Iron deficiency is a known complication of achlorhydria and may precede the development of pernicious anemia. Among 160 patients with autoimmune gastritis identified by hypergastrinemia and strongly positive antiparietal antibodies, we explored the overlap between 83 subjects presenting with iron deficiency anemia (IDA), 48 with normocytic indices, and 29 with macrocytic anemia. Compared with macrocytic patients, patients with IDA were 21 years younger (41 +/- 15 years versus 62 +/- 15 years) and mostly women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objectives: Conventional endoscopic and radiographic methods fail to identify a probable source of gastrointestinal blood loss in about one third of males and post-menopausal females and in most women of reproductive age with iron deficiency anemia (IDA). Such patients, as well as subjects refractory to oral iron treatment, are often referred for hematologic evaluation.
Design And Methods: Patient clinic, screened for non-bleeding gastrointestinal conditions including celiac disease (antiendomysial antibodies), autoimmune atrophic gastritis (hypergastrinemia with strongly positive antiparietal cell antibodies) and H.
The ligand-filled 32-kDa fragment of the porcine estradiol receptor extending from His267 to the C-terminal Ile595 was purified to homogeneity by adsorption to mAb 13H2. The native protein was exposed at 4 degrees C to a panel of proteases: thermolysin, subtilisin, pronase, elastase, ficin, bromelain, endopeptidase Lys-C, both in the dimer and the monomer state, and chymotrypsin at pH 8.2 only.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolar metabolites extracted from the effluents of viable porcine uterine strips superfused with either 6,7-3H-estrone or 6,7-3H-estradiol were identified as a 1:1 mixture of 6 alpha-hydroxyestrone and 7 alpha-hydroxyestrone by paper chromatography in various systems, derivatization and crystallizations to a constant specific activity. The hydroxylated compounds are the only derivatives detected after estrone superfusion. The major metabolite of estradiol released in short-time experiments is estrone followed by its 6 alpha- and 7 alpha-hydroxylated derivatives.
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