Objectives: To develop the methods for assessment of food and nutrient intake using standardized food frequency questionnaires (FFQ) in three African origin populations from Cameroon, Jamaica and Caribbean migrants to the United Kingdom.
Design: Cross-sectional assessment of diet from a representative sample in each site, using either a 2-day food diary or a 24-h recall method to determine foods for inclusion on the food frequency questionnaire.
Setting: A rural and urban site in Cameroon, Evodoula and Cite Verte in Yaounde, respectively; a district in Kingston Jamaica; African-Caribbeans living in central Manchester, UK.
In order to test the hypothesis that negative feedback signals from abdominal receptors are integrated in an additive manner in the control of voluntary food intake, cows with rumen fistulas were given intraruminal infusions of sodium acetate or sodium propionate, or both, with or without distension of the rumen by balloon. Intakes were monitored during the 3 h experimental period and for 2 h after and samples of rumen fluid were taken for estimation of short-chain fatty acid concentrations and osmolality. Six cows in mid-lactation were fed on hay and concentrates and given, into the rumen, 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRumen-fistulated lactating cows were individually fed on hay or silage and intakes were monitored during 3 h treatment periods and for 2 h after. Each experiment used five, six or seven animals and the treatments were applied in a Latin Square design. Sodium acetate infusions of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLarge prolactin-secreting pituitary adenomas with suprasellar extension are often complicated by visual field defects, for which surgical decompression is the accepted treatment. However, surgical management of large prolactinomas is often not curative. This report describes a group of six unselected male patients who presented with visual field defects and reduced visual acuity due to large pituitary tumours with suprasellar extension.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLactating dairy cows prepared with rumen fistulas were fed on grass silage and concentrates and used in two experiments to compare the effects of sodium acetate and sodium chloride infused over 3 h into the rumen on the voluntary intake of silage. Silage intake was depressed in an approximately linear manner by increasing amounts (6-15 mol) of sodium acetate (NaOAc) and 15 mol NaCl had an effect similar to that of 12 mol NaOAc. Sodium in rumen fluid was significantly correlated with intake as was osmolality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreased sodium-lithium countertransport in erythrocytes is found in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and nephropathy. To determine whether such an increase precedes the onset of nephropathy and, if so, whether it is associated with changes in renal function, we measured erythrocyte sodium-lithium countertransport in 52 patients with IDDM but not nephropathy or hypertension and in 32 control subjects. Seventeen of the 52 patients with IDDM (33 percent) had sodium-lithium countertransport activity that exceeded the maximal activity in the control subjects (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperinsulinaemia and sodium retention have been studied in 22 Type 2 diabetic patients (10 normotensive, 12 hypertensive) and 10 normal control subjects matched for age, sex, and body mass index. Exchangeable sodium was similar in the three groups. Plasma renin activity and plasma angiotensin II were lower in both groups of diabetic patients than in the normal control subjects (p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErythrocyte sodium, potassium and water contents and sodium fluxes were measured in both normotensive and hypertensive patients with either insulin dependent or non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. Hypertensive patients were studied again after two months' treatment with captopril. There were no differences in erythrocyte ion contents or concentrations but sodium fluxes may have been lower in insulin dependent patients and in hypertensive patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo investigate the hypothesis that insulin resistance is concerned in the pathogenesis of essential hypertension fasting glucose/insulin and fasting insulin/C-peptide ratios were measured in non-obese normotensive and hypertensive diabetic and non-diabetic subjects. Patients with essential hypertension had normal fasting serum insulin values and normal fasting glucose/insulin ratios; by contrast, the hypertensive non-insulin-dependent diabetic subjects had higher fasting serum insulin and lower glucose/insulin ratios than either normotensive diabetic or non-diabetic patients. Both hypertensive and normotensive diabetic subjects had higher fasting C-peptide values than those without diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo groups of rats were fed diets in which the carbohydrate components was either starch or sucrose. A third group was fed on a stock diet. Half of the animals in each group were made diabetic by injection of either streptozotocin, in two of the groups, or alloxan, in the third group.
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