(r)-3-hydroxybutanoic acid

(r)-3-hydroxybutanoic acid is a lipid of Fatty Acyls (FA) class.

Cross Reference

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

Current reference collection contains 2725 references associated with (r)-3-hydroxybutanoic acid in LipidPedia. Due to lack of full text of references or no associated biomedical terms are recognized in our current text-mining method, we cannot extract any biomedical terms related to diseases, pathways, locations, functions, genes, lipids, and animal models from the associated reference collection.

Users can download the reference list at the bottom of this page and read the reference manually to find out biomedical information.


Here are additional resources we collected from PubChem and MeSH for (r)-3-hydroxybutanoic acid

Possible diseases from mapped MeSH terms on references

We collected disease MeSH terms mapped to the references associated with (r)-3-hydroxybutanoic acid

MeSH term MeSH ID Detail
Fascioliasis D005211 3 associated lipids
Fatigue D005221 10 associated lipids
Fatty Liver D005234 48 associated lipids
Fetal Macrosomia D005320 3 associated lipids
Forearm Injuries D005543 1 associated lipids
Foreign-Body Reaction D005549 10 associated lipids
Gastroenteritis D005759 4 associated lipids
Glioma D005910 112 associated lipids
Glycogen Storage Disease Type I D005953 4 associated lipids
Glycogen Storage Disease D006008 4 associated lipids
Per page 10 20 50 100 | Total 185

PubChem Associated disorders and diseases

PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

NCBI Entrez Crosslinks

All references with (r)-3-hydroxybutanoic acid

Download all related citations
Per page 10 20 50 100 | Total 2707
Authors Title Published Journal PubMed Link
Vanoverschelde JL et al. Competition between palmitate and ketone bodies as fuels for the heart: study with positron emission tomography. 1993 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:8456973
Shi ZQ et al. Effects of subbasal insulin infusion on resting and exercise-induced glucose turnover in depancreatized dogs. 1993 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:8460681
Marker JC et al. Catecholamines in prevention of hypoglycemia during exercise in humans. 1991 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:1674642
Cherel Y and Le Maho Y Five months of fasting in king penguin chicks: body mass loss and fuel metabolism. 1985 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:4051024
Swithers SE Development of independent ingestive responding to blockade of fatty acid oxidation in rats. 1997 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:9374805
Blomqvist G et al. Use of R-beta-[1-11C]hydroxybutyrate in PET studies of regional cerebral uptake of ketone bodies in humans. 1995 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:7491948
Stallknecht B et al. Effect of training on epinephrine-stimulated lipolysis determined by microdialysis in human adipose tissue. 1995 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:8572197
Goodwin GW and Taegtmeyer H Metabolic recovery of isolated working rat heart after brief global ischemia. 1994 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:8067397
Beaufrère B et al. Effects of D-beta-hydroxybutyrate and long- and medium-chain triglycerides on leucine metabolism in humans. 1992 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:1312786
Turcotte LP et al. Increased plasma FFA uptake and oxidation during prolonged exercise in trained vs. untrained humans. 1992 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:1319676
Mansell PI et al. Enhanced thermogenic response to epinephrine after 48-h starvation in humans. 1990 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:2405717
Cersosimo E et al. Glutamine blocks lipolysis and ketogenesis of fasting. 1986 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:3513612
Féry F and Balasse EO Response of ketone body metabolism to exercise during transition from postabsorptive to fasted state. 1986 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:3518484
Laughlin MR et al. Nonglucose substrates increase glycogen synthesis in vivo in dog heart. 1994 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:8048587
Lundgren F et al. Substrate exchange in human limb muscle during exercise at reduced blood flow. 1988 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:3142276
Winder WW et al. Endurance training attenuates stress hormone responses to exercise in fasted rats. 1982 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:6283921
Tuttle KR et al. Glucagon, not insulin, may play a secondary role in defense against hypoglycemia during exercise. 1988 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:3287952
Féry F et al. Role of fat-derived substrates in the regulation of gluconeogenesis during fasting. 1996 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:8967471
Heller SR and Cryer PE Hypoinsulinemia is not critical to glucose recovery from hypoglycemia in humans. 1991 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:1858873
McCall AL et al. Effects of hypoglycemia and diabetes on fuel metabolism by rat brain microvessels. 1988 Am. J. Physiol. pmid:2964787