Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although environmental factors are important triggers of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), heredity plays a major role in the pathogenesis of the disease. Insulin resistance manifested as impaired activation of glycogen synthase and thereby storage of glucose as glycogen in skeletal muscle is demonstrable early on in NIDDM relatives, suggesting that NIDDM could be an inherited muscle disease. On the other hand, insulin deficiency is almost unequivocally present before manifest diabetes develops. An intensive search for candidate genes for NIDDM has been initiated; so far it has not been possible to ascribe NIDDM to any alterations in the human genome. Given the heterogenous nature of NIDDM, its age-dependent penetrance and strong influence of environmental factors, it may not be fruitful to use NIDDM as an end-point in genetic linkage or association studies. It is more likely that DNA defects result in either insulin resistance or insulin deficiency, which in turn, can both lead to NIDDM. In accordance with the thrifty gene hypothesis, the insulin resistance gene has protected individuals during long periods of starving by storing energy as fat rather than as glycogen in muscle. The abundance of food in Western society has made this once protective gene a deleterious one, suggesting that these individuals are not equipped with the metabolic machinery to handle overeating.
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PMID:The etiology and pathogenesis of non-insulin-dependent diabetes. 148 43

Vanadyl sulfate trihydrate was given by gavage to streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats for 21 days at doses of 0, 25, 50, or 75 mg/kg/day. In marked contrast to the reduction in plasma glucose observed in diabetic animals given vanadyl sulfate via drinking water, diabetic rats given vanadyl by gavage were not characterized by normoglycemia. Similarly, in contrast to the normalizing effect of vanadyl in drinking water, vanadyl by gavage had only a minimal influence on diabetes associated hyperphagia and polydipsia. Despite the lack of marked effect of vanadyl by gavage on the above parameters, tissue vanadium accumulation in the gavaged rats was similar to that reported for rats given vanadium by drinking water. The present results (taken together with previous data) show that the administration of vanadium by gavage is not a viable alternative to the use of insulin in diabetes treatment.
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PMID:Administration of vanadyl sulfate by gavage does not normalize blood glucose levels in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 150 5

A case of Torulopsis glabrata osteomyelitis of the thoracic spine producing spinal cord compression and myelopathy is reported. The patient displayed several of the predisposing factors to T. glabrata infection, including diabetes mellitus, a history of abdominal surgery, and intravenous catheterization with hyperalimentation. The patient was successfully managed with surgical decompression, debridement, and curettage of the affected bone, postoperative immobilization, and systemic amphotericin B therapy. Her pain was relieved, spinal cord function recovered, and the vertebrae healed uneventfully. T. glabrata osteomyelitis is a rare and unpredictably progressive infection. This case demonstrates that it requires prompt therapy and close observation.
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PMID:Torulopsis glabrata vertebral osteomyelitis. 152 Sep 98

Thirty-one abdominal fascial wound dehiscences occurred in 2,761 patients undergoing major abdominal surgery during a 5-year period (1%). Twenty-two specific local and systemic risk factors were analyzed and compared with the risk factors of a control group of 38 patients undergoing similar procedures without dehiscence. Through multivariate analysis, each factor was assessed as an independent statistical variable. Significant factors (p less than 0.05) were found to include age over 65, wound infection, pulmonary disease, hemodynamic instability, and ostomies in the incision. Additional systemic risk factors that were found to be significant included hypoproteinemia, systemic infection, obesity, uremia, hyperalimentation, malignancy, ascites, steroid use, and hypertension. Risk factors not found to be important independent variables included sex, type of incision, type of closure, foreign body in the wound, anemia, jaundice, and diabetes. When dehiscence and control groups were combined, 30% of patients with at least five significant risk factors developed dehiscence, and all the patients with more than eight risk factors developed a wound dehiscence. There was an overall mortality of 29%, which was directly related to the number of significant risk factors. The co-existence of 9 risk factors portended death in one third of the patients, and all the patients with more than 10 risk factors died.
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PMID:Factors influencing wound dehiscence. 832 36

Elevated levels of immunoreactive hypothalamic neuropeptide Y have recently been reported both in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats and in the spontaneously diabetic BB rat. We have measured the levels of neuropeptide Y encoding messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) in both of these rat models to determine whether an increase in neuropeptide Y gene expression is a contributory factor to the increases in hypothalamic neuropeptide Y immunoreactive peptide content. In the hypothalami of both the spontaneously diabetic BB/E and the streptozotocin-diabetic animals, neuropeptide Y mRNA showed significant elevations (to 204 +/- 13% (+/- SE) and 387 +/- 48% of control values, respectively, p less than 0.01 for both). Our results demonstrate that two models of insulin-deficient diabetes in the rat are associated with increased hypothalamic neuropeptide Y mRNA. Taken with the known effects of neuropeptide Y on food intake these results suggest that increased neuropeptide Y synthesis in the hypothalamus may be related to the hyperphagia seen in the diabetic condition.
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PMID:Increased hypothalamic neuropeptide Y messenger RNA levels in two rat models of diabetes. 155 14

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay in eight microdissected hypothalamic regions of obese (fa/fa) and lean (Fa/?) Zucker rats. Freely fed obese rats showed significant (40-100%) increases in NPY concentrations in several regions, notably the paraventricular, ventromedial, and dorsomedial nuclei and the arcuate nucleus/median eminence, compared with lean rats. Hypothalamic NPY concentrations were not affected in either obese or lean rats by food restriction, which caused 25% weight loss over 3 wk. Refeeding to initial weight significantly increased NPY levels in the ventromedial and dorsomedial nuclei in lean rats but did not significantly alter NPY concentrations in any hypothalamic region in obese rats. These observations indicate fundamental differences in the regulation of hypothalamic NPY between obese and lean Zucker rats. NPY injected into the paraventricular nucleus and other regions causes hyperphagia, obesity, and increased secretion of insulin, glucagon, ACTH, and corticosterone. These behavioral and neuroendocrine abnormalities all occur in the obese Zucker syndrome and may be due to increased NPY-ergic activity in the hypothalamus.
Diabetes 1991 Nov
PMID:Altered neuropeptide Y concentrations in specific hypothalamic regions of obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats. Possible relationship to obesity and neuroendocrine disturbances. 165 67

1. The effects of streptozotocin-diabetes, bulk-diet, low protein diet (8%) and protein-calorie malnutrition on parotid gland response to sympathetic nerve stimulation were studied in male Wistar rats. 2. Mean body weights were considerably less in diabetic and protein-calorie malnourished rats than in the other groups, but parotid gland weight was reduced only in animals placed on a low-protein diet. 3. Salivary flow rate (microliter/min/g tissue) and total protein output (mg secreted/g tissue) were reduced in diabetic rats. 4. Salivary composition was altered in diabetes and protein-calorie restriction, and the specific changes were unique to each condition. 5. Thus, with the possible exception of gland weight the effects of diabetes on parotid gland structure and function are not related to either hyperphagia or nutritional status.
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PMID:Effects of diabetes and dietary manipulation on rat parotid gland secretory response to sympathetic nerve stimulation. 167 1

Somatostatin, gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) and gastrin were measured in the stomach of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes, insulinoma-bearing rats and their respective controls. Rats injected with streptozotocin exhibited hyperphagia, insulinopenia and severe hyperglycemia. Stomach weights, and the concentrations and total amounts of GRP and gastrin in the stomach, were similar to nondiabetic control rats. The concentration of somatostatin in the stomach of diabetic rats was 25% greater, but the total stomach content of somatostatin was similar to that of control rats. Insulinoma-bearing rats exhibited hyperphagia, hyperinsulinemia and hypoglycemia. Concentrations of GRP and gastrin in the stomach were 72% and 19% lower, respectively, than in control rats. Despite 45% greater stomach weight, the total stomach content of GRP was 61% lower. Stomach concentrations of somatostatin, and total stomach contents of somatostatin and gastrin, were similar in insulinoma-bearing and control rats. The results demonstrate abnormalities in the stomach concentrations of regulatory peptides in rats with diabetes and insulinoma. These abnormalities are not attributable to changes in food intake alone, suggesting specific effects of these metabolic diseases on gastric regulatory peptides and gastric function.
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PMID:Somatostatin, gastrin-releasing peptide and gastrin in the stomach of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes and insulinoma. 167 27

Spontaneously diabetic rats with remarkable polyuria, polyphagia, and polydipsia were discovered in 1983 in an outbred colony of Long-Evans rats purchased from Charles River Canada in 1982. They have since been maintained at the Tokushima Research Institute (Otsuka Pharmaceutical, Tokushima, Japan). A strain of rats (Long-Evans Tokushima Lean [LETL]) with diabetes was bred from these rats. The characteristic features of the disease in LETL rats are 1) sudden onset of polyuria, polyphagia, hyperglycemia, and weight loss; 2) no sex differences in the rate of onset or severity; 3) lymphocyte infiltration into islets followed by destruction of beta-cells and disappearance of lymphocytes at the onset of diabetes; 4) no significant T lymphopenia; 5) lymphocyte infiltration into the salivary glands and lacrimal glands; and 6) at least two recessive genes involved in the pathogenesis of insulitis, one of which is closely linked with RT1u. These characteristics closely resemble those of human insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Results suggest that the LETL rat is a useful animal model for analysis of genetic and immunologic factors relating to the pathogenesis of human IDDM.
Diabetes 1991 Nov
PMID:New inbred strain of Long-Evans Tokushima lean rats with IDDM without lymphopenia. 168 94

Central and lateral hypothalamic concentrations of 9 regulatory peptides implicated in the control of feeding behaviour were measured in corpulent (cp/cp) JCR:LA-cp rats which develop spontaneous obesity, hyperinsulinaemia and hyperlipidaemia, and in lean (+/?) controls. In female cp/cp rats, central hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY), neurotensin, somatostatin and substance P were significantly lower (p less than 0.02) than in lean female controls. Following food restriction with a 16% reduction in body weight, these differences were apparently reversed and there were also significant rises in the lateral hypothalamic concentrations of neurotensin and of galanin. The other 4 peptides examined (bombesin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, neuromedin B and vasoactive intestinal peptide) did not differ significantly between cp/cp and lean females, either fed freely or food-restricted. Male cp/cp rats showed no significant differences from lean males in central or lateral hypothalamic concentrations of any of the 9 peptides. NPY and galanin are powerful and specific central appetite stimulants, whereas neurotensin, substance P and somatostatin inhibit feeding when injected centrally. Disturbances in these putative appetite-regulating peptides may be involved in the hyperphagia and other hypothalamic abnormalities in this spontaneous obesity syndrome. The apparent absence of differences between the male corpulent and lean groups may relate to sexual dimorphism of the syndrome, which is more marked in the females.
Diabetes Res 1990 Sep
PMID:Hypothalamic regulatory peptide disturbances in the spontaneously obese JCR: LA-corpulent rat. 172 Mar 64


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