Publications by authors named "Shiel N"

Secular trends toward a declining age at puberty onset with correlated changes in body weight have been reported in economically advanced countries. This has been attributed to excess calorie intake along with reduced physical activity in children. However, because the timing of puberty in humans is also influenced by other factors, such as genetic traits, living conditions, geographical location, and environmental chemicals, it is difficult to distinguish the effect of diet and body size from other factors in a human population.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Biochemical assessments of micronutrient antioxidant status were done in 14 consecutive black patients with calcific chronic pancreatitis and 15 controls at Soweto, near Johannesburg in southern Africa. The patients showed subnormal levels of vitamin C in plasma; selenium, beta-carotene and alpha-tocopherol in serum; and inorganic sulphate (as an index of long-term sulphur amino acid intake) in urine (P < 0.001 for each): furthermore, among the patients ascorbate constituted a lower fraction of vitamin C (P < 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pancreatic oxidative stress with depletion of pancreatic glutathione is an early feature in all tested models of acute pancreatitis, and sooner or later the problem extends to the lung, irrespective of disease severity, whether toward spontaneous recovery or death from multisystem organ failure. We, therefore, sought evidence of oxidative stress in the human disease by analyzing admission blood samples. We found it from high concentrations of oxidatively altered linoleic acid in serum and vitamin C in plasma (p < 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Four indices of free radical activity were measured in fasting serum/plasma samples from 14 consecutive blacks with clinically quiescent chronic pancreatitis and 15 outwardly healthy hospital personnel at Soweto, the township near Johannesburg in South Africa. The patients had higher serum levels than did controls of lipid isomerisation (P < 0.002) and peroxidation (P < 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vitamin C is a key antioxidant in human blood plasma and hence could influence the outcome of conditions such as acute pancreatitis in which oxidative stress apparently plays a pivotal role. The concentrations of vitamin C and its immediately bioavailable form, ascorbic acid, in fasting plasma samples from 30 healthy volunteers were compared with those in admission samples from 29 consecutive patients with acute pancreatitis and 27 patients with other acute abdominal crises. Median (range) levels of vitamin C and ascorbic acid, respectively, were 15 (6.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF