parenteral nutrition is required to prevent ...
Harada E - - 1995
The effect of repeated oral administration of polydextrose and pectin on intestinal macromolecular transport and digestive enzymes development was examined in the suckling rat. The administration of polydextrose for 7 days resulted in pancreatic hyperplasia, followed by the enhancement of trypsin activity. The length of the small intestine and the ...
Chu K U - - 1995
OBJECTIVE: The authors examined the effects of exogenous bombesin (BBS) on gut mucosal growth in chow-fed rats and the mucosal regeneration after gut atrophy brought about by feeding an elemental diet and after intestinal injury produced by methotrexate (MTX). SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Bombesin is one of many gastrointestinal peptides implicated ...
Rutgers H C - - 1995
Fifteen dogs with signs of small and, or, large bowel disease that responded clinically to an exclusion diet were studied, using differential sugar absorption as an objective parameter of the mucosal response to the diet. Intestinal permeability and function were assessed by determining the urinary excretion ratios of lactulose/rhamnose and ...
Ortega M A - - 1995
Previous studies in very young rats have shown that dietary nucleotides improve small intestine repair after injury or malnutrition. To investigate the potential effect of nucleotides in old rats, which have a diminished capability for intestinal repair, 17-mo-old rats were deprived of food for 5 d and then fed a ...
Fujita T - - 1995
Intact intestinal epithelium and associated lymphatic tissue act as body defences against luminal toxins. This barrier may become threatened or compromised in inflammatory bowel disease, leading to an increase in mucosal permeability and subsequent translocation of endotoxins. The effect of oral glutamine on gut mucosal ornithine decarboxylase activity and on ...
Rana S - - 1995
The effect of severe malnutrition and protein deficiency on small intestine has been documented, but the literature on the effect of mild-to-moderate protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) on small intestine is scant. Mild-to-moderate PEM is most prevalent in India. Twenty-four young rhesus monkeys weighing 1.5-2.0 kg were divided into two groups, control ...
Perera W M - - 1995
The aim of the present study was to compare the nutritive value of bacterial single-cell protein (BSCP) with that of fishmeal in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum)). Four diets were formulated to contain a total of 458 g crude protein/kg of which 0% was from BSCP in diet 1 (BSCP-0), ...
Starck J M - - 1995
Japanese quail were fed five diets of different nutrient composition and the structural responses of the intestinal tract were measured. Six morphometric variables were recorded. Depending on the diet, we found drastic changes in those factors affecting surface dimensions of the mucosa epithelium and the thickness of the muscle layers ...
Chen W J - - 1995
The effects of long-chain triglycerides (LCT) and of medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) on intestinal adaptation in rats were compared following a 60% resection of intestine. Sixty Long-Evans rats were divided into four groups: control (sham-operated) rats fed an MCT-enriched diet, control rats fed an LCT-enriched diet, experimental rats fed an MCT-enriched ...
Edwards J F - - 1995
Sixteen German Shepherd Dogs from 4 litters were IgA-deficient on the basis of at least 1 of 2 serum IgA determinations, and all had small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, as documented by quantitated small intestinal bacterial culture in another study. These dogs were fed 2 diets that differed principally in their ...
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