Search results for "Hemoglobin"

showing 10 items of 504 documents

The oxygen status of arterial human blood

1990

The oxygen status of arterial human blood is described at least by four variables: Oxygen partial pressure (pO2, mmHg), oxygen saturation (sO2, %), hemoglobin content (cHb, g/dL) and oxygen content (cO2, mL/dL). Beside perfusion, however, the oxygen supply of all organs is decisively determined by the mean capillary pO2 which itself is primarily dependent on the arterial cO2. Therefore, the oxygen availability (cardiac output x caO2, mL/min) may be described by the cO2 value in arterial blood or those variables who determine the latter one. The diagnostic significance of the O2 variables of the oxygen status consequently increases in the order of pO2, sO2 (cHb) and cO2. In arterial blood, o…

Lung Diseasesmedicine.medical_specialtyPartial PressureClinical BiochemistryPoison controlchemistry.chemical_elementOxygenMethemoglobinHypoxemiaCarbon Monoxide PoisoningHemoglobinsInternal medicinemedicineHumansOximetryCardiac OutputOxygen saturationMethemoglobinCarbon monoxide poisoningbusiness.industryAnemiaArteriesGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseCapillariesrespiratory tract diseasesOxygenchemistryAnesthesiaCardiologyArterial bloodHemoglobinBlood Gas Analysismedicine.symptombusinessScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation
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Neuroglobin and Other Hexacoordinated Hemoglobins Show a Weak Temperature Dependence of Oxygen Binding

2004

AbstractMouse and human neuroglobins, as well as the hemoglobins from Drosophila melanogaster and Arabidopsis thaliana, were recombinantly expressed in Escherichia coli, and their ligand-binding properties were studied versus temperature. These globins have a common feature of being hexacoordinated (via the distal histidine) under deoxy conditions, as evidenced by a large amplitude for the alpha absorption band at 560nm and the Soret band at 426nm. The transition from the hexacoordinated form to the CO bound species is slow, as expected for a replacement reaction Fe-His → Fe → FeCO. The intrinsic binding rates would indicate a high oxygen affinity for the pentacoordinated form, due to rapid…

Macromolecular SubstancesProtein ConformationBiophysicschemistry.chemical_elementNeuroglobinNerve Tissue ProteinsBiologyLigandsOxygenDissociation (chemistry)HemoglobinsMiceSpecies SpecificityAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHumansGlobinBinding siteBinding SitesArabidopsis ProteinsTemperatureProteinsLigand (biochemistry)GlobinsOxygenCrystallographyKineticsBiochemistrychemistryNeuroglobinOxygen bindingProtein ligandProtein BindingBiophysical Journal
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Polyphenol intake and cardiovascular risk factors in a population with type 2 diabetes: The TOSCA.IT study

2017

Background: The role of polyphenol intake on cardiovascular risk factors is little explored, particularly in people with diabetes. Aim: To evaluate the association between the intake of total polyphenols and polyphenol classes with the major cardiovascular risk factors in a population with type 2 diabetes. Methods: Dietary habits were investigated in 2573 males and females participants of the TOSCA.IT study. The European Prospective Investigation on Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) questionnaire was used to assess dietary habits. In all participants, among others, we assessed anthropometry, plasma lipids, blood pressure, C-reactive protein and HbA1c following a standard protocol. The USDA and Ph…

Male0301 basic medicinePhysiologyType 2 diabetes030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicineSettore MED/13 - Endocrinologiachemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineDietary polyphenolsFlavonoidsPhenolic acidsCardiovascular riskType 2 diabetesLOW-GRADE INFLAMMATIONBLOOD-PRESSUREDIETARY POLYPHENOLSDARK CHOCOLATEINSULIN SENSITIVITYRANDOMIZED-TRIALSDISEASEMETAANALYSISMETABOLISMCHOLESTEROLRisk FactorsSurveys and QuestionnairesHydroxybenzoatesProspective StudiesFood scienceCardiovascular risk; Dietary polyphenols; Flavonoids; Phenolic acids; Type 2 diabeteseducation.field_of_studyPhenolic acidNutrition and Dieteticsbiologyfood and beveragesType 2 diabetesDietary polyphenolMiddle AgedDietary polyphenols; Flavonoids; Phenolic acids; Cardiovascular risk; Type 2 diabetesEuropean Prospective Investigation into Cancer and NutritionDietary polyphenolsCardiovascular DiseasesFemalePhenolic acidsPopulationCardiovascular risk Dietary polyphenols Flavonoids Phenolic acids Type 2 diabetes03 medical and health sciencesDiabetes mellitusmedicineHumanseducationTriglyceridesAgedFlavonoids030109 nutrition & dieteticsDose-Response Relationship Drugbusiness.industryCholesterol HDLC-reactive proteinPolyphenolsCholesterol LDLAnthropometrymedicine.diseaseCardiovascular riskCardiovascular risk; Dietary polyphenols; Flavonoids; Phenolic acids; Type 2 diabetes; Nutrition and Dietetics; Critical Care and Intensive Care MedicineDietCross-Sectional StudiesNutrition AssessmentDiabetes Mellitus Type 2chemistryFlavonoidbiology.proteinGlycated hemoglobinbusinessBody mass index
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Effect on gut microbiota of a 1-y lifestyle intervention with Mediterranean diet compared with energy-reduced Mediterranean diet and physical activit…

2021

ABSTRACT Background The Mediterranean diet is a well-recognized healthy diet that has shown to induce positive changes in gut microbiota. Lifestyle changes such as diet along with physical activity could aid in weight loss and improve cardiovascular risk factors. Objectives To investigate the effect of an intensive lifestyle weight loss intervention on gut microbiota. Methods This is a substudy of the PREDIMED-Plus (Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea-Plus), a randomized controlled trial conducted in overweight/obese men and women (aged 55–75 y) with metabolic syndrome. The intervention group (IG) underwent an intensive weight loss lifestyle intervention based on an energy-restricted Mediterr…

Male0301 basic medicineWeight lossMediterranean dietNutritional Status Dietary Intake and Body CompositionMedicine (miscellaneous)PhysiologyOverweightGut floraDiet MediterraneanAcademicSubjects/MED00160Feceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineWeight lossRNA Ribosomal 16SMedicinePhylogenyMetabolic SyndromeNutrition and DieteticsbiologyMiddle AgedOriginal Research CommunicationsRNA BacterialFemalemedicine.symptomEnergy restriction030209 endocrinology & metabolismGut microbiotaAcademicSubjects/MED0006003 medical and health sciencesMediterranean dietHumansObesityExerciseLife StyleAgedCaloric RestrictionBacteriabusiness.industryLachnospiraceaemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationObesityGastrointestinal Microbiome030104 developmental biologychemistryGlycated hemoglobinMetabolic syndromeEnergy IntakebusinessThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
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The SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin improves the primary diabetic complications in ZDF rats

2017

Hyperglycemia associated with inflammation and oxidative stress is a major cause of vascular dysfunction and cardiovascular disease in diabetes. Recent data reports that a selective sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitor (SGLT2i), empagliflozin (Jardiance®), ameliorates glucotoxicity via excretion of excess glucose in urine (glucosuria) and significantly improves cardiovascular mortality in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The overarching hypothesis is that hyperglycemia and glucotoxicity are upstream of all other complications seen in diabetes. The aim of this study was to investigate effects of empagliflozin on glucotoxicity, β-cell function, inflammation, oxidative stress and endothel…

Male0301 basic medicineendocrine system diseasesDiabetic CardiomyopathiesFPS-ZM1 RAGE inhibitorClinical BiochemistryAorta ThoracicRAGE receptor for AGEICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecule-1ECL enhanced chemiluminescence030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyDPP-4 dipeptidyl peptidase-4medicine.disease_causeTNF-α tumor necrosis factor-αBiochemistryeNOS endothelial •NO synthase (type 3)0302 clinical medicineGlucosidesecSOD extracellular superoxide dismutaseInsulin-Secreting CellsCCL-2 see MCP-1HyperlipidemiaHyperinsulinemiaGTN glyceryl trinitrate (nitroglycerin)IFN-γ interferon-γDHE dihydroethidineEndothelial dysfunctionEndothelial dysfunctionIL-6 interleukin-6lcsh:QH301-705.5HO-1 heme oxygenase-1lcsh:R5-920ICAM-1NG normoglycemiaDiabetesNox catalytic subunit of NADPH oxidaseSGLT2 inhibitorβ-cell contentL-012 8-amino-5-chloro-7-phenylpyrido[34-d]pyridazine-14-(2H3H)dione sodium saltChIP chromatin immunoprecipitationC-Reactive ProteinCRP C-reactive proteinAGE advanced glycation end productsHbA1c glycohemoglobinlcsh:Medicine (General)Research PaperZucker diabetic fatty ratsmedicine.medical_specialtyDMSO dimethylsulfoxideMCP-1 monocyte-chemoattractant-protein-1qRT-PCR quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reactionZDF Zucker diabetic fatty (rat)Low-grade inflammation03 medical and health sciencesROS reactive oxygen speciesSodium-Glucose Transporter 2Physiology (medical)Internal medicineDiabetes mellitusPKC protein kinase CEmpagliflozinmedicineAnimalsHypoglycemic AgentsBenzhydryl CompoundsCOX2 cyclooxygenase-2SGLT2i SGLT2 inhibitorSodium-Glucose Transporter 2 InhibitorsGlycated HemoglobinACh acetylcholinebusiness.industryOrganic Chemistrynutritional and metabolic diseasesType 2 Diabetes Mellitusmedicine.diseaseH2K9me2 histone3 lysine9 dimethylationRatsRats ZuckerDHFR dihydrofolate reductaseSGLT2 sodium-glucose co-transporter-2Oxidative StresssGC soluable guanylyl cyclaseGlucose030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologylcsh:Biology (General)ALDH-2 mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenaseEndothelium VascularAGE/RAGE signalingHG hyperglycemiabusinessOxidative stressRedox Biology
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Influence of habitual dairy food intake on LDL cholesterol in a population-based cohort

2021

Background: Cholesterol has a pivotal role in human physiology, exerting both structural and functional activity. However, higher blood cholesterol levels, especially low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), are a major cardiovascular risk factor. Therefore, special attention has been given to the effect of dietary factors in influencing LDL-C blood levels. In particular, much research has focused on dairy products, since they are a main component of different dietary patterns worldwide. A large body of evidence did not support the hypothesis that dairy products significantly increase circulating LDL-C, but no definitive data are available. Hence, we aimed to assess the relationships am…

MaleAdultPopulationlcsh:TX341-641Blood PressureLongitudinal StudieBody fat percentageArticleBody Mass IndexLDLCohort StudiesDairychemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal scienceCheeseSurveys and QuestionnairesMedicineAnimalsHumansLongitudinal StudiesSettore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche ApplicateeducationSicilyeducation.field_of_study...Nutrition and Dieteticsbusiness.industryCholesterolWaist-Hip RatioAnimalFeeding BehaviorCholesterol LDLAnthropometryMiddle AgedRicottaBlood pressureCholesterolMilkchemistryCohortFemalelipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Glycated hemoglobinDairy ProductsbusinessBody mass indexlcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supplyFood Science
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Effects of resistance training frequency on cardiorespiratory fitness in older men and women during intervention and follow-up.

2017

This study investigated the effects of resistance training (RT) performed with different frequencies, including a follow-up period, on cardiorespiratory fitness in healthy older individuals. Eighty-eight men and women (69 ± 3 years, 167 ± 9 cm and 78 ± 14 kg) were randomly placed into four groups: training one- (M1 = 11, W1 = 12), two- (M2 = 7, W2 = 14), or three- (M3 = 11, W3 = 13) times-per-week or a non-training control group (MCon = 11, WCon = 9). During months 1–3, all subjects trained two-times-per-week while during the subsequent 6 months, training frequency was set according to the group. Oxygen consumption (cycling economy: CE), gross efficiency (GE), blood lactate concentrations (…

MaleAgingTime FactorsvanhuksetHematocritBiochemistryHemoglobins0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyAbsorptiometry PhotonHeart Ratestrength trainingBlood lactate030212 general & internal medicineta315Leg pressFinlandmedicine.diagnostic_testcardiovascularAge FactorsTreatment OutcomeCardiorespiratory FitnessHematocritCardiologyBody Compositionsubmaximal oxygen consumptionFemalevoimaharjoitteluikääntyneetmedicine.medical_specialtyStrength trainingelderly03 medical and health sciencesOxygen ConsumptionInternal medicineHeart rateGeneticsmedicineHumansLactic AcidMuscle StrengthMolecular BiologyGross efficiencyGeriatric AssessmentAgedbusiness.industryResistance trainingCardiorespiratory fitnessResistance Training030229 sport sciencesCell Biologyaerobinen harjoitteluaerobicPhysical therapyExercise TestbusinessBiomarkersExperimental gerontology
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Influence of sample return time and ambient temperature on the performance of an immunochemical faecal occult blood test with a new buffer for colore…

2016

IF 2.415; International audience; The haemoglobin concentration measured by faecal immunochemical tests (FIT) may be decreased in cases of delayed sample return or high temperature. It is an issue of great importance. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of sample return time and of season on the performance of an FIT (FOB-Gold) with a new buffer. The study included 20 371 participants involved in the French organized colorectal cancer (CRC) screening programme. The probability of a positive screening test, detection rates and positive predictive values for CRC and advanced adenoma were analysed according to sample return time and season of screening. A sample of positive FI…

MaleCancer ResearchMultivariate analysisTime FactorsEpidemiologyColorectal cancerMESH: Reagent Kits DiagnosticMESH : AgedMESH : HemoglobinsMESH : Early Detection of Cancer[ SDV.CAN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/CancerReturn timeScreening programmeImmunoenzyme TechniquesHemoglobinsMESH : Specimen HandlingMESH : FemaleMESH : Neoplasm StagingMESH : Reagent Kits DiagnosticMESH : TemperatureEarly Detection of CancerMESH: AgedMESH: Middle AgedMESH : PrognosisTemperatureMESH: Follow-Up StudiesMESH: Neoplasm StagingMiddle AgedPrognosisPredictive valueMESH: TemperatureMESH: HemoglobinsMESH : Occult BloodOncologyColorectal cancer screeningOccult BloodFemaleSeasonsMESH : Colorectal NeoplasmsColorectal NeoplasmsMESH : Time FactorsAdenomamedicine.medical_specialtySample (material)MESH : Male[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/CancerMESH: PrognosisSpecimen HandlingAnimal scienceMESH : Immunoenzyme TechniquesmedicineHumansMESH: Early Detection of CancerMESH : Middle AgedMESH: Specimen HandlingMESH: Immunoenzyme TechniquesAgedNeoplasm StagingMESH: AdenomaMESH: HumansMESH : Seasonsbusiness.industryMESH: Time FactorsMESH : HumansPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthMESH : Follow-Up Studiesmedicine.diseaseMESH: MaleSurgeryMESH : AdenomaReagent Kits DiagnosticFaecal occult blood testbusinessMESH: Occult BloodMESH: FemaleMESH: SeasonsMESH: Colorectal NeoplasmsFollow-Up Studies
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Enhanced radiosensitivity in experimental tumours following erythropoietin treatment of chemotherapy-induced anaemia.

1998

The radiosensitivity of solid tumours in anaemic rats treated with recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO, epoetin beta) was studied. Anaemia was induced by a single dose of carboplatin (45 mg kg(-1) i.v.), resulting in a reduction in the haemoglobin concentration by 30%. In a second group, the development of anaemia was prevented by rhEPO (1000 IU kg(-1)) administered s.c. three times per week starting 6 days before the carboplatin application. Three days after carboplatin treatment, DS-sarcomas were implanted subcutaneously onto the hind foot dorsum. Neither carboplatin nor rhEPO treatment influenced tumour growth rate. Five days after implantation, tumours were irradiated with a single …

MaleCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyAnemiamedicine.medical_treatmentUrologyAntineoplastic AgentsRadiation ToleranceCarboplatinRats Sprague-Dawleychemistry.chemical_compoundHemoglobinsInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansRadiosensitivityErythropoietinEpoetin betaChemotherapybusiness.industryAnemiamedicine.diseaseCarboplatinRecombinant ProteinsRatsRadiation therapyEndocrinologyOncologychemistryErythropoietinToxicitySarcoma ExperimentalbusinessNeoplasm Transplantationmedicine.drugResearch ArticleBritish journal of cancer
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Liraglutide improves carotid intima-media thickness in patients with type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: An 8-month prospective pi…

2015

Objective: To explore the effects of the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor analogue liraglutide on subclinical atherosclerosis in diabetic subjects with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).Research design and methods: In this 8-month prospective study, 29 subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and NAFLD (16 men and 13 women, mean age: 61 ± 10 years) were matched for age and gender with 29 subjects with T2DM without NAFLD (16 men and 13 women, mean age: 61 ± 8 years). Liraglutide 0.6 mg/day for 2 weeks, followed by 1.2 mg/day, was given in addition to metformin.Main outcome measures: Anthropometric variables, glucometabolic parameters and carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) using B-mode …

MaleClinical BiochemistryPilot ProjectsType 2 diabetesCarotid Intima-Media ThicknessGastroenterologychemistry.chemical_compoundRisk FactorsDrug DiscoveryProspective StudiesProspective cohort studyliraglutideMedicine (all)Fatty liverLipidMiddle AgedLipidsHemoglobin AAtherosclerosiFemalemedicine.drugHumanmedicine.medical_specialtycarotid intima-media thickneInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusmedicineHumansHypoglycemic AgentsPilot ProjectAgedGlycated HemoglobinHemoglobin A GlycosylatedPharmacologytype 2 diabeteHypoglycemic AgentLiraglutidebusiness.industryRisk FactorDrug Discovery3003 Pharmaceutical Sciencenutritional and metabolic diseasesnon-alcoholic fatty liver diseaseAtherosclerosismedicine.diseaseProspective StudieEndocrinologychemistryIntima-media thicknessDiabetes Mellitus Type 2Glycated hemoglobinbusiness
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