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Chapter 23: Choline, a precursor of acetylcholine and phospholipids in the brain

1993

Publisher Summary The plasma level of free choline is remarkably constant at about 10 pM in animals and human. Ingestion of food, especially when rich in choline or lecithin, transiently elevates the plasma choline level up to 20 pM or more. In contrast, choline-deficient diet leads to a reduction of the plasma level by about 50%. Choline is considered an essential nutrient, which is predominantly supplied as phosphatidylcholine (lecithin). For a long time, neuroscientists have been intrigued by the fact that choline is a precursor for the biosynthesis of both acetylcholine (ACh) and phospholipids. For 50 years, lecithin has been marketed in Europe as a drug that was claimed to prevent exha…

medicine.medical_specialtyfood.ingredientMembrane lipidsPhospholipidLecithinchemistry.chemical_compoundfoodEndocrinologychemistryPhosphatidylcholineInternal medicinemedicineCholinergicCholineHomeostasisAcetylcholinemedicine.drug
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Fructose diet induced short-term impairment of cone sensitivity and gene expression in rat retina

2012

National audience; Abstract: Purpose A high fructose diet has been widely used to trigger insulin resistance in rodent; insulin resistance is one of the major risk factor for the development of type 2 diabetes. Thirty to 40% of diabetic patients develop diabetic retinopathy. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the short-term effect, at 1, 3, 5, 8 days, of a 60% fructose diet, on photoreceptor sensitivity and gene expression in the retina of Brown Norway rats. Methods: Flicker electroretinograms (8Hz) were recorded under anesthesia, from both eyes simultaneously in order to study sensitivity of photoreceptors. Then, rats were euthanized and enucleated. Retinae and posterior poles were collec…

medicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresInflammationType 2 diabetesBiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineInsulin resistanceInternal medicineGene expressionmedicine[SDV.MHEP.OS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Sensory OrgansRetinaRetinalGeneral MedicineDiabetic retinopathymedicine.diseaseOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologychemistry030221 ophthalmology & optometrysense organsmedicine.symptom030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHomeostasis[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology
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The association between quality of care and technical efficiency in long-term care

2005

To analyse the association between quality of care and technical (productive) efficiency in institutional long-term care wards for the elderly.One hundred and fourteen public health centre hospitals and residential homes in Finland.Wards were divided into two categories according to their rank in the quality distribution, considering 41 quality variables separately. The technical efficiency scores of the good- and poor-quality groups were compared using cross-sectional data.Data envelopment analysis was used for calculating technical efficiency. The Mann-Whitney test and correlation coefficients were used to explore the association between quality and efficiency.The wards where quality indi…

medicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectEfficiency OrganizationalRisk FactorsSurveys and QuestionnairesData envelopment analysismedicineHomes for the AgedHumansPerformance measurementQuality (business)Association (psychology)Diagnosis-Related GroupsFinlandAgedQuality Indicators Health Caremedia_commonHospitals Publicbusiness.industryHealth PolicyPublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHealth Care CostsGeneral MedicineLong-Term CareTest (assessment)Long-term careCross-Sectional StudiesFamily medicineMann–Whitney U testbusinessHospital UnitsInternational Journal for Quality in Health Care
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The consumption of a bread enriched with dietary fibre and l-carnitine improves glucose homoeostasis and insulin sensitivity in patients with metabol…

2015

The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a bakery product enriched with dietary fibre and L-carnitine in countering glucose homoeostasis and insulin sensitivity in patients with and without MetS. This was a 12-week, double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial employing fifty-four subjects (28 with MetS and 26 without MetS). After one month (run-in period), subjects were divided into two intervention groups: one received dietary fibre (5.59 g of soluble fibre and 9.49 g of insoluble fibre) plus 2325 mg of L-carnitine enriched bread (n = 26) and the other received placebo bread (n = 28). Anthropometric measurements, biochemical parameters inflammatory markers and LDL subfra…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryInsulinmedicine.medical_treatmentCaloric restrictionMetabolismmedicine.diseasePlaceboMetabolic syndromeBiochemistryFibreInsulin resistanceEndocrinologyInternal medicineL-carnitinemedicineCarnitineMetabolic syndromeLipid profilebusinessHomeostasisFood Sciencemedicine.drugJournal of Cereal Science
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Constitutive androstane receptor activation stimulates faecal bile acid excretion and reverse cholesterol transport in mice.

2010

The constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) is a nuclear receptor expressed in the liver and involved in xenobiotic metabolism. The aim of this study was to assess whether pharmacological CAR activation could affect neutral sterol and bile acid elimination under conditions of cholesterol overload.Wild type, Car-/-, ApoE-/-, and low-density lipoprotein receptor (Ldlr)-/- mice fed a western-type diet were treated with the CAR agonist TCPOBOP.CAR activation was associated with a decrease in faecal cholesterol output related to the repression of the Abcg5/g8 cholesterol transporters. In contrast, TCPOBOP treatment induced a marked increase (up to three fold, p0.01) in the elimination of faecal b…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classPyridinesLipoproteinsBiological Transport ActiveGene ExpressionReceptors Cytoplasmic and NuclearHyperlipidemiasBiologyCholesterol 7 alpha-hydroxylaseBile Acids and Saltschemistry.chemical_compoundFecesMiceApolipoproteins EInternal medicineConstitutive androstane receptormedicineAnimalsHomeostasisATP Binding Cassette Transporter Subfamily G Member 5Liver X receptorConstitutive Androstane ReceptorMice KnockoutHepatologyBile acidCholesterolReverse cholesterol transportATP Binding Cassette Transporter Subfamily G Member 8Cholesterol HDLAtherosclerosisSterolMice Inbred C57BLEndocrinologyCholesterolchemistryLiverReceptors LDLLDL receptorlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)ATP-Binding Cassette TransportersJournal of hepatology
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Hyperinsulinemia, hyperproinsulinemia and insulin resistance in the metabolic syndrome.

1996

For better comprehension of the metabolic syndrome, it is necessary to differentiate the effect of insulin on glucose metabolism on the one hand, and on other metabolic activities on the other hand. Whereas glucose utilization is affected by insulin resistance, the effect of insulin on lipid metabolism, ion and aminoacid transport does not seem to be diminished. Lipid metabolism, however, seems to play a crucial role in the induction of the vicious cycle. Increased energy and fat ingestion may be due to an increased number of galanin secreting cells in the hypothalamus. The excessive fat intake results in an increased rate of release of insulin and increased influx of triglycerides into the…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentCarbohydrate metabolismFatty Acids NonesterifiedHyperproinsulinemiaModels BiologicalCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceInsulin resistanceInternal medicineHyperinsulinismmedicineHyperinsulinemiaAnimalsHomeostasisHumansInsulinMolecular BiologyTriglyceridesPharmacologyChemistryInsulinCell BiologySyndromemedicine.diseaseEndocrinologyAminoacid transportMolecular MedicineMetabolic syndromeInsulin ResistanceHyperinsulinismProinsulinExperientia
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Gray Matter Changes in Adolescents Participating in a Meditation Training

2020

Meditation has shown to benefit a wide range of conditions and symptoms, but the neural mechanisms underlying the practice remain unclear. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have investigated the structural brain changes due to the practice by examining volume, density, or cortical thickness changes. However, these studies have focused on adults; meditation’s structural effects on the adolescent brain remain understudied. In this study, we investigated how meditation training affects the structure of the adolescent brain by scanning a group of 38 adolescents (16.48 ± 1.29 years) before and after participating in a 12-week meditation training. Subjects underwent Training for Awareness,…

medicine.medical_specialtymeditationmedia_common.quotation_subjectAudiologyLeft posteriorGrey mattercomputer.software_genre050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Left thalamus03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineVoxelvoxel-based morphometryMedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMeditationlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiological PsychiatryOriginal Researchmedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industry05 social sciencesHuman NeuroscienceMagnetic resonance imaginggray matterVoxel-based morphometryadolescent brainPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologybusinessInsulacomputer030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMRIFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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The histone acetyltransferase MOF activates hypothalamic polysialylation to prevent diet-induced obesity in mice

2014

Overfeeding causes rapid synaptic remodeling in hypothalamus feeding circuits. Polysialylation of cell surface molecules is a key step in this neuronal rewiring and allows normalization of food intake. Here we examined the role of hypothalamic polysialylation in the long-term maintenance of body weight, and deciphered the molecular sequence underlying its nutritional regulation. We found that upon high fat diet (HFD), reduced hypothalamic polysialylation exacerbated the diet-induced obese phenotype in mice. Upon HFD, the histone acetyltransferase MOF was rapidly recruited on the St8sia4 polysialyltransferase-encoding gene. Mof silencing in the mediobasal hypothalamus of adult mice prevented…

medicine.medical_specialtyobesityfood intake[ SDV.BA ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineBiologie animalemedicineGene silencinghypothalamusMolecular BiologyGene030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerAnimal biology0303 health sciencessynaptic plasticitybiology[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologypolysialylationNeurosciencesCell BiologyHistone acetyltransferasePhenotypeChromatinEndocrinologyHypothalamus[ SDV.NEU ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]Neurons and CognitionSynaptic plasticitybiology.proteinchromatinOriginal Articlehypothalamus;polysialylation;synaptic plasticity;obesity;food intake;chromatin[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHomeostasis
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Immune-Inflammatory Responses and Oxidative Stress in Alzheimers Disease: Therapeutic Implications

2010

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a heterogeneous and progressive neurodegenerative disease which in Western society mainly accounts for clinical dementia. AD has been linked to inflammation and oxidative stress. Neuro-pathological hallmarks are senile plaques, resulting from the accumulation of several proteins and an inflammatory reaction around deposits of amyloid, a fibrillar protein, Abeta, product of cleavage of a much larger protein, the beta-amyloid precursor protein (APP) and neurofibrillary tangles. Inflammation clearly occurs in pathologically vulnerable regions of AD and several inflammatory factors influencing AD development, i.e. environmental factors (pro-inflammatory phenotype) an…

medicine.medical_treatmentCellular homeostasisInflammationmedicine.disease_causeImmune systemAlzheimer DiseaseDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansSettore MED/05 - Patologia ClinicaSenile plaquesInflammationSettore MED/04 - Patologia GeneralePharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesbusiness.industrymedicine.diseaseOxidative StressCytokinechemistryImmunologyInflammation MediatorsAlzheimer's disease curcuminIL-6 inflammation oxidative stressAlzheimer's diseasemedicine.symptombusinessOxidative stressCurrent Pharmaceutical Design
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Concept of an extracellular regulation of muscular metabolic rate during heavy exercise in humans by psychophysiological feedback.

1996

Efferent motor signals to skeletal muscles concern not only the space/ time pattern of motion, but also the setting of muscular performance and through this the control of the current metabolic rate. For an optimal adjustment of metabolic rate during heavy exercise-e.g. in athletic competitions-a feedback control system must exist, including a programmer that takes into consideration a finishing point (teleoanticipation). The presented experiments, using Borg's scale, indicate the existence and functioning of a system for optimal adjustment of performance during heavy exercise and the relevance of teleoanticipatory effects. Thus motor learning includes not only somatosensory control, but al…

medicine.medical_treatmentEfferentPhysical ExertionModels PsychologicalSomatosensory systemBiofeedbackModels BiologicalRunningCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceStress PhysiologicalmedicineHomeostasisHumansMuscle SkeletalMolecular BiologySwimmingPharmacologyMotor controlBiofeedback PsychologyCell BiologyTime perceptionMetabolic control analysisTime PerceptionExercise TestMolecular MedicineRegression AnalysisMotor learningPsychologyNeuroscienceCentral governorExperientia
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