Analyze Diet

Topic:Biochemistry

The study of biochemistry in horses encompasses the chemical processes and substances that occur within equine organisms. This field investigates the molecular interactions and pathways that are fundamental to horse physiology, including metabolism, enzyme activity, and genetic expression. Key areas of interest include the examination of metabolic disorders, nutrient absorption, and the biochemical basis of muscle function and energy production. Researchers utilize biochemical analysis to understand health and disease mechanisms in horses, contributing to the development of diagnostic tools and therapeutic strategies. This page gathers peer-reviewed studies and scholarly articles that explore various biochemical processes and their implications for equine health and performance.
Enantioselective glucuronidation and subsequent biliary excretion of carprofen in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    March 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 3 358-361 
Soraci A, Benoit E, Jaussaud P, Lees P, Delatour P.Carprofen (CPF) enantiomers and their glucuronide conjugates (GLUC) were measured in plasma and bile of horses after IV administration of the racemic compound (0.7 mg/kg of body weight). The CPF was detectable in plasma for up to 72 hours after dosing, whereas GLUC appeared early (time for maximal plasma concentration, 1 hour) and was measurable transiently at low concentration (maximal plasma concentration, 0.5 microgram/ml). The enantiospecific plasma profiles indicated a clear predominance of R-CPF, whereas the stereoselectivity of the glucuronides favored S-GLUC. At 1, 2, and 12 hours afte...
Immunohistochemical localisation of met-enkephalin in the adrenal gland of the fetal and newborn horse.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 2 147-149 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03052.x
Challis JR, Han X, Matthews SG, Fowden AL, Silver M, Holdstock N, McGladdery A, Ousey JC, Allen WR, Rossdale PD.No abstract available
Local and remote matrix responses to chondrocyte-laden collagen scaffold implantation in extensive articular cartilage defects.
Osteoarthritis and cartilage    March 1, 1995   Volume 3, Issue 1 61-70 doi: 10.1016/s1063-4584(05)80038-x
Sams AE, Minor RR, Wootton JA, Mohammed H, Nixon AJ.Chondrocyte-laden collagen scaffolds were evaluated in extensive cartilage defects in an equine model. Arthroscopic techniques were used to implant a chondrocyte-collagen culture product in 15-mm defects in the lateral trochlear ridge of the femoropatellar joint of 12 horses. Ungrafted control defects were formed in the opposite joint. Groups of six horses were terminated at 4 and 8 months after implantation and the repair sites, adjacent cartilage, and remote cartilage within each femoropatellar joint examined biochemically. Eight months following surgery the relative proportions of type II c...
Accumulation of chromotrope 2R positive cells in equine endometrium during early pregnancy and expression of transforming growth factor-beta 2 (TGF-beta 2).
Journal of reproduction and fertility    March 1, 1995   Volume 103, Issue 2 339-347 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.1030339
Lea RG, Stewart F, Allen WR, Ohno I, Clark DA.Endometrial tissue from the gravid uterine horn of pregnant mares was examined by northern analysis and in situ hybridization for mRNA that hybridized to cDNA and RNA probes generated from a mouse TGF-beta 2 1.2 kb cDNA clone. The mouse cDNA probe hybridized to characteristic TGF-beta 2 mRNA transcripts on a northern blot of total RNA isolated from horse endometrium collected at day 45 of gestation. Two major 4.0 and 3.5 kb transcripts and possibly a minor 1.6 kb transcript were observed, consistent with specific hybridization to equine TGF-beta 2 mRNA. By in situ hybridization, riboprobes tra...
Catecholamine affects acetylcholine release in trachea: alpha 2-mediated inhibition and beta 2-mediated augmentation.
The American journal of physiology    March 1, 1995   Volume 268, Issue 3 Pt 1 L368-L373 doi: 10.1152/ajplung.1995.268.3.L368
Zhang XY, Robinson NE, Wang ZW, Lu MC.We investigated the effects of catecholamines on acetylcholine (ACh) release from equine airway parasympathetic nerves. Trachealis strips were suspended in 2-ml tissue baths with Krebs-Henseleit solution containing atropine (10(-7) M), neostigmine (10(-6) M), and guanethidine (10(-5) M). Electrical field stimulation (20 V, 0.5 ms, 0.5 Hz, for 15 min) was applied, and ACh was measured by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. Epinephrine (Epi) and norepinephrine (NE) inhibited ACh release in a concentration-dependent manner. Inhibition was attenuated by the alpha...
In vitro 19-norandrogen synthesis by equine placenta requires the participation of aromatase.
The Journal of endocrinology    March 1, 1995   Volume 144, Issue 3 517-525 doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1440517
Moslemi S, Silberzahn P, Gaillard JL.Explants of equine full-term placenta have been shown to synthesize 19-norandrogens from labelled androgens. Steroid metabolites were purified by silica-gel column chromatography then analysed and quantified by c18-reverse-phase HPLC coupled to a radioactive flow detector. 19-Norandrostenedione was subsequently recrystallized to constant specific activity, providing unequivocal evidence of its synthesis by the equine placenta. 19-Norandrostenedione synthesis appeared to be localized in the microsomal fraction. Regardless of the substrate used, formation of 19-norandrogens was far weaker than t...
Immunohistochemical localisation of steroidogenic enzymes and phenylethanolamine-N-methyl-transferase (PNMT) in the adrenal gland of the fetal and newborn foal.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1995   Volume 27, Issue 2 140-146 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1995.tb03051.x
Han X, Fowden AL, Silver M, Holdstock N, McGladdery AJ, Ousey JC, Allen WR, Rossdale PD, Challis JR.An increase in fetal adrenal cortisol output signals the onset of parturition in many animal species but, in the fetal horse, plasma concentrations of cortisol remain low for much of late pregnancy, with a rise occurring only very close to the time of birth (term 320-360 days). Immunohistochemistry was used to determine the localisation and changes in distribution of key steroidogenic enzymes for cortisol production; P450scc, P450C17 and 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 beta HSD) in adrenal tissue from fetal and newborn horses and these findings were correlated with the appearance of imm...
The equine endometrial cup reaction: a review.
The veterinary quarterly    March 1, 1995   Volume 17, Issue 1 21-29 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1995.9694525
Koets AP.The function of eCG in equine pregnancy is far from clear but it has become evident that eCG has little or no FSH activity in the horse and is therefore probably not responsible for the secondary ovulations. eCG does have luteotrophic activity and it could play a role in the resurgence of the primary corpus luteum (1,7,44). Some evidence exists that the receptor population on the equine gonads is heterogenous in a way that makes it possible to distinguish eCG from eLH, resulting in different post-receptor effects (7). There is also evidence that eCG itself is heterogenous, both in glycosylatio...
D-glucose transport and glycolytic enzyme activities in erythrocytes of dogs, pigs, cats, horses, cattle and sheep.
Research in veterinary science    March 1, 1995   Volume 58, Issue 2 195-196 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(95)90078-0
Arai T, Washizu T, Sagara M, Sako T, Nigi H, Matsumoto H, Sasaki M, Tomoda I.The activities of D-glucose transport (D-GT) and the glycolytic enzymes hexokinase (HK) and pyruvate kinase (PK), were measured in the erythrocytes of dogs, pigs, cats, horses, cattle and sheep. The erythrocytes of dogs had the highest activities of D-GT, HK and PK, significantly higher than the activities in the erythrocytes of the herbivores. The activities of D-GT and HK in cat erythrocytes were significantly lower than in those of dogs. The differences between the activities of D-GT in the erythrocytes of the different species followed the differences in activities of HK but not those in t...
Regulation of granule size in human and horse eosinophils by number of fusion events among unit granules.
The Journal of physiology    February 15, 1995   Volume 483 ( Pt 1), Issue Pt 1 201-209 doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1995.sp020578
Hartmann J, Scepek S, Lindau M.1. We have investigated the granule size distributions in human and horse eosinophils by time-resolved patch-clamp capacitance measurements. 2. During exocytosis of single granules the electrical capacitance of the plasma membrane increases in discrete steps. The steps in horse cells are about six times larger than those in human cells in accordance with the difference in granule size. 3. In both species a multimodal capacitance step size distribution is observed with a first peak at 6-7 fF corresponding to granules with a diameter of about 450-500 nm and a surface area of about 0.7 microns2, ...
The proximal ligand variant His93Tyr of horse heart myoglobin.
Biochemistry    February 14, 1995   Volume 34, Issue 6 1997-2005 doi: 10.1021/bi00006a021
Hildebrand DP, Burk DL, Maurus R, Ferrer JC, Brayer GD, Mauk AG.The spectroscopic and structural properties of the His93Tyr variant of horse heart myoglobin have been studied to assess the effects of replacing the proximal His residue of this protein with a tyrosyl residue as occurs in catalases from various sources. The variant in the ferric form exhibits electronic spectra that are independent of pH between pH 7 and 10, and it exhibits changes in absorption maxima and intensity that are consistent with a five-coordinate heme iron center at the active site. The EPR spectrum of the variant is that of a high-spin, rhombic system similar to that reported for...
Changes in equine endometrial retinol-binding protein RNA during the estrous cycle and early pregnancy and with exogenous steroids.
Biology of reproduction    February 1, 1995   Volume 52, Issue 2 438-443 doi: 10.1095/biolreprod52.2.438
McDowell KJ, Adams MH, Franklin KM, Baker CB.A cDNA library was constructed from poly(A) RNA obtained from Day 14 nonbred equine endometrium. A cDNA probe for porcine retinol-binding protein (RBP) was used to screen the library, and a complete cDNA sequence (1133 bp, excluding the poly(A) tail) was obtained. Endometrial biopsies were obtained from cycling, nonbred mares at Days 0, 1, 4, 8, 10, 11, 13, and 15 and from pregnant mares at Days 11, 13, 15, and 17 after ovulation (n = 2 mares each day). Endometrial biopsies were also taken from 18 noncycling anestrous mares after the following treatments: C (vehicle control for 1 day, n = 3), ...
Determination of carbonic anhydrase III isoenzyme concentration in sera of racehorses with exertional rhabdomyolysis.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 2 162-166 
Nishita T, Ohohashi T, Asari M.The concentration of carbonic anhydrase III isoenzyme (CA-III) in serum samples from 216 clinically normal Thoroughbreds was determined by use of an enzyme immunoassay. The concentration range of CA-III was from 16.0 to 254.5 ng/ml (mean, 56.5 +/- 11.9 ng/ml). Significant differences were not detected according to age or sex. To confirm whether serum CA-III concentration was high in horses with muscle disease, serum samples of 11 horses with exertional rhabdomyolysis were analyzed by enzyme immunoassay. Their serum CA-III concentration was about 56 times (3,136 +/- 2,610 ng/ml) that of healthy...
Validation of the shrinkage temperature of animal tissue for bioprosthetic heart valve application by differential scanning calorimetry.
Biomaterials    February 1, 1995   Volume 16, Issue 3 251-258 doi: 10.1016/0142-9612(95)92125-p
Loke WK, Khor E.Shrinkage temperature is most often used to report the degree of cross-linking in glutaraldehyde-fixed animal tissue for use in bioprosthetic heart valve fabrication. Present practice utilizes the measurement of hydrothermal shrinkage observed when a sample is subjected to a temperature programme. This measurement at best gives a general indication of the efficiency of the treatment, i.e. the extent of cross-linking in the tissue. When differential scanning calorimetry has been used, the ambiguity arising from the scant reporting of the protocols used does not permit easy comparison of experim...
Characterisation of a membrane receptor on ruminants and equine platelets and peripheral blood leukocytes similar to the human integrin receptor glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (CD41/61).
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    February 1, 1995   Volume 44, Issue 3-4 359-368 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)05310-o
Pintado CO, Friend M, Llanes D.This paper describes two anti-glycoprotein IIb/IIIa or CD41/61 murine monoclonal antibodies (Co.35E4 and Co.2oA1). The cellular distribution and apparent molecular weight of the antigen detected by these antibodies is consistent with their reaction with ruminant and equine glycoprotein IIb/IIIa. Biochemical analysis of the equine molecule using sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) revealed bands of 24, 100 and 110 kDa under reducing conditions and 115 and 80 kDa under nonreducing conditions. Biochemical analysis of ruminant antigen revealed that the 24 kDa band...
Electrostatics of hemoglobins from measurements of the electric dichroism and computer simulations.
Biophysical journal    February 1, 1995   Volume 68, Issue 2 655-664 doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80226-2
Antosiewicz J, Porschke D.Hemoglobins from normal human cells, from sickle cells, and from horse were investigated by electrooptical methods in their oxy and deoxy forms. The reduced linear dichroism measured as a function of the electric field strength demonstrates the existence of permanent dipole moments in the range of 250-400 Debye units. The reduced limiting dichroism is relatively small (< or = 0.1); it is negative for hemoglobin from sickle cells and positive for the hemoglobins from normal human cells and from horse. The dichroism decay time constants are in the range from about 55 to 90 ns. Calculations of th...
The comparison of pepsin and trypsin action on goat, cow, mare and human caseins.
Roczniki Akademii Medycznej w Bialymstoku (1995)    January 1, 1995   Volume 40, Issue 3 486-493 
Jasińska B.The degree of proteolysis of micellar caseins of human, goat's, mare's and two breeds (Black&White and Red Polish) of cow's milk was compared for pepsin and trypsin action in vitro. Human and goat's caseins were hydrolysed in 100% and 96%, respectively, mare's casein--92%, Black&White cow's casein--90%, Red Polish cow's casein--76%. The differences can be related to the micelle structure, especially to the prevalence of beta casein in the human and goat's casein. The significant dissimilarity between the two breeds of investigated cows is surprising and indicates a different geometry o...
Prostaglandin F2 alpha metabolite levels following an embryo transfer procedure in the mare.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    January 1, 1995   Volume 36, Issue 1 145-147 doi: 10.1186/BF03547711
Kask K, Malmgren L, Odensvik K.Hormonal, chemical, and mechanical stimuli can activate the arachidonic acid cascade and result in formation of prostaglandins and related substances. These compounds can have a profound role in the initiation of the inflammatory process (Higgins & Lees 1984). Prostaglandin (PG) F2α is the key hormone in reproductive physiology with well-known effects on reproductive performance e.g. luteolysis and abortion. An activation of the arachidonic acid cascade, caused by mechanical manipulation during an embryo transfer procedure, might be one explanation for early embryonic loss.
Isolation and identification of two potent neurotoxins, aspartic acid and glutamic acid, from yellow star thistle (Centaurea solstitialis).
Natural toxins    January 1, 1995   Volume 3, Issue 3 174-180 doi: 10.1002/nt.2620030309
Roy DN, Peyton DH, Spencer PS.Horses grazing for prolonged periods on yellow star thistle (YST), a plant which grows wild in western parts of the United States, develop an extrapyramidal disorder known as nigropallidal encephalomalacia (NPE). Attempts have been made to identify, isolate, and characterize the toxins responsible for the disease in animals. Using the organotypic tissue culture system on mouse cortical explants as a specific assay method for neurotoxicological evaluation, it has been possible to isolate and characterize two potent neuroexcitotoxic compounds, aspartic and glutamic acids, the former being the ma...
Training-induced modifications in some biochemical defences against free radicals in equine erythrocytes.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1995   Volume 19, Issue 3 179-184 doi: 10.1007/BF01839296
Avellini L, Silvestrelli M, Gaiti A.Oxidative stress develops when the generation of free radicals exceeds the antioxidant capacity of cells or extracellular fluids. It can also occur as a result of physical exercise, and the pathogenesis of exercise-induced myopathies and haemolysis in horses may be related to changes in lipid peroxidation caused by free radicals. Cells have developed biochemical protection against oxidative stress and, as tissues seem to increase their antioxidant defences under chronic activation, training may be one of the ways of increasing antioxidant defences. Accordingly, we tested some enzymatic antioxi...
Effect of exercise intensity on plasma prostaglandin concentrations in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 1 122-126 
Mitten LA, Hinchcliff KW, Pate JL, Kohn CW, McKeever KH.Exertion has an effect on plasma, serum, and/or urine prostanoid concentrations in many species. We investigated the effect of exercise intensity on plasma prostaglandin concentrations during and after exercise in horses. Six Thoroughbreds completed 4 trials: 3 exercise trials (low-, medium-, and high-speed) and 1 nonexercise (control) trial on a high-speed treadmill. Blood samples were collected from a jugular catheter before, during, and after exercise. The PCV and blood lactate, plasma protein, plasma prostacyclin (6-keto-PGF1 alpha), thromboxane B2 (TXB2), and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) conce...
Effects of lipoprotein, equine luteinizing hormone, equine follicle-stimulating hormone, and equine prolactin on equine testicular steroidogenesis in vitro.
Journal of andrology    January 1, 1995   Volume 16, Issue 1 18-27 
Eisenhauer KM, Roser JF.A stallion testicular cell incubation system was developed and used to investigate the regulation of steroidogenesis in stallion testes. Cells isolated from testes of 2- to 4-year-old stallions (n = 6) were cultured for 12 hours in a defined medium with and without varying doses of lipoprotein, equine luteinizing hormone (eLH), human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), equine follicle-stimulating hormone (eFSH), and/or equine prolactin (ePRL). Estrogen conjugate (EC), testosterone (T), and estradiol-17 beta (E2) production were determined by RIA. Increasing doses of lipoprotein significantly (P <...
The amino Acid sequence glutamine-628 to valine-646 within the A1 repeat domain mediates binding of von Willebrand factor to bovine brain sulfatides and equine tendon collagen.
Platelets    January 1, 1995   Volume 6, Issue 5 245-251 doi: 10.3109/09537109509023562
Andrews RK, Booth WJ, Bendall LJ, Berndt MC.von Willebrand Factor (vWF) is a multifunctional glycoprotein in plasma and vascular subendothelial matrix which plays a major role in cellular adhesion. vWFdependent adhesion of platelets to the subendothelium at high shear rates involves a specific platelet membrane receptor, the glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complex. We have previously purified a 39/34-kiloDalton (kDa) dispase fragment of vWF (Leu-480/Val-481 to Gly-718) and demonstrated that this fragment contains the binding site for the GP Ib-IX complex [Andrews R K, et al. Biochemistry 1989; 28: 8326-83361. vWF also mediates agglutination of ...
Dietary protein and(or) energy restriction in mares: plasma glucose, insulin, nonesterified fatty acid, and urea nitrogen responses to feeding, glucose, and epinephrine.
Journal of animal science    January 1, 1995   Volume 73, Issue 1 136-144 doi: 10.2527/1995.731136x
Sticker LS, Thompson DL, Bunting LD, Fernandez JM, DePew CL.Sixteen light horse mares (8 to 9 yr of age; 457 to 579 kg BW) were fed Bermudagrass hay and a corn/cottonseed hull-based supplement formulated to contain either 100% (control) or 50% (restricted) of the protein and(or) energy requirements for maintenance in a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treatments. Daily measurements of intake, BW, and plasma hormones and metabolites were made for 33 d. Plasma glucose, insulin, NEFA, and urea N were measured in hourly samples drawn on d 27, and parallel with an i.v. glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) and epinephrine challenge on d 29. Energy restriction increa...
The hemostatic profile of equine ovarian follicular fluid.
Thrombosis research    January 1, 1995   Volume 77, Issue 1 45-54 doi: 10.1016/0049-3848(95)90863-b
Yamada M, Gentry PA.The coagulation factors VII and X and fibrinogen were detected in equine ovarian follicular fluid. The amounts of fibrinogen and factor X were approximately 40 percent of that found in normal equine plasma while the level of factor VII was lower, at approximately 14 percent. The addition of human recombinant tissue factor caused fibrin formation in the follicular fluid. The thrombin generating activity appears to be confined to the tissue factor pathway since no activity associated with factors VIII:C, IX or IX was detected. Fibrinolytic activity, at higher levels than that found in plasma, wa...
[Physiology of intestinal absorption of phosphorus in animals].
Reproduction, nutrition, development    January 1, 1995   Volume 35, Issue 5 475-489 
Barlet JP, Davicco MJ, Coxam V.Intestinal absorption of inorganic phosphorus. In most mammalian species inorganic phosphorus (P) is absorbed at the duodenal and jejunal level. However in horses some P is absorbed from the large intestine, whereas in ruminant animals some absorption also takes place in the forestomachs. The structure of the putative phosphate-sodium carrier of the brush border from enterocytes still awaits identification. P absorption is modulated both by endocrine (calcitriol, triiodothyronine) and nutritional factors (minerals of the diet, chemical form of phosphorus). Regulation of salivary P secretion, i...
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for myosin heavy chains in the horse.
Reproduction, nutrition, development    January 1, 1995   Volume 35, Issue 6 619-628 doi: 10.1051/rnd:19950602
Barrey E, Valette JP, Jouglin M, Picard B, Geay Y, Robelin J.The content in slow and fast myosin heavy chains (MHC 1 and MHC 2) of 5 equine muscles was determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The results obtained with this immunoenzymatic method were compared with complementary techniques: electrophoresis and immunohistochemistry. Slices of masseter, diaphragm, tensor faciae latae, semitendinosus and cutaneus trunci were obtained from a 12-year-old saddle horse after slaughter. Muscular proteins were specifically extracted to be analysed by ELISA. The technique used 2 complimentary monoclonal antibodies (MAb). MAb 1 was prepared from a hu...
Allometry of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the muscle relaxant metocurine in mammals.
The American journal of physiology    January 1, 1995   Volume 268, Issue 1 Pt 2 R85-R91 doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1995.268.1.R85
Gronert GA, Fung DL, Jones JH, Shafer SL, Hildebrand SV, Disbrow EA.We investigated the effects of body size on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the renally cleared muscle relaxant metocurine. We hypothesized that pharmacokinetics of the drug would change allometrically in proportion to physiological time [infinity Mb0.25, where Mb is body mass] and that pharmacodynamics would be independent of size because of the highly conserved structure of the acetylcholine receptor. Metocurine effects during general anesthesia were examined in 17 rats, 8 cats, 6 dogs, 5 pigs, 7 sheep, and 12 horses. Allometric analysis demonstrated size dependence for pharmaco...
Prejunctional muscarinic autoreceptors on horse airway cholinergic nerves.
Life sciences    January 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 25 2255-2262 doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(95)00215-r
Wang ZW, Yu MF, Robinson NE.Muscarinic autoreceptors on horse airway cholinergic nerves were studied by examining the effects of muscarinic receptor antagonists on electrical field stimulation (EFS)-induced acetylcholine (ACh) release in trachealis preparations. All the antagonists including atropine (non-selective), pirenzepine (M1-selective), AF-DX 116 (M2-selective), and hexahydrosiladifenidol (M3-selective) augmented ACh release concentration-dependently. The augmentation was not due to displacement of ACh molecules from tissue receptors into the bath liquid because incubation with atropine after EFS had no influence...
Effect of food deprivation on baseline iodothyronine and cortisol concentrations in healthy, adult horses.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1995   Volume 56, Issue 1 116-121 
Messer NT, Johnson PJ, Refsal KR, Nachreiner RF, Ganjam VK, Krause GF.Six healthy, adult horses, with normal (mean +/- SEM) baseline serum concentrations of total triiodothyronine (T3, 1.02 +/- 0.16 nmol/L), free T3 (FT3, 2.05 +/- 0.33 pmol/L), total thyroxine (T4, 19.87 +/- 1.74 nmol/L), free T4 (FT4, 11.55 +/- 0.70 pmol/L), total reverse T3 (rT3, 0.68 +/- 0.06 nmol/L), and cortisol (152.75 +/- 17.50 nmol/L), were judged to be euthyroid on the basis of response to a standardized thyroid-stimulating hormone response test. Serum concentrations of T3, FT3, T4, FT4, rT3, and cortisol were determined immediately before and every 24 hours during a 4-day period of foo...