thymic-factor--circulating has been researched along with Obesity* in 4 studies
4 other study(ies) available for thymic-factor--circulating and Obesity
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The humoral activity of the avian thymic microenvironment.
The thymic microenvironment (composed of the lymphoepithelial stroma and the secretory products of the thymic epithelium) provides the required milieu for the development of the thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells). There is limited information characterizing or identifying the active secretory components of the avian thymus. The work discussed here has focused on examination of the presence, regulation, and activity of one of the thymic hormones (thymulin) in the chicken. A thymulin-like product has been shown to exist in chicken serum as assessed by the mammalian bioassay and an ELISA immunoassay; thymectomy removes this product from the serum. Serum thymulin activity has been shown to be directly related to the thyroid status of the chick with the functionally hypothyroid Cornell sex-linked dwarf strain having lower levels than the euthyroid K strain. Alterations in circulating thymulin concentrations produced by daily thymulin injections resulted in an altered profile of the major peripheral blood T cell subpopulations and produced significant changes in the autoimmune pathology present within the Obese strain chicken. These approaches represent preliminary attempts to study the role of thymulin in avian immune development and in immune-neuroendocrine interactions. Topics: Animals; Autoantibodies; CD4-CD8 Ratio; Chickens; Dwarfism; Obesity; Poultry Diseases; Thymic Factor, Circulating; Thyroglobulin | 1993 |
Thymulin activity during very-low-calorie diet.
The potential use of thymulin levels as a sensitive and functional marker of energy deficiency was investigated in 13 obese women during a 3-week very-low-calorie diet. Mean weight loss was 8.92 +/- 0.52 kg after 21 days of treatment. The patients were free from infection as assessed by serum orosomucoid and C-reactive protein measurements. Serum albumin levels were not decreased throughout the experiment whereas transthyretin concentrations fell significantly during the first 2 weeks and remained fairly stable thereafter. Orosomucoid levels dropped only after 3 weeks of dieting. Serum zinc concentrations were within the normal range on admission and at the end of the experiment. Thymulin activity was not altered throughout the study, suggesting that this thymic hormone cannot be used as a functional marker of short-term energy restriction. Topics: Adult; C-Reactive Protein; Diet, Reducing; Energy Intake; Evaluation Studies as Topic; Female; Humans; Nutritional Status; Obesity; Orosomucoid; Prealbumin; Serum Albumin; Thymic Factor, Circulating | 1992 |
[Multifactorial analysis of the effect of metabolic and endocrine factors on cellular immunity in patients with cancer of the uterine body].
Multifactorial analysis of effects of metabolic and endocrine determinants of the host and morphology of the tumor on cellular immunity has been undertaken in 29 patients with cancer of the corpus uteri. Several regression models obtained using the Hocking-Leslie method demonstrated significant effects of age, obesity, triglyceride levels, morphologic differentiation of the tumor and magnitude of invasion on various levels of cellular immunity, presenting as an increase in T-helper and decrease in suppressor counts. The multifactorial analysis depicted additive effects of endocrine homeostatic determinants and the tumor on different aspects of cellular immunity in cancer of the corpus uteri. Topics: Age Factors; Aged; Female; Humans; Hypertriglyceridemia; Immune Tolerance; Leukocyte Count; Middle Aged; Obesity; Rosette Formation; T-Lymphocytes; Thymic Factor, Circulating; Thymus Hormones; Uterine Neoplasms | 1990 |
Serum thymic hormone activity in genetically-obese mice.
1. Serum thymic hormone was assayed in genetically-obese (C57B1/6J ob/ob) mice and lean controls (+/+, +/-) of the same strain. 2. The thymic hormone activity was higher in the majority of the obese animals compared with non-obese mice. 3. The number of antibody-forming cells in the spleen expressed as a proportion of the total mononuclear cells was increased in the obese mice. 4. It is suggested that obesity is associated with significant changes in the thymic hormone levels which may alter the relative proportion of lymphocyte subsets and cell-mediated immunity. Topics: Animals; Antibody-Producing Cells; Hemolytic Plaque Technique; Male; Mice; Mice, Obese; Obesity; Thymic Factor, Circulating; Thymus Hormones | 1981 |