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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Because of the dangers of
hypoglycemia
to the developing brain, the need to develop a lifelong positive attitude toward an eating pattern, the inherent communication difficulties, and the spontaneity of the very young, the diabetic infant presents a particular challenge to medical personnel. Baby and toddler foods in jar measurements and formula have been translated into the American Diabetes Association exchanges to help in teaching families with diabetic infants the effects of various foods on the infant's diabetes. The exchanges are taught as tools in maintaining metabolic balance rather than as a fixed diet. Caloric level is planned on the basis of diet history and the infant's current growth status. Flexibility of pattern and attitude is emphasized to minimize conflict
over eating
and to allow normal spontaneous activity without jeopardizing health.
...
PMID:Baby food exchanges and feeding the diabetic infant. 746 Jul 27
Plasma glucose concentration was measured at 3-h intervals in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats placed on various insulin replacement regimens using three different kinds of insulin. High insulin dosages produced at least periodic
hypoglycemia
, even though there were no overt signs of insulin overdose. Low- and single-dose regimens produced periods of hyperglycemia. Both high and low doses of protamine zinc insulin normalized diabetes-induced reductions in 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic acid [5-HIAA; the principal metabolite of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] and 5-HT turnover (5-HIAA/5-HT), despite the failure of the low-dose regimen to normalize plasma glucose. Diabetic rats evidenced continued
hyperphagia
and hyperdipsia during insulin treatment, and insulin treatment also induced
hyperphagia
and excessive weight gain in nondiabetic rats. Insulin treatment only partially normalized diabetes-induced adrenal hypertrophy. Adrenal hypertrophy is an indication of a continued stresslike physiological state in diabetes even during insulin therapy. This state may be involved in the enhanced risk in diabetic humans for development of anxiety disorders and clinical depression.
...
PMID:Metabolic and neurochemical profiles in insulin-treated diabetic rats. 750 9
1. During the first two thirds of gestation, coinciding with a minimal accretion by the conceptus, the mother is in an anabolic state which is supported by her
hyperphagia
and the more efficient conservation of exogenous nutrients when she eats. During this phase maternal fat deposits are accumulated thanks to the enhancement in adipose tissue lipogenic and glycerologenic activity. In contrast, in the latter part of gestation, the rapid fetal growth is sustained by the intense transfer of nutrients from maternal circulation. 2. Glucose is quantitatively the most abundant of the several substrates that cross the placenta and despite increased maternal gluconeogenesis this transfer is responsible for the maternal tendency to
hypoglycemia
. This causes a switch to a net catabolic state which is especially evident in the net breakdown of fat depots. 3. Enhanced release of adipose tissue lipolytic products, free fatty acids (FFA) and glycerol, facilitates the liver synthesis of triglycerides and their later release into circulation associated to very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL). Glycerol is also used as an important gluconeogenic substrate and FFAs are broken down through beta-oxidation for ketone body synthesis. Flow through these pathways becomes increased when food is withheld and this actively contributes to the availability of fuels to the fetus which becomes partially preserved from maternal metabolic insult. Increased liver production of VLDL-triglycerides and decreased extrahepatic lipoprotein lipase contribute to exaggerated maternal hypertriglyceridemia which, besides being a floating metabolic reserve for emergency conditions such as starvation, constitutes an essential substrate for milk synthesis around parturition in preparation for lactation. 4. While the maternal anabolic tendencies found during the first two-thirds of gestation seem to be facilitated by hyperinsulinemia in the presence of a normal responsiveness to the hormone, it is proposed that most of the metabolic changes taking place during the last third of gestation seem to be caused by the insulin-resistant state which is consistently present at this stage, since its reversion caused by sustained exaggerated hyperinsulinemia also reverts several of these metabolic adaptations.
...
PMID:Carbohydrate-lipid interactions during gestation and their control by insulin. 754 70
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) demonstrated that intensive treatment of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) can substantially reduce the onset and progression of diabetic retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy. The major risk associated with intensive treatment is recurrent
hypoglycemia
. Implementation of intensive treatment recommendations is difficult but should be considered and probably recommended to most patients with IDDM. If intensive treatment is impractical, any improvement in glycemic control is probably beneficial. Improved glycemic control should be recommended to most patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). The use of insulin in patients with NIDDM is controversial, especially in patients who are overweight,
overeating
, and minimally symptomatic.
...
PMID:Diabetes control and complications. 759 63
The effects of long-term exposure (7 wk) to hyperinsulinaemia on insulin sensitivity were studied in female rats. The rats were made hyperinsulinaemic by implantation of osmotic minipumps that were changed once a week. Elevated adrenergic activity and secretion of glucocorticoids were controlled by another minipump with propranolol and adrenalectomy with corticosterone substitution, respectively. This resulted in hyperinsulinaemia and moderate
hypoglycaemia
, the latter probably counteracted by
overeating
and increased glucagon secretion, as indicated by increased body weight and lower liver glycogen contents, respectively. Euglycaemic, hyperinsulinaemic clamp measurements showed a significantly higher glucose disposal rate (P < 0.05) in the hyperinsulinaemic rats 18.8 +/- 1.1 mg kg-1 min-1 compared with the control groups 14.6 +/- 0.4 and 15.4 +/- 0.9 mg kg-1 min-1. Insulin stimulation of 2-deoxyglucose as well as glycogen synthesis was measured in the extensor digitorum longus muscle, the red and white part of the gastrocnemius, the soleus muscle, the liver and in parametrial, retroperitoneal, and inguinal adipose tissue. No differences were found between the groups in the insulin response of the 2-deoxyglucose uptake. Glycogen synthesis was significantly elevated in all muscles in the insulin treated compared with the control rats but no differences were found in the liver. Capillary density was significantly elevated per unit muscle surface area in the soleus and extensor digitorum longus muscles of the insulin-exposed rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The effects of long-term hyperinsulinaemia on insulin sensitivity in rats. 762 70
Medialbasal hypothalamic (MBH) deafferentation induces hypothalamic obesity accompanied by
hyperphagia
and hyperinsulinemia. Insulin is essential in developing and maintaining obesity, but the role of insulin in food intake in hypothalamic obesity is still unclear. The present study demonstrated that exogenous insulin increased food intake dose relatedly in MBH deafferented diabetic rats without developing
hypoglycemia
. Insulin administrations suppressed
hyperphagia
in the sham-operated diabetic rats. In contrast, in the MBH deafferented diabetic rats, insulin increased food intake in sow-related manner concomitant with a greater increased body weight gain than the sham-operated diabetic rats. The blood glucose levels of the MBH deafferented diabetic rats were at all time higher than those of the sham-operated diabetic rats and were hyperglycemic throughout the insulin treatment. These data indicate that insulin action on food intake mediated through the central nervous system is modulated by MBH deafferentation. This modulated insulin action may contribute to the pathogenesis on obesity in MBH deafferented animals.
...
PMID:Medialbasal hypothalamic deafferentation modulates feeding response to insulin in rats. 851 Dec 1
Statistical studies repeatedly have shown an association between systemic insulin resistance and a preponderance of highly glycolytic, relatively insulin-insensitive muscle fibers as well as a low density of muscle capillaries. The nature of the relationship between these observations is, however, not clear. Female rats were made hyperinsulinemic for 7 days by implantation of osmotic minipumps. Elevated adrenergic activity and secretion of glucocorticoids were controlled by another minipump with propranolol and adrenalectomy was controlled with glucocorticoid substitution. This resulted in hyperinsulinemia and moderate
hypoglycemia
, the latter probably counteracted by
overeating
and increased glucagon secretion, as indicated by increased body weight and lower liver glycogen contents, respectively. Systemic insulin sensitivity was increased and measured with a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp technique. This was paralleled by an elevated glucose utilization estimated as uptake of 2-deoxyglucose in parametrial, retroperitoneal, and inguinal adipose tissues and the soleus and extensor digitorum longus muscles. Glycogen synthesis was also elevated in the soleus muscle. Muscle fiber composition changed with hyperinsulinemia and elevated 2-deoxyglucose uptake toward more fast-twitch, type II, particularly type IIb fibers, whereas the proportion of slow-twitch, type I fibers, diminished. Capillary density was elevated per unit muscle surface area as well as per muscle fiber. This was paralleled by increased insulin sensitivity systemically and in muscles. These results suggest that muscle fiber composition alterations may be a consequence rather than a cause of hyperinsulinemia and that capillarization rather than fiber composition is of importance for insulin sensitivity in muscle.
...
PMID:Effects of hyperinsulinemia on muscle fiber composition and capitalization in rats. 851 74
Hyperphagia
and anovulation are both triggered by prior food deprivation or other treatments that decrease intracellular availability of metabolic fuels in most species studied. Syrian hamsters fail to show compensatory
hyperphagia
, but do show anestrus in response to these energetic challenges. In the present experiments, we examined food intake, plasma glucose levels, and estrous cyclicity in Syrian hamsters in response to 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol (2,5-AM), a fructose analog that is thought to trigger eating in rats by depleting intracellular levels of ATP. In experiment 1, female estrous cycling hamsters were treated with 100, 200, 400, or 800 mg/kg 2,5-AM or the vehicle by intraperitoneal injection. Food intake was measured 1, 2, 4, 8, and 24 h after treatment. There were no statistically significant increases in food intake in response to any dose of 2,5-AM. In experiment 2, blood samples were drawn at 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, and 25 h after hamsters were treated with 0 or 400 mg/kg 2,5-AM. 2,5-AM treatment resulted in a mild but significant decrease in plasma glucose levels similar to those seen in 2,5-AM-treated rats, suggesting that 2,5-AM has similar effects on fuel metabolism in rats and hamsters. In experiment 3, hamsters received 2,5-AM, 2,5-AM plus the fatty acid oxidation inhibitor methyl palmoxirate, or vehicle every 6 h over the first 48 h of the estrous cycle and were tested for indexes of estrous cyclicity at the end of the cycle. All hamsters showed normal estrous cycles, regardless of treatment. If 2,5-AM has similar metabolic consequences in rats and hamsters, the present results suggest that decreased intracellular levels of ATP and mild
hypoglycemia
do not increase food intake or inhibit estrous cyclicity in Syrian hamsters.
...
PMID:Effects of the fructose analog, 2,5-anhydro-D-mannitol, on food intake and estrous cyclicity in Syrian hamsters. 908 57
The case of a woman of 27 affected by the Prader-Willi syndrome who underwent general anaesthesia for dental surgery is reported. The patient presented severe mental retardation, small stature, moderate muscular hypotonia,
hyperphagia
, obesity, and diabetes mellitus. Premedication consisted of diazepam and atropine; anaesthesia was induced with propofol and maintained with propofol, fentanyl and N2O; muscle paralysis was obtained with atracurium. A small glottis was observed at laryngoscopy so that a 6 mm cuffed tube was inserted. Surgery lasted 75 minutes; the patient recovered promptly a few minutes following the end of propofol infusion; no postoperative complication was recorded. As
hypoglycemia
can occur during and after surgery in the Prader-Willi syndrome, plasma samples for glucose, NEFA, insulin, cortisol, and growth hormone (GH) were collected prior to the induction of anaesthesia (A), 20 minutes after starting surgery (B), at the end of surgery (C), and 3 hours later (D). In spite of the infusion of glucose, hyperglycemia was observed just in C and D samples (A:77; B:88; C:245; D:279 mg/dl). Stable NEFA values, within the normal range, were observed (A:77; B:88; C:245; D:279 mg/dl) suggesting poor or absent lipolysis. Insulin decreased progressively during surgery (A:10.5; B:8.8; C:5.4; D:7.0 mU/L). Cortisol peaked in B (A:9.5; B:20.9; C:13.4; D:4.8 micrograms/dl), suggesting normal hypothalamic reactivity to the surgical stimulus. Finally very low GH levels were observed (A:0.04; B:0.07; C:0.06; D:0.09 ng/ml) suggesting GH deficiency, which had possibly affected the size of patient's glottis. Our data support the hypothesis that
hypoglycemia
in the Prader-Willi syndrome originates from inadequate lipolysis during starvation.
...
PMID:[General anesthesia in Prader-Willi syndrome]. 910 80
A patient with recurrent severe
hypoglycaemia
attacks due to a large, irresectable retroperitoneal leiomyosarcoma was treated with radiotherapy (60 Gy). The blood glucose level gradually and steadily improved as the cumulative radiation dose was increased. Weaning of
hyperalimentation
was started when the cumulative dose reached 21.6 Gy. The patient became completely free from hypoglycaemic attacks despite no significant diminishment of local tumour size and untreated multiple lung metastases. The patient was discharged and the attacks did not recur until expiration as a result of tumour bleeding. This case report supports the clinical usefulness of radiation therapy in treating
hypoglycaemia
induced by non-islet cell tumour.
...
PMID:Radiotherapy for hypoglycaemia associated with large leiomyosarcomas. 916 58
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