Chlamydia-positive genitourinary infections are common causes of male and female infertility. Semen abnormalities are often associated with Chlamydia infections. A large population of male patients, admitted to our clinic for genitourinary infection, were examined for genitourinary pathogens, including Chlamydia, and for semen abnormalities. There were higher abnormalities semen in Chlamydiainfected patients than either non-Chlamydia-infected or healthy controls. Chlamydia therapy by antimicrobial agents improved semen characteristics. Chlamydia infection contributes to seminal fluid abnormalities and probably to male infertility. A search for chlamydial infection is warranted whenever semen abnormalities are noted. An antimicrobial therapy improves semen quality when effective in eradicating Chlamydia.
The incorporation of labeled glycerol into glycerolipid of rat brain was influenced by the age of the animal (2-month-old vs. newborn); indeed, 12 min after the administration, diglyceride was the most heavily labeled glycerolipid in the newborn brain, whereas the labeling of glycerophospholipid was highest in the adult. Various amounts of ethanol (0% to 36% of total energy intake) were administered to pregnant female rats, and the brains of their pups were examined for the ability to incorporate labeled glycerol into glycerolipid. The radioactivity incorporated into lipid diminished with increasing the amounts of alcohol consumed. The labeling pattern of lipid classes was also influenced; indeed, the radioactivity of diglyceride decreased markedly, whereas that of triglyceride and glycerophospholipid was affected to a lower degree. The distribution of radioactivity among different phospholipids also varied with age; on a percent basis, phosphatidylcholine was labeled less and phosphatidylinositol was labeled more in the newborn than in the adult. Ethanol influenced the pattern of glycerophospholipid labeling, increasing the radioactivity of phosphatidylserine and decreasing that of phosphatidylinositol.
Growth alters the ability of rat brain to incorporate [2-3H]glycerol into glycerides; indeed, 12 min after the intracranial administration of the precursor, diglyceride becomes more radioactive in newborn than in 19-day-old brain, the reverse being true for total glycerophospholipid and triglyceride. The ratio between the labeling of phospholipid and that of neutral lipid in the experimental conditions described in this paper is proposed as a marker of brain maturity. The distribution of labeling among phospholipid classes also varies with age, and the increase of labeling in total phospholipid occurring with increasing age is almost entirely due to phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine. The metabolism of myelin lipids might be responsible for these age-dependent variations. The administration of ethanol to dams during pregnancy and lactation alters the distribution of the label among neutral glycerolipid and total glycerophospholipid in an age-dependent manner. The labeling distribution among phospholipid classes is also affected.
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