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Science | 1959

Effect of Dietary Fats on Fatty Acid Composition of Human Erythrocytes and Chick Cerebella

M. K. Horwitt; Cecil C. Harvey; Bernard Century

Through gas-liquid chromatography it can be shown that increasing the ingestion of linoleic acid-containing fats increases the deposition of linoleic acid in erythrocytes and in brain tissue. Such changes are probably causally related to the tocopherol requirement, the incidence of chick encephalomalacia, and the peroxide hemolysis test. Whether similar mechanisms are involved in the ability of unsaturated oils to lower serum cholesterol levels remains to be determined.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1963

Interrelationships of Dietary Lipids Upon Fatty Acid Composition of Brain Mitochondria, Erythrocytes and Heart Tissue in Chicks

Bernard Century; Lloyd A. Witting; Cecil C. Harvey; M. K. Horwitt

L IPIL) composition of braimi may be readily affected by diet.’ � Efforts to evaluate the possible relationship between an alteration in the composition of brain lipids and a disease process have stimulated studies of chick encephalomalacia. This in turn led to observations of a similar pathologic disease in the brain of a child who had been fed intravenously an emulsion which furnished a high level of linoleic acid.35


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 1959

Effect of fatty acids on chick encephalomalacia.

Bernard Century; M. K. Horwitt

Summary Corn oil or lard from which tocopherol had been removed, promoted chick encephalomalacia, whereas coconut oil, butter, linseed oil, and cod liver oil did not produce symptoms, and olive oil had a questionable effect. Dietary combinations of 2% corn oil with either 8% coconut oil, lauric acid, myristic acid, or a mixture of saturated fatty acids like coconut oil significantly increased the incidence of encephalomalacia over 2% corn oil alone, while 6% linseed oil, cod liver oil, or oleic acid inhibited the effect of 4% corn oil. Olive oil, butter, fatty acids like butter, palmitic acid, and stearic acid had no net effects upon the incidence of encephalomalacia induced by corn oil. The intake of linoleic acid appears to be a primary factor in the etiology of encephalomalacia, but some of the other fatty acids may secondarily increase or decrease this effect.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1964

Role of arachidonic acid in nutritional encephalomalacia: Interrelationship of essential and nonessential polyunsaturated fatty acids☆☆☆

Bernard Century; M. K. Horwitt

Abstract Combining 8% reconstituted cod liver oil with 8% reconstituted corn oil in a tocopherol-free diet prevented the appearance of nutritional encephalomalacia in chicks. Adding 8% reconstituted cod liver oil to a diet containing 1% ethyl arachidonate enhanced the incidence of encephalomalacia in tocopherol-deficient chicks and resulted in lower tissue arachidonate levels than in the group fed 1% ethyl arachidonate alone. Adding 8% reconstituted cod liver oil, from which tocopherol was removed, to a diet containing 8% reconstituted corn oil depressed arachidonate and higher essential fatty acids in tissues, and markedly increased the levels of the nonessential unsaturated fatty acids of the linolenic series. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that fatty acids of the linolenic series, found in cod liver oil, can readily displace essential fatty acids in tissues, even in brain, and inhibit the conversion of linoleic to arachidonic acid.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 1964

Effect of Dietary Selenium on Incidence of Nutritional Encephalomalacia in Chicks.

Bernard Century; M. K. Horwitt

Summary Addition of 0.13 ppm of selenium as sodium selenite to a semisynthetic diet containing 4% corn oil freed of tocopherol reduced the incidence of encephalomalacia. On the other hand, when 8% corn oil was fed, selenium in levels up to 1.56 ppm had no effect on the proportion of chicks with encephalomalacia. Growth was not affected by addition of selenium.


Life Sciences | 1969

Effect of dietary lipid on chlorpromazine depression of 32P labeling of rat brain phospholipids

Bernard Century; M. K. Horwitt

Abstract The action of chlorpromazine in depressing uptake of 32 P into rat brain phospholipids was lowest in animals fed high levels of corn oil, in comparison with rats fed beef fat, or fish oils. While this response is related to hypothermia produced by chlorpromazine, the differences in body temperature did not appear to be sufficient to account for the differences in this chlorpromazine activity among the animals fed different lipids.


Journal of Nutrition | 1960

Role of diet lipids in the appearance of dystrophy and creatinuria in the vitamin E-deficient rat.

Bernard Century; M. K. Horwitt


Journal of Nutrition | 1963

Effect of Dietary Lipids upon Mitochondrial Composition and Swelling

Bernard Century; M. K. Horwitt


Journal of Nutrition | 1961

Compositions of skeletal muscle lipids of rats fed diets containing various oils.

Bernard Century; Lloyd A. Witting; Cecil C. Harvey; M. K. Horwitt


Journal of Nutrition | 1972

Effect of Dietary Lipid on Various Liver Enzymes and on in vivo Removal of 3,4-Dimethoxyphenylethylamine, 3,4-Dihydroxyphenylalanine and 5-Hydroxytryptophan in Rats

Bernard Century

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M. K. Horwitt

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Cecil C. Harvey

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Lloyd A. Witting

University of Illinois at Chicago

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