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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
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Obesity is common in populations that are overnourished and can become a significant public health problem. Obesity predisposes to non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia, cholelithiasis, some malignancies and osteoarthritis. These consequences that most directly affect the cardiovascular system are dyslipidemia and hypertension. Nations in which obesity is rare should learn from the experience of the countries where it is prevalent, that prevention of obesity is a public health measure rather than weight reduction.
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PMID:Cardiovascular consequences of obesity. 149 63

A case of sulindac-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) is described; the etiology, symptoms, and treatment of TEN are reviewed; and sulindac's pharmacokinetic characteristics and other adverse effects are discussed. A 62-year-old black woman was given a prescription for sulindac 150 mg twice daily to relieve pain associated with degenerative joint disease. She also had a nine-year history of type II diabetes mellitus that was being managed with tolbutamide 500 mg once daily. After two weeks of sulindac therapy she developed a rash that spread over her entire body. Sulindac therapy was discontinued, and one day later the patient was admitted to the hospital with a temperature of 104.6 degrees F, conjunctivitis, and an erythematous macular rash over 60% of her body. Initially, therapy included prednisone 160 mg orally every day, applications of silver sulfadiazine cream four times daily for two days, and methylcellulose 0.5% ophthalmic solution (two drops four times daily) for the conjunctivitis. She also received intravenous hydration. By the fifth hospital day the patient's skin lesions and conjunctivitis had improved to the point that the prednisone dosage was tapered to 120 mg, then to 80 mg, and then to nothing over the following three days. Her diabetes was managed by short-term treatment with NPH insulin; however, before discharge, tolbutamide therapy was reinstituted, and insulin was discontinued. At follow-up four weeks after discharge, the patient's skin was largely clear. TEN has multiple etiologies, but the basic mechanism of injury is believed to be an immunological reaction directed at the basal cell layer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Sulindac-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis. 323 97

Patients selected for gastroplasty should be at least 45 kg above ideal weight, between the ages of 18 and 50, and operated on in a center with good results, where team assessment and long-term follow-up is emphasized. Referral by a family doctor who provides local care and support is important. Medical complications need not be present because the idea is to prevent them, but problems such as sleep apnea, adult onset diabetes mellitus, hypertension, osteoarthritis, and infertility, which may be corrected by weight loss, increase the indication for gastroplasty. Patients should have social support and be intelligent enough to understand the postoperative diet and the need for regular follow-up. Those with a history of psychiatric admission require careful preoperative assessment by psychiatrist or psychologist and close follow-up and support. Patients should have made a good supervised attempt at dieting, have had stable weight for 3 to 5 years preoperatively, and have stopped smoking at least 6 weeks prior to operation. Tests to assess personality factors, eating habits, and motivation are developing, but more precise methods of selecting patients for gastroplasty and predicting successful and uncomplicated weight loss are still needed.
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PMID:Patient selection for obesity surgery. 332 22

The major premise by which weight reduction is used as a medical therapy is the fact that obesity is a primary risk factor in the onset and severity of many medical diseases. Hypertension, coronary artery disease, adult onset diabetes mellitus, complications of major abdominal and thoracic surgery, cancer of the breast and colon, and degenerative joint disease are prevalent diagnoses. The data to support weight reduction use as a medical therapy derive primarily from studies of cardiovascular disease. These studies show lowering of blood pressure and reduction of risk factors for glucose intolerance, angina, and hyperlipidaemia. The magnitude of weight loss (percent reduction in excess body weight) is important; 10 per cent reduction is a firm threshold in obese patients (greater than 130%- less than 200% ideal body weight). Success at achieving this medical therapy is most frequent using very low calorie diets which average 30-40% reduction of excess body weight. Mild and moderate hypertension will respond in 90% of patients. Type II diabetes mellitus patients can become free of exogenous insulin requirement. Response to general anaesthesia and control of respiratory distress syndrome will improve if preoperative weight loss is achieved. Improved cardiovascular fitness and relief of exertional dyspnoea are other clinically important outcomes of very low calorie diet therapy. A high priority exists to investigate the use of comprehensive professional weight control therapy as medical treatment.
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PMID:Benefits of reducing--revisited. 624 29

It is well known that IDDM cases can be complicated with osteopenia, but most of these results were reported using single photon absorptiometry. There have been few reports of diabetic osteopenia using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), a method that is excellent for precise bone mineral measurement. Osteoarthritis and osteophytes of unknown origin in the lumbar vertebrae are often observed in elderly NIDDM patients. In this study, we examined the clinical characteristics of decreased bone mineral density (BMD) and whether anteroposterior (AP) scanning of the lumbar vertebrae (L2-L4) provides sufficient informations concerning osteopenia in elderly diabetic patients. The study was performed using DXA, which can quantify regional BMD throughout the body. The BMD in the total body and that in the lumbar vertebrae were measured by DXA (Lunar Co.) in 68 diabetics over age 60, 33 males and 35 females, mean age 68 +/- 8 yr, (mean +/- SD) and in 94 middle-aged diabetics (40 to 59), 56 males and 38 females, mean age 51 +/- 4 yr. The percentage of decrease in regional BMD in diabetic patients differed significantly by age and gender. The BMD in the head and spine especially decreased after menopause in women. However, the BMD of the leg and spine did not decrease with age in men. When the BMD of the lumbar vertebrae was plotted against the Y axis and the BMD in the total body against the X axis, the slope of the curve showed a greater increase in elderly diabetics than that in middle aged diabetics (1.8 vs 1.5) suggesting the BMD in the lumbar vertebrae has been overestimated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A study of osteopenia in elderly diabetic patients]. 759 60

Obesity is a vast and ever-expanding problem in affluent societies, which we have so far failed to confront. Over 20% of Western European and North American adults are overweight to a degree which may potentially shorten their life expectancy. Obesity has well-known associations with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM), hypertension, dyslipidaemia and coronary heart disease, as well as less obvious links with diseases such as osteoarthrosis and various malignancies; it also causes considerable problems through reduced mobility and decreased quality of life. The overall financial burden of obesity is impossible to calculate precisely, but may account for 6-8% of total health-care expenditure in North America [1] (similar estimates probably apply to Western Europe). Obesity is difficult to treat and many patients remain obstinately overweight despite our best efforts. The available options range from behavioural therapy to gastrointestinal surgery and include numerous drugs designed to suppress appetite or increase energy expenditure. As in many other areas of medicine, the length and diversity of this list are reliable signs that effective treatment is still beyond our reach. This article argues that new anti-obesity drugs may emerge from recent advances in understanding the control of energy balance in rodents. The discussion is structured around neuropeptide Y (NPY), a major brain peptide which at present appears to be important in regulating energy balance and seems a promising candidate for therapeutic exploitation.
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PMID:Neuropeptide Y and energy balance: one way ahead for the treatment of obesity? 791 92

A cross-sectional study of 1385 Saudi females attending 15 health centres in urban and rural areas in the Riyadh region was conducted during September and October 1992 to determine the prevalence of obesity and its associated factors. The mean age was 32.2 +/- 11.7 years and body mass index (BMI) 29.2 +/- 7.0 kg m-2. Only 26.1% of subjects were their ideal weight (BMI < 25 kg m-2), while 26.8% were overweight (BMI 25-29.9 kg m-2), 41.9% were moderately obese (BMI 30-40 kg m-2) and 5.1% were morbidly obese (BMI > 40 kg m-2). High-risk groups for obesity were mostly middle aged, multiparous housewives. Patients living in rural areas had greater BMIs than those living in urban areas (P < 0.01). Thirty per cent of overweight participants did not think they were overweight. The study emphasizes the need for community based programmes for preventing and reducing obesity since weight control is effective in ameliorating most of the disorders associated with obesity such as Type 2 non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, heart disease, sleep apnoea syndrome and osteoarthritis of the knees. The focus of efforts should be directed towards young mothers who are at risk of developing obesity and who play a central role in perpetuating it in their offspring.
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PMID:High prevalence of clinical obesity among Saudi females: a prospective, cross-sectional study in the Riyadh region. 800 60

We investigated the association of non-insulin-dependent (Type 2) diabetes mellitus and depression symptoms in a representative community-dwelling elderly population independently of other conditions such as gender, age, status, disability, cognitive impairment and a number of chronic medical conditions such as chronic obstructive lung disease, degenerative joint disease, heart disease, cirrhosis of the liver, cholelithiasis, peptic ulcer and kidney stones. A total of 1339 elderly subjects living in southern Italy were randomly selected from electoral rolls and evaluated. All subjects were tested by the Geriatric Depression Scale to detect depression, the Mini-Mental State Examination to study cognitive function and the Activity Daily Living Index to evaluate disability. Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus affected 14.7% of our sample. Depression was more prevalent in women over 75 years of age than in younger women (15.9 vs 8.1%, p < 0.001). In multiple linear regression analysis, diabetes mellitus was found to be significantly associated with depression independently of age, gender, loneliness, cognitive impairment, chronic obstructive lung disease, degenerative joint disease, heart diseases, cancer, kidney disease, cirrhosis of the liver and cholelithiasis. It is concluded that non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is significantly associated with depression in the elderly, which may have clinical implications for the achievement of sufficient blood glucose control.
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PMID:Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is associated with a greater prevalence of depression in the elderly. The Osservatorio Geriatrico of Campania Region Group. 889 92

This study was undertaken to update and revise the estimate of the economic impact of obesity in the United States. A prevalence-based approach to the cost of illness was used to estimate the economic costs in 1995 dollars attributable to obesity for type 2 diabetes mellitus, coronary heart disease (CHD), hypertension, gallbladder disease, breast, endometrial and colon cancer, and osteoarthritis. Additionally and independently, excess physician visits, work-lost days, restricted activity, and bed-days attributable to obesity were analyzed cross-sectionally using the 1988 and 1994 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Direct (personal health care, hospital care, physician services, allied health services, and medications) and indirect costs (lost output as a result of a reduction or cessation of productivity due to morbidity or mortality) are from published reports and inflated to 1995 dollars using the medical component of the consumer price index (CPI) for direct cost and the all-items CPI for indirect cost. Population-attributable risk percents (PAR%) are estimated from large prospective studies. Excess work-lost days, restricted activity, bed-days, and physician visits are estimated from 88,262 U.S. citizens who participated in the 1988 NHIS and 80,261 who participated in the 1994 NHIS. Sample weights have been incorporated into the NHIS analyses, making these data generalizable to the U.S. population. The total cost attributable to obesity amounted to $99.2 billion dollars in 1995. Approximately $51.64 billion of those dollars were direct medical costs. Using the 1994 NHIS data, cost of lost productivity attributed to obesity (BMI> or =30) was $3.9 billion and reflected 39.2 million days of lost work. In addition, 239 million restricted-activity days, 89.5 million bed-days, and 62.6 million physician visits were attributable to obesity in 1994. Compared with 1988 NHIS data, in 1994 the number of restricted-activity days (36%), bed-days (28%), and work-lost days (50%) increased substantially. The number of physician visits attributed to obesity increased 88% from 1988 to 1994. The economic and personal health costs of overweight and obesity are enormous and compromise the health of the United States. The direct costs associated with obesity represent 5.7% of our National Health Expenditure in the United States.
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PMID:Current estimates of the economic cost of obesity in the United States. 954 25

An estimated 97 million adults in the United States are overweight or obese, a condition that substantially raises their risk of morbidity from hypertension, dyslipidemia, type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, gallbladder disease, osteoarthritis, sleep apnea and respiratory problems, and endometrial, breast, prostate, and colon cancers. Higher body weights are also associated with increases in all-cause mortality. Obese individuals may also suffer from social stigmatization and discrimination. As a major contributor to preventive death in the United States today, overweight and obesity pose a major public health challenge.
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PMID:Executive summary of the clinical guidelines on the identification, evaluation, and treatment of overweight and obesity in adults. 975 81


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