Dilution induces structural alterations (i.e., vesicle formation) in the lipid particles of supersaturated human hepatic bile and in dilute model bile systems of comparable composition. These alterations strikingly increase both the degree and duration of metastable supersaturation. Concentrated nor
Cholesterol nucleation-influencing activity in t-tube bile
β Scribed by Albert K. Groen; Jan P. J. Stout; Jan A. G. Drapers; Frans J. Hoek; Rob Grijm; Guido N. J. Tytgat
- Book ID
- 102849341
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 651 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
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β¦ Synopsis
Nucleation-influencing activity was determined in T-tube bile samples derived from patients with obstructive jaundice. Since native T-tube bile samples do not nucleate, nucleation-influencing activity was determined by measuring the influence of T-tube bile on the nucleation time of model bile. In the assay, T-tube bile was mixed with model bile, and the nucleation time of this mixture was compared with the nucleation time of a model bile supplemented with the same amount of lipid as present in the bile sample. The results were expressed as ratio of the nucleation time of the mixture and the nucleation time of the control (NTm/NTc). There was a significant difference (p less than 0.01) between bile samples from patients with cholesterol gallstones and samples from patients with biliary obstruction due to other causes. More than 80% of the 33 samples from eight patients with stones were nucleation-promoting (NTm/NTc less than or equal to 0.6). Of the 40 bile samples from patients without stones, 7 were nucleation-promoting, 25 had no effect (NTm/NTc = 0.8 to 1.2) and 8 bile samples were nucleation-inhibiting (NTm/NTc greater than or equal to 1.4). There was no correlation between the lipid or protein content of a T-tube bile sample and its nucleation-influencing activity. The presence of both nucleation-promoting and nucleation-inhibiting activity in the same T-tube bile was demonstrated by chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose. More than 75% of the biliary protein did not bind to the column. This fraction showed nucleation-inhibiting activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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This study was performed to determine whether biliary cholesterol nucleates primarily from vesicles or micelles. Twenty gallbladder biles and 12 hepatic biles from patients with gallstones as well as 16 model biles were examined. The nucleation times (days) of the biles as well as their isolated ves
Patients with multiple cholesterol gallbladder stones have been found to be at a higher risk for the recurrence of gallstones after successful nonsurgical treatment than those with a solitary stone. Cholesterol gallstone recurrence, like primary gallstone formation, probably involves a triple defect