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)

The continuous infusion of a concentrated, high-caloric glucose solution intravenously into underfed or 3-day-starved rats at a rate of 390 kcal/kg/day results in hypophosphatemia, muscular weakness, neuropathy, lethargy, occasional convulsions, and eventual coma and death. This sequence of events is not observed in similarly infused normal rats. It is a model of a fatal parenteral nutrition syndrome which occurs in undernourished patients. Rats in coma had an eightfold increase in the blood glucose level, a 1.6-fold increase in serum osmolarity, a 16% to 20( decrease in brain water content, and normal blood ketones. A lag phase of at least 8 hr and often 12 to 24 hr occurred following the start of the hyperosmotic glucose infusion before the blood glucose began to accumulate progressively and the syndrome developed. The onset of the syndrome could be prevented by the administration of large amounts of insulin required to keep the blood sugar from exceeding 250 mg/dl. Thus the rat model of the fatal hyperalimentation syndrome is a form of hyperglycemic, hyperosmolar, nonketotic coma caused by brain dehydration.
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PMID:Weakness, neuropathy, and coma following total parenteral nutrition in underfed or starved rats: relationship to blood hyperosmolarity and brain water loss. 21 10

The pathogenesis of the rare hypernatremia, usually described in the literature as "neurogenic" or "essential" hypernatremia, consists of defective thirst mechanism either alone or in combination with impaired osmoregulation of ADH release. As etiology, disturbances of the neoplastic, vascular and degenerative type and malformations in the hypothalamic area are known. In patients with the hypodipsia-hypernatremia syndrome, dysfunction of the anterior pituitary lobe, obesity, abnormal regulation of body temperature, psychomotor retardation and episodic muscular weakness are frequently encountered as additional abnormalities. A 6-year-old patient is described with hypodipsia-hypernatremia syndrome manifest for 3 years. Besides hypernatremia, hypodipsia and the relative insensitivity of the osmoreceptors regulating ADH release, elevated body temperature, polyphagia and obesity, partial hypothalamic-hypophyseal dysfunction, lethargy and psychomotor retardation are the principal findings. An inflammatory lesion or one occupying an intracranial space was not demonstrable until now. Under forced water intake and hypocaloric diet the patient has progressed well with nearly complete normalization of the hypernatremia, body temperature and obesity.
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PMID:Hypodipsia-hypernatremia syndrome. 42 94

Various classes of antidepressant drugs with distinct pharmacologic actions are differentially effective in the treatment of classic melancholic depression--characterized by pathological hyperarousal and atypical depression--associated with lethargy, hypersomnia, and hyperphagia. All antidepressant agents exert their therapeutic efficacy only after prolonged administration. In situ hybridization histochemistry was used to examine in rats the effects of short-term (2 weeks) and long-term (8 weeks) administration of 3 different classes of activating antidepressant drugs which tend to be preferentially effective in treating atypical depressions, on the expression of central nervous system genes thought to be dysregulated in major depression. Daily administration (5 mg/kg, i.p.) of the selective 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HT) reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine, the selective alpha 2-adrenergic receptor antagonist idazoxan, and the nonspecific monoamine oxidase A and B inhibitor phenelzine increased tyrosine hydroxylase mRNA levels by 70-150% in the locus coeruleus after 2 weeks of drug and by 71-115% after 8 weeks. The 3 drugs decreased corticotropin-releasing hormone mRNA levels by 30-48% in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus. The decreases occurred at 8 weeks but not at 2 weeks. No consistent change in steroid hormone receptor mRNA levels was seen in the hippocampus with the 3 drugs, but fluoxetine and idazoxan increased the level of mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) mRNA, respectively, after 8 weeks of drug administration. Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) mRNA levels in the anterior pituitary and plasma adrenocorticotropic-hormone (ACTH) levels were not altered after 2 or 8 weeks of drug treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The antidepressants fluoxetine, idazoxan and phenelzine alter corticotropin-releasing hormone and tyrosine hydroxylase mRNA levels in rat brain: therapeutic implications. 135 83

CRH has been shown to produce increased locomotion, arousal, and anorexia in experimental animals. A deficiency of CRH in patients with seasonal affective disorder could contribute to the characteristic lethargy, hypersomnia, and hyperphagia characteristic of this illness. To test this hypothesis, we studied basal plasma ACTH and cortisol levels and their responses to ovine CRH in controls and depressed patients with seasonal affective disorder before and after light treatment. Untreated seasonal affective disorder patients showed normal basal plasma cortisol and ACTH levels, but their responses to CRH tended to be delayed and were significantly reduced. When patients were studied after 9 days of light treatment, a significant increase in plasma ACTH and cortisol responses to CRH was observed. Our findings in untreated patients with seasonal affective disorder are similar to those in patients with Cushing's disease 2 weeks after transsphenoidal hypophysectomy, who uniformly show sustained suppression of their CRH neuron because of long-standing hypercortisolism. This findings suggest that the CRH neuron of patients with seasonal affective disorder is hypofunctional. We postulate that the clinical symptomatology in patients with seasonal affective disorder could reflect deficient activity of this important arousal-producing system.
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PMID:Abnormal pituitary-adrenal responses to corticotropin-releasing hormone in patients with seasonal affective disorder: clinical and pathophysiological implications. 185 Nov 85

Similar symptomatology has been described for both seasonal affective disorder (SAD) and atypical depression. For example, hyperphagia, hypersomnia, and intense lethargy are common to both, suggesting that they might be subtypes of the same disorder. If SAD and atypical depression are different manifestations of the same underlying pathophysiology, treatment effective for one might also benefit the other. Bright artificial lights (2500 lux, 6-8 a.m. and p.m.) were significantly less effective in treating eight patients diagnosed as having atypical depression without a seasonal pattern than 25 SAD patients. Differential treatment outcome suggests that SAD and atypical depression are separate disorders.
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PMID:Is seasonal affective disorder a variant of atypical depression? Differential response to light therapy. 224 88

Acromegaly was diagnosed in 14 middle-aged to old cats of mixed breeding. Thirteen (93%) of the cats were male and one was female. The earliest clinical signs in the 14 cats included polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, all of which were associated with untreated diabetes mellitus. All developed severe insulin resistance within a few months; peak insulin dosages required to control severe hyperglycemia ranged from 20 to 130 U per day. Other clinical findings weeks to months after diagnosis included enlargement of one or more organs (e.g., liver, heart, kidneys, and tongue) (n = 14), cardiomyopathy (n = 13), increase in body size and weight gain (n = 8), nephropathy associated with azotemia and clinical signs of renal failure (n = 7), degenerative arthropathy (n = 6), and central nervous system signs (i.e., circling and seizures) caused by enlargement of the pituitary tumor (n = 2). The diagnosis of acromegaly was confirmed by demonstration of extremely high basal serum growth hormone concentrations (22 to 131 micrograms/l) in all cats. Computerized tomography disclosed a mass in the region of the pituitary gland and hypothalamus in five of the six cats in which it was performed. Two cats were treated by cobalt radiotherapy followed by administration of a somatostatin analogue (octreotide), whereas two cats were treated with octreotide alone. Treatment had little to no effect in decreasing serum GH concentrations in any of the cats. Eleven of the 14 cats were euthanized or died four to 42 months (median survival time, 20.5 months) after the onset of acromegaly because of renal failure (n = 2), congestive heart failure (n = 1), concomitant renal failure and congestive heart failure (n = 3), progressive neurologic signs (n = 2), persistent anorexia and lethargy of unknown cause (n = 1), the owner's unwillingness to treat the diabetes mellitus (n = 1), or unknown causes (n = 1). Results of necropsy examination in ten cats revealed a large pituitary acidophil adenoma (n = 10), marked left ventricular and septal hypertrophy (n = 7), dilated cardiomyopathy (n = 1), arthropathy affecting the shoulder, elbow, or stifle (n = 5), and glomerulopathy characterized by expansion of the mesangial matrix and variable periglomerular fibrosis (n = 10).
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PMID:Acromegaly in 14 cats. 240 66

Two adolescent boys with Kearns-Sayre syndrome (progressive external ophthalmoplegia, heart block, elevated CSF protein, and ragged-red muscle fibers) developed lethargy, increasing somnolence, polydipsia, polyphagia, and polyuria after a brief course of steroid therapy. Both had hyperglycemia and acidosis. Nonketotic, lactic acidosis was present in one and ketosis in the other. Severe respiratory failure developed, and both patients died. Postmortem revealed fatty infiltration of the pancreas in addition to a diffuse spongiform encephalopathy.
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PMID:Fatal metabolic acidosis, hyperglycemia, and coma after steroid therapy for Kearns-Sayre syndrome. 370 1

This paper presents the clinical and metabolic findings in two young boys with long-standing Kearns-Sayre syndrome. Following short exposure to oral prednisone, both boys developed lethargy, increasing somnolence, polydipsia, polyphagia, and polyuria. Both presented in the emergency room with profound coma, hypotension, severe hyperglycemia, and acidosis. Nonketotic lactic acidosis was present in one and ketosis without a known serum lactate level was present in the other. Respiratory failure rapidly ensued and both patients expired in spite of efforts at resuscitation. We believe these two cases represent a newly described and catastrophic metabolic-endocrine failure in the Kearns-Sayre syndrome.
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PMID:Hyperglycemic acidotic coma and death in Kearns-Sayre syndrome. 370 9

Thirteen cats with diabetes mellitus were evaluated. Clinical signs included polydipsia, polyuria, polyphagia, lethargy, and weight loss. Results of physical examination included obesity, hepatomegaly, mild seborrhea sicca, muscle wasting, and dehydration. One cat walked plantigrade and was suspected of having a diabetic neuropathy. Persistent hyperglycemia, glucosuria, high liver enzyme activities, hypercholesterolemia, hyperproteinemia, and low electrolyte concentrations were the common laboratory findings. In 3 cats diabetes mellitus developed after megestrol acetate therapy; 2 of these cats required only temporary insulin treatment. In a 3rd cat, which had no history of receiving diabetogenic drug therapy, remission of diabetes mellitus also was observed. Serum insulin and plasma glucose concentrations were determined in 6 cats after administration of an intermediate-acting insulin (isophane insulin) and in 3 cats after administration of a long-acting insulin (protamine zinc insulin). The insulin concentration peaked 2 to 6 hours after the injection of intermediate-acting insulin and 6 to 12 hours after the injection of long-acting insulin. The lowest glucose concentration was recorded 4 to 8 hours after injection of intermediate-acting insulin, and 6 to 12 hours after injection of long-acting insulin. It was concluded that, although insulin therapy must be adjusted to the individual, the diabetic cat usually requires twice-daily administration of isophane insulin; however, the protamine zinc insulin can be given once daily for satisfactory control.
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PMID:Insulin therapy in cats with diabetes mellitus. 629 64

Psychopharacologist have had a longstanding interest in identifying a depressive subtype which selectively benefits from monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs). A superior rate of improvement with MAOI treatment might help delineate a depressive subgroup with pathophysiology different from other depressive syndromes. Research is described which indicates that patients with reactivity of mood, as well as two of four associated features (hypersomnia, overeating, lethargy, and rejection sensitivity), may have a preferential response to phenelzine as compared with imipramine or placebo. Preliminary data are presented to suggest that patients with reactive mood and only one associated feature may have a preferential response rate to phenelzine compared to imipramine and placebo. Data on patients with reactive mood but no associated features are insufficient at this point to draw any conclusions.
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PMID:Defining the boundaries of atypical depression. 637 82


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