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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An analysis of complications arising from
hyperalimentation
in 17 septic patients in an ICU is presented. All developed hypophyosphatemia.
Hyperglycemia
necessitated intravenous insulin in 16 patients. Hypoalbuminemia persisted in all patients despite 134 gm of protein a day. Abnormal liver function and azotemia were common. Catheter complications occurred in three of 90 catheter insertions. Mortality in this population was 70%. Guidelines for the use of Dextrostix for monitoring blood glucose levels and a protocol for
hyperalimentation
in patients with sepsis are suggested.
...
PMID:Problems encountered with hyperalimentation in critically ill patients. 11 53
In the horse, a syndrome of hirsutism,
hyperglycemia
, glucosuria, polydipsia, polyuria,
polyphagia
, and progressive debilitation has been recognized. Most often the syndrome has been associated with adenomas of the pars intermedia of the pituitary and bilateral adrenal hyperplasia or nodular hyperplasia involving primarily the zona fasciculata. Previously, the syndrome has been ascribed to compression of the hypothalamus by an expanding but functionally inactive pituitary neoplasm. In the present case, with RIA determination of plasma ACTH concentrations, the syndrome was ascribed to pituitary ACTH-dependent hyperadrenocorticism and likened to human Cushing's disease.
...
PMID:A case of pituitary adrenocorticotropin-dependent Cushing's syndrome in the horse. 22 13
A new strain of obese mouse, the PBB/Ld, has been studied in terms of fat pad cellularity, serum insulin and blood glucose levels, and response to gold thioglucose injections. Age-matched C57B1/6J mice were used as controls. Adipocyte size and number in the major fat depots were determined at various ages from weanling to maturity in the PBB/Ld and C57B1/6J strains. Results indicated that obesity in the PBB/Ld was due to hypertrophy of adipocytes in retroperitoneal and subcutaneous fat depots and to hypertrophy and hyperplasia in the epididymal fat pad. PBB/Ld mice also developed hyperinsulinemia and
hyperglycemia
and these findings have been discussed in terms of the developmental changes in fat pad cellularity. The injection of gold thioglucose led to increased food intake in both PBB/Ld and C57B1/6J mice.
Hyperphagia
was also present in the PBB/LD control group, but increased efficiency of converting calories to body weight was not observed in this group when compared to control C57B1/6J mice. The characteristics of obesity seen in the PBB/Ld mouse are discussed and comparisons are made to similar studies in other rodent models of obesity.
...
PMID:Description of obesity in the PBB/Ld mouse. 34 7
Intravenous
hyperalimentation
allows complete nutrition and anabolism in patients who cannot be fed by the oral route. However, several complications have been reported, e.g. septicaemia and hyperglycaemina. In 51 intensive-care patients receiving
hyperalimentation
, 18% were found to be hyperglycaemic in spite of insulin administration.
Hyperglycaemia
was frequently associated with stress. In 8 patients undergoing major surgery, which was chosen as a stress model, decreased insulin and increased glucagon, growth hormone and cortisone levels were observed. These findings could explain stress-induced glucose intolerance. In a further experiment, 8 intensive-care patients were given alternative intravenous feedings with either 600g of a mixture of glucose, fructose and xylitol in a ration of 1:2:1 or 600g glucose per day. During both regimens insulin administration was required in 4 patients, but the insulin dosage was lower with the mixture. Plasma glucose during glucose infusion was 205+/-25mg/100ml(M+/-SEM) and the sum of plasma glucose, fructose and xylitol during infusion of the mixture was 176+/-33mg/100ml, the difference being of borderline significance (p less than 0.05). The advantages and disadvantages of infusable substrates are summarized on the basis of the available literature and it is concluded that, in general, glucose is preferable. However, if hyperglycaemia is difficult to control, partial replacement of glucose by glucose substitutes or fat emulsions may be advantageous. A routine infusion programme for central venous feeding is suggested. Causes and prevention of side-effects are reviewed. In many patients receiving central venous nutrition less hazardous and less expensive methods could be used such as nasogastric tube feeding, elemental diet or peripheral venous nutrition.
...
PMID:[Parenteral hyperalimentation (author's transl)]. 40 48
A new program of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) for surgical neonates has been described an investigated. The program is based on the use of fat emulsion as the major source of calories and infusion of large volumes of the solution via peripheral veins. This program has three main advantages over conventional
hyperalimentation
using a central venous catheter: (1) it avoids complications such as septicemia, thrombosis of large vessels, and metabolic complications such as
hyperglycemia
or osmotic diuresis; (2) it provides physiological nutritive elements containing a normal composition of glucose, protein, and fat; and (3) it is easy to start and manage the TPN using a peripheral vein. Thirty-four neonatal surgical patients with life-threatening gastrointestinal anomalies have been placed on this TPN program. Infusion of fat emulsion and large volumes of fluid were well tolerated and all patients gained weight during the period of observation.
...
PMID:Total parenteral nutrition using peripheral veins in surgical neonates. 40 73
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
Diabetes mellitus was tentatively diagnosed in a black-footed ferret with polyuria, polydipsia,
polyphagia
, dehydration, and weight loss. Laboratory findings (marked
hyperglycemia
(724 mg/100 ml), glycosuria, and ketonuria) and the subsequent favorable response to insulin therapy confirmed the diagnosis. Although lesions were not observed in the pancreas, gross and histologic findings concomitant with diabetes mellitus included arteriosclerosis, with calcification of the aorta and other major vessels; mild necrotizing hepatitis; and mild proliferative glomerulonephritis. A perineal adenocarcinoma, with metastasis to an internal iliac lymph node, was an incidental finding. Special stains demonstrated adequate numbers of beta cell granules in the islets of Langerhans. Thus, the diabetes was apparently due to a lack of release of the synthesized insulin or to diminished effectiveness of the secreted insulin.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus in a black-footed ferret. 92 62
In ob/ob mice a 12-wk period of food restriction led to a reduced rate of somatic growth and a decreased lean body mass, along with small but reliable reductions in systemic immunoreactive insulin levels and evidence of increased insulin sensitivity. However, no effects of limited access to food were noted on the basal
hyperglycemia
, the elevated percent carcass lipid, or on the significantly higher levels of serum corticoids that occur in obese animals. These data indicate that
hyperphagia
alone is not responsible for the maintenance of many of the commonly reported characteristics of the obese-hyperglycemic syndrome, but do not exclude the contribution of factors secondary to the quantity of ingested food. Additionally, the present data lend support to recent work suggesting that chronic hyperinsulinemia or an elevated set point of total carcass lipid may be instrumental in the development of this syndrome.
...
PMID:Effects of limited food intake on the obese-hyperglycemic syndrome. 93 35
Insulin resistance of diaphragms of ob/ob mice has been repeatedly demonstrated previously both in vitro and in vivo. In the present study, transport and metabolism of glucose with and without insulin stimulation were compared in a skeletal muscle more likely than diaphragm or heart to be representative of the overall striated muscle mass, i.e. isolated soleus muscle. Compared with soleus muscle from lean controls, unstimulated lactate release in the presence of exogenous glucose was depressed from 16.2 to 12.3 nmol/60 min per mg wet wt in soleus from ob/ob mutants; glycolysis was decreased from 6.6 to 3.7 and [14C]glucose oxidation to 14CO2 from 0.90 to 0.33 nmol glucose/60 min per mg wet wt. Uptake of 2-deoxyglucose (2-DOG), both with and without insulin, was very much less for soleus from ob/ob than from lean mice, at 2-DOG concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 10 mM, and in mice of 6-15 wk. When 2-DOG concentration was 1 mM, its basal uptake was 0.53 nmol/30 min per mg wet wt for soleus of ob/ob as against 0.96 for soleus of lean mice. The absolute increment due to 1 mU/ml insulin was 0.49 in muscle of ob/ob as against 1.21 in that of lean mice. When the resistance to insulin action was decreased by pretreatment in vivo by either streptozotocin injection or fasting, the decreased basal 2-DOG uptake of subsequently isolated soleus muscle was not improved. Inhibition of endogenous oxidation of fatty acids by 2-bromostearate, while greatly increasing 14CO2 production from [14C]glucose, did not affect basal [5-3H]glucose metabolism or 2-DOG uptake. It is suggested that transport and/or phosphorylation of glucose under basal, unstimulated conditions are depressed in soleus muscle of ob/ob mice, whether or not resistance to insulin and hyperinsulinemia are also present. Although the origin of the decreased basal glucose uptake remains unknown it might be related to a similar decrease in basal glucose uptake by ventromedial hypothalamic cells, an event presumably resulting in a tendency to
hyperphagia
. Decreased basal glucose uptake by soleus muscle of ob/ob mice might explain the
hyperglycemia
, and hence partly the hyperinsulinemia and excessive fat deposition of those animals.
...
PMID:Decreased basal, noninsulin-stimulated glucose uptake and metabolism by skeletal soleus muscle isolated from obese-hyperglycemic (ob/ob) mice. 99 31
Untreated insulin-deficient diabetes causes
hyperphagia
and neuroendocrine disturbances that may be partly mediated by increased hypothalamic activity of neuropeptide Y (NPY), a potent central appetite stimulant. The metabolic signal that stimulates hypothalamic NPY is unknown. This study aimed to determine whether insulin deficiency or
hyperglycemia
was responsible. Regional hypothalamic NPY concentrations were compared in streptozocin-diabetic (STZ-D) rats rendered nearly normoglycemic by either insulin replacement or food restriction. Untreated STZ-D rats were hyperphagic and showed significantly increased (p less than 0.01) hypothalamic NPY concentrations in the arcuate nucleus and lateral hypothalamic area. Once-daily ultralente insulin injections corrected hypoinsulinemia and
hyperglycemia
, abolished
hyperphagia
, and normalized NPY concentrations in all hypothalamic regions. By contrast, food restriction effectively lowered glycemia without raising insulin levels. In these underfed diabetic rats, NPY concentrations rose further and were significantly higher than nondiabetic and untreated diabetic levels in most hypothalamic regions. We conclude that insulin deficiency is a major stimulus to hypothalamic NPY in STZ-D, whereas
hyperglycemia
may exert an inhibitory influence. These findings support the hypothesis that hypothalamic NPY responds to specific metabolic cues and is involved in regulating energy balance and conserving body weight.
...
PMID:Insulin deficiency is a specific stimulus to hypothalamic neuropeptide Y: a comparison of the effects of insulin replacement and food restriction in streptozocin-diabetic rats. 143 14
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