{"id":60,"date":"2023-01-18T10:00:43","date_gmt":"2023-01-18T09:00:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/?page_id=60"},"modified":"2023-01-18T10:23:21","modified_gmt":"2023-01-18T09:23:21","slug":"reference-11-20","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/?page_id=60","title":{"rendered":"Reference 11-20"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p class=\"has-text-align-left\"><strong>Prof. Sven Kurbel MD, PhD &#8211; personal web pages<\/strong><br>Dept. of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty<br>J. Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek, Croatia<br>e-mail: sven@jware.hr<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>11. Can incidence of depression in women be linked to estrogen dependent secretion of<br>various hormone binding proteins?<br>Dodig-Curkovic K, Kurbel S, Matic VC.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Med Hypotheses. 2009 Feb;72(2):211-2. doi: 10.1016\/j.mehy.2008.09.034. Epub 2008 Nov 8.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Department of Psychiatry, Osijek University Hospital, Osijek, Croatia.<br><br>This paper describes a possible framework of hormones and their binding proteins<br>(BPs) that might be responsible for the increased incidence of depression in<br>women, including postnatal depression. It is based on three reported facts:<br>Increased cortisol exposure reduces growth hormone (GH) secretion. Cortisol and<br>GH show opposite effects on mood. Liver secretion of various hormone binding<br>proteins is increased under estrogen exposure. If we accept that pure cortisol<br>exposure leads to depressive mood, while simultaneous brain exposure to cortisol<br>and an anabolic (growth hormone or somatomammotropin) is less mood affecting, the<br>occurrence of depression an be more likely in persons: with altered sleep<br>patterns and thus reduced GH secretion, in individuals with increased chronic<br>cortisol exposure (any individual under repeated or sustained stress, older<br>individuals with stressful memories, etc.). The proposed mechanism can be<br>enhanced in women of reproductive age through increased transcortin and GH BP<br>pools due to estrogen action on liver. A particularly vulnerable phase seems to<br>be the early postnatal period, when sudden discontinuation of somatomammotropin<br>anabolic actions might lead to postnatal depression that takes weeks or months to<br>resolve, until the GH\/cortisol circadian rhythm normalization.<br><br>PMID: 18996648&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><strong><br>12. Possible links of age related hypertension and evolution imposed features of<br>heart and aorta.<br>Kurbel S.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Curr Aging Sci. 2008 Dec;1(3):166-8.<\/strong><br><br>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, Osijek, Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>The left ventricle thickness is a limiting factor of optimal heart size and<br>strength. Due to disappearance of all the features compromising left ventricular<br>compliance, mammalian heart has decreased vascular density and coronary vessel<br>diameter and it requires sufficient diastolic aortic pressure for the left<br>ventricle perfusion. Atrial muscle and the right ventricle are perfused during<br>the entire heart cycle. The systolic pressure in the left ventricle forces blood<br>vessels in the muscle wall to collapse, particularly in the subendocardial muscle<br>layer. This makes the most active part of the heart prone to hypoxia. Optimal<br>perfusion of the left ventricle wall requires sufficient aortic pressure during<br>diastole, making individuals with higher diastolic pressures advantageous, in<br>situations requiring combination of increased heart rate and output. Described<br>mechanisms might have contributed to the hereditary quality of age-related<br>hypertension in humans.<br><br>PMID: 20021388&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><strong><br>13.Are extracellular osmolality and sodium concentration determined by Donnan<br>effects of intracellular protein charges and of pumped sodium?<br>Kurbel S.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>J Theor Biol. 2008 Jun 21;252(4):769-72. doi: 10.1016\/j.jtbi.2008.02.022. Epub 2008 Feb 23<\/strong>.<br><br>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, J Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek,<br>Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>Comment in<br>J Theor Biol. 2010 May 21;264(2):639-40.<br><br>Although we are used to attribute almost identical extracellular fluid (ECF)<br>sodium concentrations in birds, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals to the<br>composition of the primordial oceans in which, presumably, all life originated,<br>this interpretation is not supported by geological data suggesting that the ocean<br>salinity was never much lower than the present-day values, still four times<br>higher than our plasma sodium. Here presented interpretation is that the similar<br>ECF salt concentrations are dictated by the opposed Donnan effects on the cell<br>membrane. The only way for the cell to reach the osmotic equilibrium is to alter<br>cell volume, until concentration of nondiffusible intracellular ions (mainly<br>charges on intracellular proteins) is equal to the ECF restricted ions (mainly<br>Na+ ions, restricted by pumping out of cells). The achievement of<br>electroneutrality requires that the sum of all anions equals concentration of<br>positive ions in the cell (mainly K+). Negative charges on cytoplasmic proteins<br>are the most stable component among ionized particles and other ions have to<br>adapt to their concentration. Positive and negative soluble intracellular ions<br>are all osmotically active and to achieve balance of osmotic forces on the cell<br>membrane, the sum of their intracellular concentrations must equal the<br>concentration of osmotically active extracellular particles. Since almost half<br>the osmotically active ECF particles are sodium ions, the ECF sodium<br>concentration seems related to concentration of charges on cytoplasmic proteins<br>and concentration of intracellular phosphates. Our ancestors could not leave the<br>salty ocean and move to brackish, or even fresh waters, without adequate<br>regulation of their ECF sodium concentration and osmolality. Concentration of<br>charges on cytoplasmic proteins or of intracellular phosphate buffers could not<br>be altered, since this would compromise cell functioning. The remaining solution<br>was to maintain the lowest ECF Na+ concentration effective in counteracting the<br>average Donnan effect of charges on cytoplasmic proteins. When the optimal ECF<br>sodium concentration had once become the reference point for osmoreceptors<br>(controlling thirst and ADH secretion) and other regulatory mechanisms (secretion<br>of renin\/angiotensin\/aldosterone, natriuretic factors), it made an important<br>survival advantage that allowed spreading of animal life in fresh water and<br>conquering of earth. The actual common value had to be a compromise that reduces<br>the average osmotic burden on body cells to zero. Individual cells can reduce<br>eventual residual osmotic forces on their membrane through altering cell volume<br>by chloride shift, and by modulating the Na+K+-ATPase function.<br><br>PMID: 18374361&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><br><strong>14. Comparison of BMI and the body mass\/body surface ratio: is BMI a biased tool?<br>Kurbel S, Zuci\u0107 D, Vrbanec D, Plestina S.<br>Coll Antropol. 2008 Mar;32(1):299-301.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, University J. J. Strossmayer,<br>Osijek, Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>For decades we are used to judge our body composition by using the body mass<br>index (BMI). Since the BMI denominator can be considered as a substitute for body<br>surface area (BSA), the body mass\/body surface ratio (BM\/BSA) can be calculated.<br>For a distribution of BM\/BSA values comparable to the distribution of normal BMI<br>values, the range 35.5-39.9 kg\/m2 is chosen as normal, although it covers BM<br>range 50 to 90 kg. The proposed normal BM\/BSA range suggests that heavy adults<br>with less than 2 m of height are not obese only if they are less than 90 kg. If<br>the described limitations of the BM\/BSA ratio are valid, then the BMI should be<br>regarded as a biased tool, less applicable to individuals with body masses<br>outside the 55 to 90 kg BM range. If we consider many health problems related to<br>the increased body mass, it is possible that the BMI should be used with caution<br>in heavy individuals.<br><br>PMID: 18494217&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><strong><br>15.Human adiposity, longevity and reproduction features as consequences of<br>population bottlenecks.<br>Kurbel S, Zuci\u0107 D.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Med Hypotheses. 2008;70(5):1054-7. Epub 2007 Oct 31.<\/strong><br><br>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, Osijek, Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>A model of the origin of modern humans through several population bottlenecks<br>caused by glacial cycles and cold-arid periods was used as a frame for describing<br>occurrence of unique physiological characteristics. Occurrence of regular evening<br>food sharing among the hominid group members improved their chances of finding<br>food the next day. It allowed slow emergence of a gracile and energy efficient<br>phenotype. Improving chances of group survival in the harsh environment included<br>these traits: &#8211; The menstrual cycle occurrence in the common ancestor of human<br>and great apes. &#8211; Single pregnancies only in women with sufficient fat reserves.<br>Ovulations stop during the food shortage seasons, or longer periods of starvation<br>and during lactation. &#8211; Women prone to obesity sooner become pregnant, passing<br>the obesity trait as an advantage. &#8211; Seldom pregnancies separated by several<br>years of anovulation made a strong pressure toward the longevity of women and<br>man. &#8211; Menopausis improved the group survival through preventing pregnancy of<br>women to old to deliver and raise children without significant risks. The modern<br>times food abundance results in high incidences of adiposity, diabetes and<br>metabolic syndrome. Continuos ovulations from puberty to menopausis except during<br>seldom pregnancies and lactations is considered responsible for the occurrence of<br>estrogen induced breast and endometrial cancers. The combination of longevity<br>with decades of androgen secretion is the main cause of prostate cancer.<br><br>PMID: 17976925&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><br><strong>16. The human mind development as a reaction to improvements in memory: possible<br>consequences on sleep, dreams and psychiatric disorders.<br>Kurbel S.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Med Hypotheses. 2008;70(3):707-8. Epub 2007 Aug 13.<\/strong><br><br>PMID: 17697755&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><strong><br>17. Tumor growth fraction, expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors, p53,<br>bcl-2 and cathepsin D activity in primary ductal invasive breast carcinoma and<br>their axillary lymph node metastases.<br>Kristek J, Dmitrovi\u0107 B, Kurbel S, Saki\u0107 K, Krajinovi\u0107 Z, Blazicevi\u0107 V, Has B,<br>Marjanovi\u0107 K.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Coll Antropol. 2007 Dec;31(4):1043-7.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Division of Thoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University Hospital<br>&#8220;Osijek&#8221;, Osijek, Croatia.<br><br>The aim of this paper is to determine similarities and differences between tumor<br>cell subclones in cases of ductal invasive breast carcinoma, and which occupy<br>primary tumor and local axillary lymph metastases. The tumor growth fraction<br>evaluated by Ki-67 was analyzed along with the expression level of estrogen and<br>progesterone receptors, protein p53, proto-oncogene protein bcl-2 and cathepsin D<br>in 60 patients. Metastatic lymph node in axilla has a higher growth fraction of<br>the tumor cells than the primary tumor (p = 0.045), as well as the higher level<br>of bcl-2 overexpression (p = 0.014). No statistically significant difference was<br>found in the presence of immunohistochemically identified estrogen receptors (p =<br>0.161) and progesterone receptors (p = 0.081) between the primary tumor and the<br>metastatic lymph node in axilla. Likewise, no difference was found between the<br>immunohistochemical evaluation of p53 (p = 0.356) and cathepsin D activity (p =<br>0.928). A higher growth fraction of the tumor cells and the higher level of bcl-2<br>overexpression in metastatic tumor cells indicate the more aggressive cell<br>subclones. This study does not support the routine testing of both primary tumor<br>and locoregional metastasis to evaluate the breast cancer hormone receptor<br>status.<br><br>PMID: 18217456&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><strong><br>18. Interstitial hydrostatic pressure: a manual for students.<br>Kurbel S, Flam J.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Adv Physiol Educ. 2007 Mar;31(1):116-7.<\/strong><br><br>Department of Physiology, Osijek Medical Faculty, Osijek, Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>Erratum in<br>Adv Physiol Educ. 2007 Dec;31(4):392. Sven, Kurbel [corrected to Kurbel, Sven];<br>Josipa, Flam [corrected to Flam, Josipa].<br><br>PMID: 17327592&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><strong><br>19. Do high incidences of common neoplasms depend on evolutionary abandoned<br>regulatory loops revived in tumor cells by mutations?<br>Kurbel S.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Med Hypotheses. 2007;68(5):991-4. Epub 2006 Dec 4.<\/strong><br><br>Osijek Medical Faculty, Department of Physiology, J Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek,<br>Croatia. sven@jware.hr<br><br>Neoplasms seem much more common than one might expect, considering complexity of<br>the required cell malfunctions. It seems very unlikely to get them all set in the<br>single cell by pure chance. Here presented idea is neoplasms exploit evolutionary<br>abandoned regulatory mechanisms still contained in our genome. During evolution<br>numerous changes have occurred in cell biology of multicellular organisms.<br>Regulatory mechanisms developed, modified its affinity, sensitivity, and effects<br>on different cells. Some eventually disappeared. Others got another chance to get<br>involved in something different. Most of these changes are forever lost, but,<br>inevitably, our genome contains codes for proteins that still can serve abandoned<br>regulatory mechanisms that are not active in normal cells. Transformation from<br>normal to malignant cells depends on accumulated alterations that remain<br>compatible with cell survival and this can happen if alterations critical for<br>cell survival activate old regulatory loops, obsolete in normal cells. Otherwise,<br>mutated cells would die before becoming malignant. Based on this concept of<br>ever-changing cellular function within survival limited borders, living cells can<br>be considered confined in a well-defined time-space continuum that incorporate<br>occurrence and disappearance of macromolecules, metabolites, mediators and<br>physical influences. Numerous scenarios involving the same set of regulatory<br>proteins emerged during evolution. All survival compatible scenarios were passed<br>to next generations and many times retested. Evolutionary conservation of<br>important proteins saved also all existing possibilities of interactions between<br>them, so parts of abandoned scenarios can be activated in malignant cells. This<br>box of forgotten tools in our genome might be the prerequisite of high incidences<br>reported for common neoplasms.<br><br>PMID: 17141969&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<br><br><strong>20. Occurrence of the acquired immunity in early vertebrates due to danger of<br>transmissible cancers similar to canine venereal tumors.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Kurbel S, Plestina S, Vrbanec D.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Med Hypotheses. 2007;68(5):1185-6. Epub 2006 Nov 15.<\/strong><br><br>PMID: 17110053&nbsp; [PubMed &#8211; indexed for MEDLINE]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Prof. Sven Kurbel MD, PhD &#8211; personal web pagesDept. of Physiology, Osijek Medical FacultyJ. Huttlera 4, 31000 Osijek, Croatiae-mail: sven@jware.hr 11. Can incidence of depression in women be linked to estrogen dependent secretion ofvarious hormone binding proteins?Dodig-Curkovic K, Kurbel S, Matic VC. Med Hypotheses. 2009 Feb;72(2):211-2. doi: 10.1016\/j.mehy.2008.09.034. Epub 2008 Nov 8. Department of Psychiatry, Osijek University Hospital, Osijek, Croatia. This paper describes a possible framework of hormones and their binding proteins(BPs) that might be responsible for the increased incidence&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-60","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/60","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=60"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/60\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":96,"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/60\/revisions\/96"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/kurbel.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=60"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}