4 results on '"Preston, T."'
Search Results
2. Effects of acute glucocorticoid blockade on metabolic dysfunction in patients with Type 2 diabetes with and without fatty liver.
- Author
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Macfarlane DP, Raubenheimer PJ, Preston T, Gray CD, Bastin ME, Marshall I, Iredale JP, Andrew R, and Walker BR
- Subjects
- Blood Glucose drug effects, Blood Glucose metabolism, Cross-Over Studies, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 blood, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 diagnosis, Double-Blind Method, Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified blood, Glycerol blood, Humans, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Indicator Dilution Techniques, Insulin blood, Liver metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Metyrapone therapeutic use, Middle Aged, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease blood, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease diagnosis, Receptors, Glucocorticoid metabolism, Scotland, Steroid 11-beta-Hydroxylase antagonists & inhibitors, Steroid 11-beta-Hydroxylase metabolism, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 drug therapy, Energy Metabolism drug effects, Hormone Antagonists therapeutic use, Liver drug effects, Mifepristone therapeutic use, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease drug therapy, Receptors, Glucocorticoid antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
To investigate the potential of therapies which reduce glucocorticoid action in patients with Type 2 diabetes we performed a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study of acute glucocorticoid blockade, using the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist RU38486 (mifepristone) and cortisol biosynthesis inhibitor (metyrapone), in 14 men with Type 2 diabetes. Stable isotope dilution methodologies were used to measure the rates of appearance of glucose, glycerol, and free fatty acids (FFAs), including during a low-dose (10 mU·m⁻² ·min⁻¹) hyperinsulinemic clamp, and subgroup analysis was conducted in patients with high or low liver fat content measured by magnetic resonance spectroscopy (n = 7/group). Glucocorticoid blockade lowered fasting glucose and insulin levels and improved insulin sensitivity of FFA and glycerol turnover and hepatic glucose production. Among this population with Type 2 diabetes high liver fat was associated with hyperinsulinemia, higher fasting glucose levels, peripheral and hepatic insulin resistance, and impaired suppression of FFA oxidation and FFA and glycerol turnover during hyperinsulinemia. Glucocorticoid blockade had similar effects in those with and without high liver fat. Longer term treatments targeting glucocorticoid action may be useful in Type 2 diabetes with and without fatty liver., (Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Discrimination of wild and cultured european sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) using chemical and isotopic analyses.
- Author
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Bell JG, Preston T, Henderson RJ, Strachan F, Bron JE, Cooper K, and Morrison DJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Carbon Isotopes analysis, England, Greece, Nitrogen Isotopes analysis, Oxygen Isotopes analysis, Scotland, Aquaculture, Bass classification, Fatty Acids analysis, Isotopes analysis
- Abstract
Recent legislation in the European Union (EC/2065/2001) requires that seafood must provide the consumer with information that describes geographical origin and production method. The present studies aimed to establish methods, based on chemical and stable isotopic analysis, that could reliably differentiate between wild and farmed European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax). The study measured fatty acid and isotopic compositions (delta13C and delta18O) of total flesh oil, delta15N of the glycerol/choline fraction, and compound-specific analysis of fatty acids (delta13C) by isotope ratio mass spectrometry. The sample set comprised 10 wild and 10 farmed sea bass from England (wild) and Scotland or Greece (farmed). Discrimination was achieved using fatty acid composition with 18:0, 18:2n-6, 20:4n-6, and 22:6n-3 providing the highest contributions for discrimination. Principal component analysis of the data set provided good discrimination between farmed and wild sea bass where factor 1 and factor 2 accounted for 60% of the variation in the data.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Body concentration of caesium-137 in patients from Western Isles of Scotland.
- Author
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Isles CG, Robertson I, Macleod JA, Preston T, East BW, Hole DJ, and Lever AF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Animals, Cesium Radioisotopes urine, Diet, Female, Fishes, Hebrides, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Milk chemistry, Poaceae analysis, Radioactive Waste, Scotland, Sheep, Whole-Body Counting, Cesium Radioisotopes analysis
- Abstract
Objectives: To compare caesium-137 concentrations in patients from the Western Isles Health Board, Glasgow area, and other parts of the Scottish mainland, and to investigate the source of 137Cs in patients from the Western Isles., Design: Study of hypertensive patients having electrolyte concentrations measured, including 137Cs. Interview by questionnaire of island subjects about intake of foods likely to contain radiocaesium and the source of these foods. Measurement of 137Cs and 134Cs in food, urine, and vegetation., Setting: Scottish mainland and Western Isles, 1979-86. All measurements before Chernobyl nuclear accident., Patients: 413 consecutive patients referred to the blood pressure unit for investigation of hypertension. 60 from the Western Isles, including 44 from North Uist; 32 from North Uist participated in the dietary analysis., Main Outcome Measures: Concentration of radiocaesium in the body, urine, food, and vegetation. Islanders' consumption of local produce., Results: Patients from the Western Isles had five times higher body concentrations of 137Cs (median 2.54 (interquartile range 1.25-3.73)) Bq/gK) than did patients from around Glasgow (0.47 (0.26-0.66) Bq/gK) and other parts of the Scottish mainland (0.42 (0.24-0.71) Bq/gK). Islanders often consumed local milk and mutton, but ate local fish rarely. 137Cs and 134Cs were present in coastal (21.6 Bq/kg 137Cs, 0.25 Bq/kg 134Cs) and moorland (135.9, 0.65 Bq/kg) grasses and in islanders' urine (2.01, 0.013 Bq/l). Lower concentrations (0.336, 0.004 Bq/l), were found in the urine of Glasgow controls (p less than 0.001 for both isotopes)., Conclusions: Islanders have excess body 137Cs concentrations, most of which probably comes from local milk and lamb. The radioactivity is not above the recommended safety limit. The presence of 134Cs suggests that nuclear reprocessing is the source of some of the radiocaesium.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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