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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present experiments have tested the hypothesis that ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesions enhance insulin secretion by neural mechanisms. Rats were made diabetic by injecting streptozotocin to destroy their own pancreatic beta-cells. Subsequently, transplants of fetal pancreatic tissue were placed under the renal capsule. VMH lesions were placed in rats whose
diabetes
was cured with transplants as well as sham-transplanted animals. The animals were followed for 4 wk. The lesioned rats with pancreatic transplants gained no more weight than the sham-operated controls. There was no significant rise in insulin in the transplanted rats after VMH lesioning, but the VMH lesioned rats with intact pancreatic tissue showed the expected rise in insulin. Food intake rose 71% in the VMH lesioned rats with intact beta-cells, but only 23% in the VMH lesioned rats with transplants. Hypertrophy of the pancreatic islets was also observed in the VMH lesioned rats with an intact pancreas, but was not found in the VMH lesioned rats with a transplanted pancreas. Thus, transplantation of pancreatic tissue beneath the renal capsule of diabetic rats prevented the characteristic
hyperphagia
, hyperinsulinemia, and obesity in VMH lesioned rats whose pancreas was free from intact innervation. The results support the hypothesis that neural mediation of the rise in insulin is the primary factor in the development of hypothalamic obesity.
...
PMID:Transplantation of pancreatic beta-cells prevents development of hypothalamic obesity in rats. 10 13
A chromophobic pituitary adenoma induced on BD IX-rats has been grafted on animals of the same strain. The transplanted tumour takes in 90-100%; it grows at a slow rate (in 7 months after grafting a weight of 7-20 g is attained). Tumour-bearing animals display gigantism and hypertrophy of adrenals; moreover, in 33% of cases,
diabetes
is observed. With non-diabetic animals, splenomegaly and marked leukocytosis are observed; immature white and red cells are present in the peripheral blood. Spontaneous regression of the tumour never occurs. After surgical removal, tumour regrowth and the formation of metastases are observed.
Diabetes
is characterised by pronounced hyperglycaemia, glucosuria,
polyphagia
and polydipsia. Histochemically, insulin cannot be detected in pancreas. Splenomegaly is never observed in diabetic animals. Transplanted adenoma frequently tends to stop growing. No recurrence is observable after extirpation. Spontaneous regression of the tumour sometimes occurs. Gigantism, hypertrophy of adrenals and
diabetes
are considered as consequences of growth hormone- and ACTH-secretion of the transplanted adenoma. At present the tumour is running in the 8th passage. It did not change its characteristics over a period of 5 years.
...
PMID:Transplantable, STH-producing and diabetogenic pituitary adenoma of the BD IX-strain of rats. 17 13
1. Rats were injected with a single dose of 35mg of streptozotocin/kg body wt. They exhibited a
diabetes
that was characterized by glycosuria, polyuria, polydipsia,
hyperphagia
, hyperglycaemia, increased concentrations of unesterified fatty acids, glycerol and triacylglycerols in the serum and an increased activity of glucose 6-phosphatase in the liver. 2. After 10 weeks the hepatic activities of the microsomal glycerol phosphate acyltransferase, phosphatidate phosphohydrolase, phosphatidate cytidylyltransferase, diacylglycerol acyltransferase, choline phosphotransferase, CDP-diacylglycerol--inositol phosphatidyltransferase and the soluble phosphatidate phosphohydrolase were measured. 3. The only significant changes were an increase in the activity of the soluble phosphatidate phosphohydrolase and a decrease in that of the CDP-diacylglycerol--inositol phosphatidyltransferase in the diabetic rats. 4. These results are discussed in relation to the control of glycerolipid synthesis.
...
PMID:The effect of chronic diabetes, induced by streptozotocin, on the activities of some enzymes of glycerolipid synthesis in rat liver. 20 60
It is today's general medical opinion that children's
diabetes mellitus
was uncommon in the past. It was generally admitted at that time the initail stages were so sudden as to make difficut its early diagnosis. It's increased incidence is at present an alarming truth; however, a parallel increase of diabetic coma or of mulminant types has rather dropped.
Diabetes
may be diagnosed by just considering the main symptoms at the onset which are polydipsia, polyuria and weight loss. If an early diagnosis is not made, acidosis (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting) may appear within a few days or weeks followed by coma (Kussamul's acidotic respiration and dehydration). Coma may be avoided by an early diagnosis and a life may be saved. It must be stressed that an important percentage of children and adolescents show a slow and gradual evolution (week or months) of their
diabetes
: gradual weight loss, sometimes with noticeable
polyphagia
, occasional enuresis, but without other associated symptoms. Asymptomatic, intermittent glucosurias are also frequent; they vary in magnitude an almost always they appear without ketonuria and with fasting normal glycemia. According to our experience they may precede in weeks or months the clinical manifestations of the disease. Postprandial glycemia is a sure diagnostic resource; it is of greater trustworthines than fasting glycemia; therefore we advise it as a routine diagnostic procedure which we recommend widely. In uncertain situations, the oral glucose tolerance test is advisable.
...
PMID:[Diabetes mellitus in childhood and adolescence. Clinical types]. 48 58
Although human need for various nutrients is well-established, the exact requirements for the different nutrients are not well-known. Nutrient requirements are affected by genetics; environment; nature of the diet; and hemeostatic demands under changing physiological conditions expressed as growth, reproduction and response to the stress of injury or disease. Pregnant and lactating women should be properly nourished if well-nourished infants are desired. Nutrient and energy needs are considerably increased during pregnancy and lactation. The most rapid growth of infants occurs during the 1st 4 to 6 months of life. Because of the many advantages of breast milk over artificial milk, full-term newborn infants should be breastfed, unless there are specific contraindications or breastfeeding is unsuccessful. The American Medical Association (AMA) urges that better efforts be made to educate the public and the medical profession as to the advantages of breastfeeding. The 4th to the 6th months of life constitute the transitional period in infant feeding. The baby should be introduced to single-ingredient foods in small quantities, one at a time, to isolate food sensitivities. Good eating habits can be formed early in life through the proper and gradual introduction of varied and nutritional meal patterns. Energy balance is a nutritional problem in late childhood and once maturity is achieved, while calorically and nutritionally inadequate diets are a growing concern for the elderly. Immoderate eating habits (e.g.,
overeating
) may aggravate or contribute to the development of degenerative diseases and should be discouraged. The AMA recommends that the American public focus on the achievement and maintenance of the most desirable body weight through a proper combination of dietary control and exercise. Specific dietary modifications (sodium restriction, weight control) are necessary in the management of hypertension,
diabetes
, coronary heart diseases and other medical problems. The medical profession should assume a more active role in teaching people how to achieve and maintain good health habits through behavioral modification.
...
PMID:American Medical Association concepts of nutrition and health. Council on Scientific Affairs. 49 Aug 37
Many gastrointestinal structural and functional properties are known to be altered in
diabetes
. In this study, we investigated whether serum and tissue gastrin levels are abnormally altered in a strain of genetically diabetic mice (C57BL/KSJ). Both serum and antral gastrin concentration were found to be significantly increased 3.4- and 2-fold above normal values in diabetic mice fed ad libitum. The increase in tissue gastrin concentration is most probably due to an increase in both cellular gastrin content and G-cell number, since the latter property is increased 130% in diabetic animals. Pair feeding studies demonstrated that
diabetes
associated
hyperphagia
is not a major factor in inducing these endocrine changes, since antral and serum gastrin are still significantly elevated above normal in diabetic animals fed a restricted diet. G-cell number, however, is not significantly increased above normal values in pair fed diabetic mice. The peak serum gastrin concentration after a meal and the duration of postprandial hypergastrinemia are also significantly increased above normal in diabetic animals. Gel filtration chromatography studies indicate that the antral nucosae of normal and diabetic mice have identical molecular forms of the hormone. It is therefore concluded that antral and serum gastrin concentration are increased in genetically diabetic mice due to both dietary alterations and other, as yet undefined, factors specific for the disease, and that the resultant hypergastrinemia may contribute to some of the gastrointestinal alterations seen in
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Alterations in serum and antral gastrin levels in genetically diabetic mice. 49 15
Obese (ob/ob) and
diabetes
(db/db) mice are genetic mutants that have been shown to have altered levels of central catecholamines as well as syndromes of obesity,
hyperphagia
, and hyperglycemia. Because of catecholamines, and particularly norepinephrine (NE), are implicated in the control of feeding, levels of central catecholamines were experimentally reduced in ob/ob and db/db mice to investigate the role of the catecholamines in these cases of spontaneously occurring obesity. Lesions produced by 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) were used to produce large depletions of NE and dopamine (DA) in both ob/ob and db/db mice and in lean control mice of the same background strains. In the db/db but not the ob/ob, central catecholamine depletion was accompanied by a significant and persistent weight loss and by a reduction in plasma glucose levels when compared with vehicle-infused controls. Treatment with the NE uptake blocker desmethylimipramine (DMI) prior to 6-OHDA infusions attenuated NE but not DA depletion.
Diabetes
mice that received DMI pretreatment showed a weight loss and decrease in plasma glucose proportional to the amount of NE depletion. Lean mice that received the 6-OHDA treatments showed only a transient weight loss and no significant change in blood glucose. It is concluded that abnormalities in central noradrenergic systems may account for part of the obesity syndrome observed in the
diabetes
mouse.
...
PMID:Differential effects on body weight of central 6-hydroxydopamine lesions in obese (ob/ob) and diabetes (db/db) mice. 52 20
Alkaline phosphatase activity of rat serum was reduced 50% by fasting the animal for 24 hours.
Diabetes
, induced by alloxan or streptozotocin, increased serum alkaline phosphatase 3- to 5-fold in fed rats and the elevated activity was reduced by insulin administration. In the absence of insulin, fasting alone was able to reduce the serum alkaline phosphatase of diabetic rats to control values. The elevated serum isozyme was found to be of intestinal origin by the use of appropriate inhibitors and electrophoretic mobility following neuraminidase treatment. It is concluded that food intake, particularly the
hyperphagia
of
diabetes
, plays a major role in regulating the concentration of intestine and serum alkaline phosphatase in the rat.
...
PMID:Effects of experimental diabetes and food intake on rat intestine and serum alkaline phosphatase. 62 74
Alloxan-diabetic rats were hyperphagic when fed diets containing little fat, but they ate normal amounts of food when given diets rich in fat. Normal rats increased food intake to the same degree when the caloric density of their diet was decreased by reducing the content of fats or carbohydrates in isocaloric amounts. Diabetic rats did not respond substantially to changes in caloric density of their diet which were produced by altering the content of dietary carbohydrates, but they systematically increased food intake as the amount of fat in their diet was reduced. Diabetic rats ate normal amounts of a high-fat diet despite continued loss of nutrients in urine and persisting impairments in glucose utilization, fat storage, and liver glycogen deposition. These findings suggest that
hyperphagia
in experimental
diabetes mellitus
is a compensatory response to a lack of utiliziable fat fuels rather than the result of a metabolic disturbance per se.
...
PMID:Hyperphagia in rats with experimental diabetes mellitus: a response to a decreased supply of utilizable fuels. 62 30
Issuing from the present state of the influence of the basic nutritive substances (protein, fat, carbohydrates) and various nutritive factors discussed again and again (cholesterol, erucaic acid, sodium, calcium/magnesium quotient, pressor amines) on the development of the arteriosclerosis, the indididual factors of influence are critically evaluated. The investigations are getting under way, so that ascertained results are standing beside insufficiently claified or open problems, From the abundance of the observations conclusions are drawn which are of significance for practice. Unfavourable influences of nutrition on the factors of risk (hyperlipoproteinaemia, disturbance of the carbohydrate tolerance, hyperuricaemia,
hyperalimentation
) and on the manifest diseases (hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, uric arthritis, obesity) of the metabolic syndrome which finally contribute to the development of arteriosclerosis are emphasized. In front of this background a clinically and ambulatorily tested basic metabolic diet is described. About 20% of the energy content (kcal or kJ) of this diet are protein, 35% fat and 45% are carbohydrates. The saturated fatty acids lie below 30%, the manifold saturated fatty acids, however, above 20% of the total fat proportion. The cholesterol content is below 400 mg, the purin-nitrogen below 200 mg, and the sodium content is about 2g per day. This diet can be produced for the treatment of persons with normal weight and overweight in different energetic degradations.
...
PMID:[Nutrition and arteriosclerosis]. 70
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