In older patients with rheumatoid arthritis, misoprostol reduced serious NSAID-induced upper gastrointestinal complications by 40% compared with placebo.
Raw and heated soy flour and casein diets were compared in rats, pigs, and monkeys with respect to growth, pancreatic changes, fecal trypsin, and nitrogen digestibility. Cholecystokinin injection was compared to feeding raw soy flour and casein in rats and casein in pigs. Several soy protein preparations were fed to rats and monkeys. Neither raw soy flour nor any other soy product produced pancreatic enlargement in pigs or monkeys. Casein and heated soy flour performed similarly. By comparison, other effects of raw soy flour were as follows. Growth was depressed 60% in rats and 84% in pigs, but not at all in monkeys. Nitrogen digestibility was depressed 5, 45, and 9% in rats, pigs, and monkeys, respectively. Pancreatic DNA, RNA, and protein levels were unchanged in monkeys fed raw soy flour. In rats, RNA per milligram pancreas was increased 40%, in pigs 20%. Pancreatic protein was decreased 7% in pigs and increased 47% in rats. Changes in pancreatic trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase, and amylase were dissimilar in the three species. Fecal trypsin was elevated 300-400% in rats, and decreased approximately 50% in pigs and monkeys. Cholecystokinin injections in pigs and rats produced changes both quantitatively and qualitatively different from those seen with raw soy flour. Feeding of heated soy flour or soy protein isolates was comparable to feeding casein in all three species, and produced no deleterious effects.
Rats were fed either a control soybean protein diet or a diet containing 3,000 ppm soybean protein-bound lysinoalanine (LAL) for 4 or 6 weeks, at which time all rats were dosed by stomach tube with 14C-LAL labeled in the lysine moiety. Urinary and fecal excretion and tissue distribution were followed in one experiment at 6, 12, 18, 24, 48 and 72 hours. Excretion in urine, feces and expired air was followed in the other metabolic experiment at 2-hour intervals for 48 hours, and at 24-hour intervals for the next 7 days. Tissue samples were counted and LAL determination was made by amino acid analysis in both experiments. The group of rats fed LAL excreted slightly more LAL than the group fed the control diet. Very little LAL remained in the rat tissues after either experiment, and the largest remaining quantity of radioactivity was found as lysine. Quantitation of 14C-lysine in the original material and in the material from rat organs showed that the rat has some capacity for converting LAL to lysine. Less than 0.5% of the original 14C remained in any organ examined 9 days after dosing in the either control or LAL-fed rats. Autoradiographs of the kidneys 24 hours after dosing showed that the radioactive material had accumulated in the proximal convoluted tubules of the corticomedullary junction.
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