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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Dieting or a change in eating habits is the most widely used approach aimed at reducing body weight. However, it is also well known that many obese people cannot reduce body weight substantially, no matter how hard they try, and that they soon regain whatever they do lose. The conventional approach to the treatment of obesity is to control it by prohibition or suppression of overeating, and by orders to change eating habits. This paper presented and examined a new psychosomatic approach for obesity (NPAO). Taking the story of "The North Wind and the Sun" from Aesop's Fables as a metaphor, this hypothesis is based on the reduction of overstressors through a "Sun"-type approach as opposed to a "North Wind"-type approach. This "Sun"-type approach, which incorporates 2 principles and 3 basic rules, is useful in decreasing stressors such as prohibition, suppression and orders, and increasing pleasantness, which competes with unpleasant stress. The treatment based on this hypothesis was applied to 77 subjects: 62 men (age 46.2 +/- 8.0 years) and 15 women (age 50.6 +/- 4.5 years). All subjects were given medical checks just before and 6 months after the psychosomatic approach for obesity. For a proportion of cases, maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) was measured before and after. In the practiced group (48 cases) except for three persons who had stopped the program within 3 months after the start, body weight and body mass index fell significantly by 5.2 kg (p < 0.001) and 2.0 kg/m2 (p < 0.001) respectively, after 6 months. There were significant reductions in total cholesterol and triglyceride (p < 0.01, p < 0.01 respectively). VO2max, however, increased significantly (p < 0.05). The subjects' impressions of this therapy, collected after 6 months were as follows: "It was comfortable" 67.7%, "It was hard going" 8.8%, "My body has become lighter" 79.4%, "I have become more energetic" 70.5%, and "I have become happier" 64.7%. During the period of the therapy, there was no report of any appearance of new physical or mental abnormalities such as fatigue or uncomfortableness. On the other hand, there were no significant changes in any parameters except for an increase of blood sugar in the non-practiced group (26 cases). These results strongly indicate that the NPAO is easy in practice, has a high success rate, shows no rebounding, reduces body weight safely, and results in an increase of vigor.
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PMID:Proposal of a new hypothesis for the psychosomatic treatment of obesity and its application. 1053 2

Feeding is a complex process responsive to sensory information related to sight and smell of food, previous feeding experiences, satiety signals elicited by ingestion and hormonal signals related to energy balance. Dopamine released in specific brain regions is associated with pleasurable and rewarding events and may reinforce positive aspects of feeding. Dopamine also influences initiation and coordination of motor activity and is required for sensorimotor functions. Thus, dopamine may facilitate integration of sensory cues related to hunger, initiating the search for food and its consumption. Dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area project to the caudate putamen and nucleus accumbens, where they modulate movement and reward. There are projections from the nucleus accumbens to the lateral hypothalamus that regulate feeding. Dopamine-deficient mice (Dbh(Th/+), Th-/-; hereafter DD mice) cannot synthesize dopamine in dopaminergic neurons. They gradually become aphagic and die of starvation. Daily treatment of DD mice with L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) transiently restores brain dopamine, locomotion and feeding. Leptin-null (Lep(ob/ob)) mice exhibit obesity, decreased energy expenditure and hyperphagia. As the hypothalamic leptin-melanocortin pathway appears to regulate appetite and metabolism, we generated mice lacking both dopamine and leptin (DD x Lep(ob/ob)) to determine if leptin deficiency overcomes the aphagia of DD mice. DD x Lep(ob/ob) mice became obese when treated daily with L-DOPA, but when L-DOPA treatment was terminated the double mutants were capable of movement, but did not feed. Our data show that dopamine is required for feeding in leptin-null mice.
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PMID:Dopamine is required for hyperphagia in Lep(ob/ob) mice. 1080 66

Mice lacking NPY Y1 receptors develop obesity without hyperphagia indicating increased energy storage and/or decreased energy expenditure. Then, we investigated glucose utilization in these animals at the onset of obesity. Fasted NPY Y1 knockouts showed hyperinsulinemia associated with increased whole body and adipose tissue glucose utilization and glycogen synthesis but normal glycolysis. Since leptin modulates NPY actions, we studied whether the lack of NPY Y1 receptor affected leptin-mediated regulation of glucose metabolism. Leptin infusion normalized hyperinsulinemia and glucose turnover. These results suggest a possible mechanism for the development of obesity without hyperphagia via dysfunction in regulatory loops involving NPY, leptin and insulin.
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PMID:Increased insulin concentrations and glucose storage in neuropeptide Y Y1 receptor-deficient mice. 1128 97

Males and females both express estrogen receptor (ER) in white adipose tissue (WAT), and estrogens appear to play an important role in regulating WAT in females. However, the role of ER in male WAT was unclear. In this review, we describe our work, which used wild type (WT) and ERalpha-knockout (alphaERKO) male and female mice to determine the role of ERalpha in regulating WAT and brown adipose tissue (BAT). There were progressive increases in WAT with advancing age in alphaERKO compared with WT males; weights of various WAT depots in alphaERKO males were increased by more than 100% compared with WT controls during adulthood. Conversely, BAT weight was similar in alphaERKO and WT males at all ages. Adipocyte areas and numbers were also increased in WAT from alphaERKO compared with WT males. Compared with WT controls, alphaERKO females also had increases in WAT. The alphaERKO mice also had insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance, similar to humans lacking ERalpha or aromatase. The obesity in alphaERKO males appeared to involve decreased energy expenditure rather than hyperphagia. In summary, ERalpha absence causes adipocyte hyperplasia and hypertrophy in WAT, but not BAT, and is accompanied by insulin resistance and glucose intolerance in both males and females. These results are the first evidence that the estrogen/ERalpha signaling system is critical in female and male WAT deposition, and may have clinical implications.
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PMID:The role of estrogen and estrogen receptor-alpha in male adipose tissue. 1140 4

We report a 43-year-old man who presented diabetic ketoacidosis 1 year after receiving kidney transplantation. He was a recipient of renal transplantation treated with metyl-prednisolone and tacrolimus regimen. The serum level of tacrolimus was 12.4 ng/ml, and he showed hyperphagia before a month of admission. A week before admission, he was aware of polydipsia, polyuria, and general fatigue. He visited our hospital and was found to have severe hyperglycemia (925 mg/dl), significant ketosis and mild metabolic acidosis (pH 7.341), although he had not been diagnosed as diabetes mellitus. He administrated in our hospital, and was treated with insulin for 5 weeks. He was not obese (BMI = 18.2 kg/m(2)) and had no family history of type 2 diabetes. He was finally treated with diet therapy alone. The 24 h urine C-peptide secretion on the third hospital day was low (8.4 microg per day). However, no autoantibodies against pancreatic islets were positive, and his insulin secretion was recovered at discharge suggesting that he was not type 1 diabetes. Although, tacrolimus has been reported to cause or worsen diabetes mellitus, the present case suggests that it could cause severe decrease in insulin secretion which leading to diabetic ketoacidosis in lean subject without previous history of diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Sudden onset of diabetes with ketoacidosis in a patient treated with FK506/tacrolimus. 1187 16

Diabetes mellitus, caused by the malfunction of insulin-dependent glucose and lipid metabolism, presents with the classical triad of symptoms: polydypsia, polyuria, and polyphagia which are often accompanied by chronic fatigue and loss of weight. Complications of diabetes mellitus include retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, and cardiovascular disease. Periodontal diseases are infections affecting the periodontium and resulting in the loss of tooth support. The association between diabetes mellitus and periodontitis has long been discussed with conflicting conclusions. Both of these diseases have a relatively high incidence in the general population (diabetes 1% to 6% and periodontitis 14%) as well as a number of common pathways in their pathogenesis (both diseases are polygenic disorders with some degree of immunoregulatory dysfunction). On the one hand, numerous reports indicate a higher incidence of periodontitis in diabetics compared to healthy controls, while other reports fail to show such a relationship. Clarification of this dilemma is occurring as the diagnostic criteria for periodontitis and diabetes mellitus improve, controlled studies with increased sample sizes are carried out, and the studies take into account major confounding variables that impact on the pathogenesis of both diseases. Current studies tend to support a higher incidence and severity of periodontitis in patients with diabetes mellitus. The overview looks at the bidirectional relationship between periodontitis and diabetes. An analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III data set confirms the previously reported significantly higher prevalence of periodontitis in diabetics than in non-diabetics (17.3% versus 9%). The analysis of the data also shows that the prevalence of diabetes in patients with periodontitis is double that seen in the non-periodontitis patients (12.5% versus 6.3%) and that this difference is also statistically significant. The pathogenesis of the 2 diseases is reviewed with an emphasis on common genetic and immune mechanisms. On the basis of the overview, 2 hypotheses for testing the relationship between periodontitis and diabetes are discussed. The first proposes a direct causal or modifying relationship in which the hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia of diabetes result in metabolic alterations that may then exacerbate bacteria-induced inflammatory periodontitis. The second hypothesis proposes that a fortuitous combination of genes (gene sets) could result in a host who, under the influence of a variety of environmental stressors, could develop either periodontitis or diabetes or both.
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PMID:The relationship between periodontal diseases and diabetes: an overview. 1188 77

Thalidomide is being increasingly used after stem cell transplantation as immunosuppression for patients with chronic graft-versus-host disease, as well as for antiangiogenesis effects in patients with multiple myeloma, brain tumors, leukemia, or other malignancies. The goal of this study was to determine if thalidomide improved the quality of life by virtue of its associated sleep-promoting, anxiety-reducing, antiwasting, and antidiarrheal effects. We therefore studied 28 patients with resistant chronic graft-versus-host disease who were treated with thalidomide (13 patients) or other immunosuppressive drugs (15) and compared them with healthy control subjects (16). All patients completed quality-of-life questionnaires prospectively before beginning regimens of thalidomide or other immunosuppressive drugs and completed similar questionnaires at 3- and 6-month intervals thereafter. The Transplant Symptom Frequency score was similar for healthy control subjects and both groups of patients with chronic graft-versus-host disease, regardless of whether they had received thalidomide or not. Quality of sleep was equally poor in patients who received or did not receive thalidomide. The most common complaint of patients with chronic graft-versus-host disease was fatigue, followed in frequency by overeating. The control group had similar concerns. This pilot study suggests that patients with chronic graft-versus-host disease have a quality of life similar to that of their health care workers, regardless of whether they are treated with thalidomide or other immunosuppressive drug, and that fatigue and overeating are the most common complaints.
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PMID:Thalidomide in chronic graft-versus-host disease after stem cell transplantation: effects on quality of life. 1246 2

Most depressives suffer from weight loss, anorexia and insomnia, while for winter depressives the typical symptoms are weight gain, carbohydrate craving, overeating, oversleeping and extreme lack of energy. It is important to know whether winter depressives differ from most other depressives on measures of energy regulation. In wintertime, we evaluated the rate of oxygen consumption in relationship to neuro-vegetative depressive symptoms in 92 Siberian women. The seated subjects underwent oxyspirography in the mid-morning (1.5 hours after a standard breakfast). It was found that the oxygen consumption rate was similar in non-depressed women (n = 25) and depressed women with non-seasonal depression (n = 27). The comparatively lower values were obtained in women with winter depression (n = 40). This finding supports the suggestion that the behaviour disturbances typical for winter depression may represent a physiological feedback loop to energy conservation.
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PMID:Rate of oxygen consumption in seasonal and non-seasonal depression. 1247 83

Menstruation is a biological phenomenon that has been subject of myths and taboos within and among various cultures. These myths distort the reality surrounding menstruation and create ambivalent feelings about the value and usefulness of this function outside of its necessity as mean of reproduction. Thus studies concerning menstruation need to take into account cultural and psychosocial factors that define the meaning, values and behavior associated with this biological phenomenon. According to several studies, 70% of women experience psychological faintness during this menstrual phase, 40% of them have these symptoms at each menstruation and between 3 to 8% of them suffer severely reacquiring medical support. This entity called premenstrual dysphoric disorder is defined by the presence of several symptoms (distress, tension, irritability, moodiness.) with a significant impairment in work or social functioning beginning during the week before and ending within a few days after the onset of menses. Several studies conducted over the past few years suggested that selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and serotoninergic tricyclic drugs may be more effective than other types of antidepressants in treating PMS symptoms. Two protocols are proposed; a continuous treatment or intermittent use during few days during pre-menstrual and menstrual phase for several cycles. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the prevalence of a potential premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) during one menstrual cycle, in a representative sample of general population of Casablanca, according the DSM IV criteria. On the other hand, a questionnaire, available from the authors, was used to explore socio-demographic data. Among 618 women interviewed, 310 met the criteria of a potential PMDD (50.2%). The mean age of the population with PMDD was 32.2 8 years ranging from 20 to 50 years; 54.8% of them were married, 33.9% of them were single and 66.5% of them had between 1 to 4 children. Two third of them were without a professional activity. During this premenstrual phase the following symptoms were found among the whole sample: marked depressive mood, feeling of hopelessness, or self-depreciation thoughts (77.7%, n=241%); difficulty of concentration (65%, n=201); marked change in appetite, overeating or specific food craving (82.8%, n=256); marked affective lability, with sadness tearful and increased sensitivity to rejection (65.8%, n=204); hypersomnia or insomnia (59.7%, n=185); subjective sense of being overwhelmed or out of control (55.7%, n=172); lethargy, excessive fatigability (91.6%, n=283); physical symptoms including breast tenderness, swelling, headache, joint or muscular pain, and a sensation of bloating and weight gain (81.9%, n=253). The most severe symptoms were fatigue and irritability. On the other hand, 73.9% of the sample had a disturbance in their socio-professional lives as a consequence to the psychological disturbances. Half of these women consulted a physician, mostly a general practitioner. These data are in accordance with the literature, confirming that this disorder is common and has a bad impact on mental health and on quality of life of the women suffering from PMDD.
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PMID:[Assessment of premenstrual dysphoric disorder symptoms: population of women in Casablanca]. 1250 65

Leptin is an adipocyte-secreted hormone that binds hypothalamic receptors and potently decreases food intake. Leptin receptor defects in homozygous mutant Zucker fatty ( fa/fa) rats lead to massive obesity, hyperphagia, decreased energy expenditure, and insulin resistance, while the phenotype of heterozygous ( Fa/fa) lean rats lies between lean ( Fa/Fa) and obese ( fa/fa) rats. Whether heterezygotes exhibit specific changes in lipid metabolism in a diet-responsive manner is not clear. Thus, the specific aim of this study was to test whether the presence of one fa allele modulates lipid metabolism and leptin, and whether these effects are exacerbated by high-fat diet. We demonstrate that the presence of one fa allele significantly increases lipogenesis in adipose tissue assessed by glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) and fatty acid synthase (FAS) activities. FAS is more responsive to high-fat diets than GPDH in Fa/fa rats. Adipose tissue leptin levels are significantly higher in fat pads of Fa/fa compared to Fa/Fa rats. Moreover, Fa/fa rats fed high-fat diet show an additional two-fold increase in leptin levels compared to wild type rats on the same diet. Collectively, these results indicate that the presence of one fa allele increase adipocyte lipogenic enzyme activities, which results in hyperleptinemia concurrent with increased adiposity.
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PMID:Effects of fatty (fa) allele and high-fat diet on adipose tissue leptin and lipid metabolism. 1266 Aug 83


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