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Connective tissue ratio

It is important to remember that adverse effects of topical corticosteroids may be systemic in nature and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis suppression can occur, especially when high-potency corticosteroids are used. Infants and small children may be more susceptible due to their increased skin sur-face body mass ratio.18 Topical corticosteroids may also cause striae, skin atrophy, acne, telangiectasias, and rosacea.2,10,18 Atrophy can result in thin, fragile, easily lacerated skin. Striae are caused by tearing of dermal connective tissue and are irreversible.18 Due to their significant adverse-effect profile, it has been recommended that no topical corticosteroid be used regularly for more than 4 weeks without review and reassessment.2... [Pg.953]

Vitamin C status is generally assessed by estimating the saturation of body reserves or measuring plasma and leukocyte concentrations of the vitamin. Urinary excretion of hydroxyproline-containing peptides is reduced in people with inadequate vitamin C status, but a number of other factors that affect bone and connective tissue turnover confound interpretation of the results (Bates, 1977). The ratio of deoxypyridinolineipyridinoline compounds derived from collagen cross-links provides a more useful index, but is potentially affected by copper status (Tsuchiya and Bates, 1997). [Pg.374]

Keratan sulfate constitutes approximately half the total mucopolysaccharide fraction of bovine cornea, where it was isolated originally by Meyer et al. (M16). It occurs fairly widely in animal connective tissues, and its presence has been reported in nucleus pulposus (G2), aorta (B17), and costal cartilage (M20). Unlike the acid mucopolysaccharides described previously, keratan sulfate contains no uronic acid residue but is comprised of V-acetyl-n-glucosamine, D-galactose, and sulfate, in equimolar ratio. The small amount of L-fucose detected in acidic... [Pg.207]

CIO. Clausen, B., Influence of age on connective tissue. Uronic acid and monic acid-hydroxyproline ratio in human aorta, myocardiiun, and skin. Lab. Invest. 11, 1340-1345 (1962). [Pg.242]

When a person is exposed to a volatile organic solvent through inhalation, the solvent vapor diffuses very rapidly torough the alveolar membranes, fire connective tissues and the capillary endothelium and into fire red blood cells or plasma. With respiratory gases the whole process takes less than 0.3 seconds. This results in almost instantaneous equilibration between the concentration in alveolar air and in blood and, flierefore, the ratio of the solvent concentration in pulmonary blood to that in alveolar air should be approximately equal to the partition coefficient. As the exposure continues, the solvent concentration in the arterial blood exceeds that in the mixed venous blood. The partial pressures in alveolar air, arterial blood, venous blood and body tissues reach equilibrium at steady state. When the exposure stops, any unmetabolized solvent vapors are removed from the systemic circulation through pulmonary clearance. During that period the concentration in fire arterial blood is lower than in the mixed venous blood and the solvent concentration in alveolar air will depend on the pulmonary ventilation, the blood flow, the solubifity in blood and the concentration in the... [Pg.1082]

These include nearly all the structural proteins which have molecules with a high axial (length/ width) ratio. Most of them are very insoluble and metabolically unreactive. They include the various keratins found in the skin and its appendages, the fibrin of blood clots, and collagen and elastin the protein constituents of connective tissues. Myosin the fibrous protein of muscle contains both fibrous and globular regions and is both metabolically reactive and relatively soluble. [Pg.46]


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Connective tissue

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