salicylates and Hyperbilirubinemia--Hereditary

salicylates has been researched along with Hyperbilirubinemia--Hereditary* in 6 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for salicylates and Hyperbilirubinemia--Hereditary

ArticleYear
Drugs and bilirubin.
    Pediatrics, 1971, Volume: 47, Issue:5

    Topics: Adult; Animals; Aspirin; Bile Acids and Salts; Bilirubin; Biological Transport; Biotransformation; Endoplasmic Reticulum; Enzyme Induction; Humans; Hyperbilirubinemia, Hereditary; Infant, Newborn; Jaundice, Neonatal; Liver; Phenobarbital; Protein Binding; Rats; Salicylates; Transferases

1971

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for salicylates and Hyperbilirubinemia--Hereditary

ArticleYear
Removing substances from blood by affinity chromatography. I. Removing bilirubin and other albumin-bound substances from plasma and blood with albumin-conjugated agarose beads.
    The Journal of clinical investigation, 1974, Volume: 53, Issue:3

    Substances such as bilirubin that bind tightly to plasma proteins cannot readily be removed from blood. We describe here the use of affinity chromatography as a new approach to the removal of proteinbound metabolites and toxins from blood. Agarose beads were coupled via cyanogen bromide to human serum albumin so as to contain 30-50 mg of albumin/g wet wt. Such beads, when exposed to plasma from a patient with congenital nonhemolytic jaundice labeled with [(14)C]-bilirubin, bound more than 150 mug bilirubin/g of beads. The binding was saturable, concentration-dependent, relatively independent of flow rate, and reversible by elution with plasma, albumin, or 50% (vol/vol) ethanol. The beads could be repeatedly reused without loss of efficiency after ethanol elution and long storage in the cold. Salicylate, cortisol, and taurocholate, which bind weakly to albumin, were retarded by the beads but eluted with neutral buffer. Thyroxine, taurolithocholate, chenodeoxycholate, and digitoxin bound tightly but were eluted with 50% ethanol. Digoxin did not bind at all. When whole blood was passed over agarose-albumin beads, bilirubin was removed, calcium and magnesium fell slightly, but red cells, white cells, platelets, clotting factors, and a variety of electrolytes and proteins were substantially unchanged. Agarose-albumin beads may be useful for removing protein-bound substances from the blood of patients with liver failure, intoxication with protein-bound drugs, or specific metabolic deficits. Furthermore, it may be possible to make useful adsorbents by attaching other proteins to agarose or other polymer beads.

    Topics: Bilirubin; Blood Proteins; Carbon Radioisotopes; Chromatography, Affinity; Cyanogen Bromide; Digitoxin; Digoxin; Humans; Hydrocortisone; Hyperbilirubinemia, Hereditary; Lithocholic Acid; Methods; Polysaccharides; Protein Binding; Salicylates; Serum Albumin; Taurocholic Acid; Thyroxine; Thyroxine-Binding Proteins

1974
Fluorescent properties of bovine serum albumin-bilirubin complex.
    Biochemical medicine, 1973, Volume: 7, Issue:1

    Topics: Alkylation; Animals; Aspirin; Bilirubin; Binding Sites; Binding, Competitive; Carrier Proteins; Cattle; Dimethyl Sulfoxide; Fatty Acids; Female; Fluorescence; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Hyperbilirubinemia, Hereditary; Infant, Newborn; Oleic Acids; Pregnancy; Protein Binding; Salicylates; Serum Albumin, Bovine; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Spectrophotometry; Sulfisoxazole

1973
Effect of bilirubin on drug conjugations in children.
    Pediatrics, 1971, Volume: 47, Issue:5

    Topics: Acetaminophen; Adult; Bilirubin; Biological Transport, Active; Biotransformation; Child; Female; Glucuronates; Humans; Hyperbilirubinemia, Hereditary; Liver; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Phenobarbital; Salicylamides; Salicylates; Transferases

1971
Effective phototherapy in congenital nonobstructive, nonhemolytic jaundice.
    The New England journal of medicine, 1970, Feb-12, Volume: 282, Issue:7

    Topics: Bilirubin; Glucuronates; Growth; Humans; Hyperbilirubinemia, Hereditary; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Phenobarbital; Phototherapy; Salicylates; Sodium Salicylate

1970
Congenital non-haemolytic jaundice in a four-year-old girl without disease of the central nervous system.
    Helvetica paediatrica acta, 1969, Volume: 24, Issue:4

    Topics: Central Nervous System; Child, Preschool; Chloramphenicol; Cholestyramine Resin; Female; Glucuronates; Humans; Hyperbilirubinemia, Hereditary; Intelligence; Nikethamide; Salicylates

1969