In order to elucidate the distribution of elements in organs from healthy Japanese, instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA), based on the preliminary examination, was applied to quantitative determination of multielements in nine organs autopsied (brain, heart, kidney, liver, lung, muscle, pancreas, spleen, and thyroid). The following results were obtained: (1) The values obtained for each element could be considered to be representative as "normal values" and "ranges" in organs from healthy Japanese males; (2) the essential elements Br, Cl, Co, Cu, Fe, K, Mn, Na, Rb, Se, and Zn were not affected by external environmental factors or by racial difference; (3) renal and hepatic Cd levels were very high in several cases and the accumulation has still been in progress in the Japanese, whereas the contaminant elements are low in each organ except for lung.
Parathyroid hormone (PTH: synthetic bovine, amino terminus 1-34 amino acids) demonstrates a positive inotropic action on the isolated papillary muscle of the rat heart. The effect was evident at PTH concentration of 10(-12)M, and the maximum inotropic effect occurred with PTH concentrations greater than 10(-11)M. Biologically inactive PTH (PTH treated with H2O2) was without effect. The inotropic effect of PTH was partially blocked by propranolol and also suppressed in the papillary muscle of the rat pretreated with reserpine. Methoxyverapamil completely blocked the inotropic action of PTH. PTH was without effects on adenylate cyclase activity of the myocardium. Results show the presence of an inotropic action of PTH in vitro and suggest that this action of PTH is partially mediated by releasing the endogenous myocardial norepinephrine which exerts a positive inotropic effect via beta-adrenergic stimulation and by an increase in Ca++ influx across plasma membranes, but independent of adenylate cyclase activation. The inotropic action of PTH may be of significance in normal cardiac function.
In the present study, an attempt was made to clarify whether ANP molecular forms in the plasma of severe congestive heart failure patients differ from those in healthy persons and whether ANP molecular forms in the plasma of the patients were changed by successful treatment of cardiac disease. Twenty patients with congestive heart failure were treated at Kitasato University Hospital. They were classified as class III or IV by New York Heart Association criteria at the time of admission. Plasma ANP concentrations decreased after treatment from 356 +/- 58.2 to 72.3 +/- 14.8 pg/ml. The gel permeation chromatograms from the plasma of healthy persons showed low, or low and high molecular weight ANP peaks which correspond to the elution positions of authentic alpha-ANP or ribonuclease A (mol. wt., 13.7 kdalton). In patients with severe congestive heart failure at a severe stage, middle molecular weight ANP consisted with the elution position of authentic beta-ANP was particularly noted in addition of low and high molecular weight ANP peaks. This middle molecular weight peak disappears in most of cases by successful treatment. Molecular forms in the plasma obtained from the coronary sinus and the inferior or superior vena cava were essentially the same. These results indicate that the middle molecular weight ANP supposed as beta-ANP may particularly be secreted in severe congestive heart failure patients.
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