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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study was undertaken to determine the influence of
hyperphagia
on the adaptive changes occurring in the rat jejunal mucosa as a result of intestinal resection. One group of resected rats was subjected to pair feeding with a sham-operated population, whilst another group was nourished ad libitum. The animals which ate ad libitum developed hypertrophy of the mucosa which was accompanied by increased
glucose
absorption in vivo without changes in enzyme levels. These alterations were much less pronounced in the pair-fed group of resected animals, a finding that indicates that the adaptive changes are at least partially influenced by increased luminal nutrition.
...
PMID:The influence of food intake on the development of structural and functional adaptation following ileal resection in the rat. 115 Jan 17
Young, adult, female Sprague-Dawley rats were fasted for 18 h and then given a single s.c. injection of alloxan (10 mg/100 g body weight) which promptly induced a severe state of diabetes. The animals were killed at frequent time intervals during the 7-day study period in order to record the dynamic changes in their capacity for adrenal steroidogenesis and secretion as measured by fluorometric determination of their circulating corticosterone (Cmpd B) levels as well as by thin layer chromatographic identification of cortical lipid moieties used for steroidogenesis. In addition to severe polydypsia, polyuria and
polyphagia
, these animals manifested super-normal
glucose
, triglycerides, free fatty acids and cholesterol in their blood, severe hepatic steatosis, adrenal hyperplasia with lipid depletion from the mineralocorticoid producing z. glomerulosa, thymus gland involution and complete degranulation of their insulin producing islet beta cells. Despite an initial high output of Cmpd B and despite progressive cortical hyperplasia, the serum Cmpd B levels became reduced and many of the animals succumbed suddenly, due most likely to inadequate adrenocortical steroidogenesis. Adrenocortical lipids showed a progressive accumulation of free fatty acids, di- and triglycerides, suggesting that some lipid enzymatic defect could be responsible for the lack of conversion of these lipid entities essential for proper steroidogenesis.
...
PMID:Adrenal glandular lipids and circulating corticosterone in severely diabetic rats. 117 54
Parasagittal knife cuts through the perifornical hypothalamus either medial or lateral to the fornix produced
hyperphagia
and obesity and altered the rat's ingestive responses to dilute
glucose
solutions. The lateral knife cut rats drank less dilute
glucose
solution under both nondeprived and food deprived conditions and displayed less of a feeding suppressive response to
glucose
ingestion compared to controls. The lateral cut rats were also deficient in their feeding response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia, although their altered sensitivity to
glucose
and insulin did not appear to be causally related. The medial knife cuts decreased the responsivity to
glucose
, but less so than the lateral cuts, and did not alter the ingestive response to insulin. Both the medial and lateral knife cuts did not appear to change the rat's responsivity to concentrated blucose solutions. The neuroanatomical and functional nature of the disorder responsible for these effects and its relationship to the hyper-phagia-obesity syndrome are discussed.
...
PMID:Effects of hypothalamic knife cuts on the ingestive responses to glucose and insulin. 119
Hepatic-portal infusions of small or large flucose loads in the rabbit had little or no stimulating effect on postinfusion food intake. However, marked differential changes in appetite were observed when small and large
glucose
loads were infused into the duodenum. The satiating effect of small
glucose
loads contrasted sharply with an unusually high increase in food intake triggered by the infusions of larger amounts of
glucose
into the duodenum. The results are interpreted in terms of a possible involvement of the enteroinsular mechanism in the regulation of food intake. This mechanism is bypassed and its influence on food intake eliminated when
glucose
is infused directly into the portal circulation. The positive relationship between large amounts of alimentary carbohydrates and
overeating
is seen as a factor that may actively promote the development of obesity and diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Satiety and hunger induced by small and large duodenal loads of isotonic glucose. 121 47
Male rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions shortly after weaning in the ventromedial (VMN) and dorsomedial (DMN) hypothalamic nuclei, respectively. A third group of rats served as sham-operated controls. The animals were subjected to intragastric preloading with 33% d-
glucose
and egg-white solutions and a 33% corn-oil suspension, and ad libitum feeding was assessed hourly for the first 7 hr after preloading. The pattern of food-intake depression was similar in all groups but the quantitative greatest depression was found in the DMN rats. The response of these three groups of animals to a diet diluted with 20% alpha cell, a nonnutritive bulker, showed an initial failure to meter calories by both VMN and DMN rats which, however, was compensated for during the remainder of the 24-hr test period. In response to a 50%
glucose
-chow mixture, both VMN and DMN rats, as well as the controls, showed the same pattern and behaved like mature dynamic hyperphagic rats inasmuch as they did not eat more of this mix than of the standard diet. After a 48-hr fast, both VMN and DMN rats showed refeeding hypophagia rather than
hyperphagia
. The data suggest that Panksepp's contention that the VMN in the mature rat is involved in long-term satiety regulation may be extended to the weanling rat with VMN destruction. Thus, this controlling role appears established early in ontogeny.
...
PMID:Food intake of weanling rats with lesions in the ventromedial and dorsomedial hypothalamic nuclei in response to intragastric loading and caloric density manipulation. 122 96
Obesity is one of the most common prosperity diseases. As a consequence of this disease there is a decrease in the expectation of life. Obesity is bascially caused by
overeating
. The low-caloric reducing diets are differentiated into a low-fat and high-carbohydrate form, and into a carbohydrate-free and high-fat diet. The metabolic advantages and the disadvantages of these two forms of low-caloric diets are discussed with respect to starvation metabolism. It is assumed that without ketoacidosis, at least 100-140 g
glucose
per day are required to meet the energetic demands of the central nervous system. Since the conversion rate of protein to
glucose
is about 2:1, during a carbohydrate-free diet about 200-260 g of protein per day would be necessary to meet the
glucose
requirements of the organism. As such a high-protein supply with food is almost impossible, ketogenesis in the liver must take place as a sort of "glucose-sparing mechanism". Only under these conditions, the otherwise extreme nitrogen catabolism can be avoided during an almost carbohydrate-free diet. However, using a fat-free (600 kcal) diet it is possible to furnish the
glucose
requirements of the central nervous system by the food supply. Therefore, a compensatory ketoacidosis is not required. Additionally, the fat-free diet does not contain cholesterol. In this way, the hypercholesterinemia which is a common feature in obesity is favourably influenced by the absence of foods of animal origin. Therefore, within a short period a marked decrease in serum cholesterol concentration results by the high-carbohydrate diet. The same is true for the concentration of free fatty acids and serum triglycerides. It is concluded that the high-carbohydrate low-caloric diet is suited best for reduction of body weight.
...
PMID:[Nutrition physiological aspects in the treatment of obesity]. 125 23
The organization, activities and experience of Porphyria Reference Centre of the Institute of Hematology in Poland is shown. A total of 214 families with acute hepatic porphyria were collected. The family studies in search of latent cases were conducted, and measures for preventing the disease attacks were taken. The therapy of the attacks consisted in
glucose
and heme arginate infusions, and
hyperalimentation
in the patients is stressed. The incidence rate of porphyrias in Poland, according to the material collected at the Institute of Hematology is 1:15,000 inhabitants, however, it is suggested that the true value is much higher.
...
PMID:[Organization and results of studies on acute hepatic porphyrias in Poland]. 129 80
Early reports associated Candida parapsilosis with endocarditis in intravenous narcotic addicts. More recently, this species has emerged as an important nosocomial pathogen, with clinical manifestations including fungemia, endocarditis, endophthalmitis, septic arthritis, and peritonitis, all of which usually occur in association with invasive procedures or prosthetic devices. Outbreaks of C. parapsilosis infections have been caused by contamination of
hyperalimentation
solutions, intravascular pressure monitoring devices, and ophthalmic irrigating solution. Experimental studies have generally shown that C. parapsilosis is less virulent than Candida albicans or Candida tropicalis. However, characteristics of C. parapsilosis that may relate to its increasing occurrence in nosocomial settings include frequent colonization of the skin, particularly the subungual space, and an ability to proliferate in
glucose
-containing solutions, with a resultant increase in adherence to synthetic materials. Recently developed molecular techniques may facilitate the continued exploration of the epidemiology and pathogenesis of C. parapsilosis infections.
...
PMID:Candida parapsilosis: epidemiology, pathogenicity, clinical manifestations, and antimicrobial susceptibility. 801 46
Antagonism of the histamine (H2) receptor reduces antinociception induced by naloxone-resistant foot-shock, naloxone-sensitive foot-shock, and morphine with a rank-order potency similar to their H2 antagonism. The antimetabolic
glucose
analog 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DG) produces antinociceptive and hyperphagic responses that dissociate from each other and are in part mediated by opioid systems. The present study determined the effects of the brain-penetrating H2 receptor antagonist zolantidine (ZOL) on 2DG antinociception on the tail-flick and jump tests, as well as on 2DG
hyperphagia
, in rats. ZOL (0.01-1 mg/kg) potentiated the antinociceptive responses induced by a moderate (450 mg/kg) dose of 2DG, but had lesser effects upon antinociception induced by a lower (100 mg/kg) 2DG dose. ZOL itself slightly increased jump thresholds, but not tail-flick latencies. Combinations of ZOL and 2DG produced supraadditive antinociception, even though ZOL failed to significantly shift the 2DG dose-response curve to the left. In contrast, ZOL failed to alter basal intake or 2DG
hyperphagia
, supporting previous evidence implicating the H1 but not the H2 receptor in these effects. These results further dissociate the antinociceptive and hyperphagic effects of 2DG, and also support previous results indicating both pro- and antinociceptive roles for H2 receptors.
...
PMID:Potentiation of 2-deoxy-D-glucose antinociception, but not hyperphagia by zolantidine, a histamine (H2) receptor antagonist. 134 37
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a major hypothalamic peptide which is implicated in the regulation of energy balance and in the activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary adrenal axis. This study aimed primarily to determine the effects on regional hypothalamic NPY levels, of catabolism and weight loss induced in rats by the synthetic glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, injected daily at a dose of 0.4 mg/kg for 7 days. NPY concentrations were significantly raised in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) of male Wistar rats (45%, p = 0.009; n = 10) compared with saline-injected controls (n = 10). Body weight (p less than 0.001) and food intake (p less than 0.001) were significantly reduced, plasma insulin concentrations were increased (p less than 0.001), but there was no change in
glucose
concentrations. Chronic dexamethasone treatment did not cause the marked NPY increases in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) and other hypothalamic regions which have been observed in other catabolic states causing weight loss. One possible explanation is the high insulin levels induced by dexamethasone, which may have prevented compensatory
hyperphagia
by suppressing an increase in hypothalamic NPYergic activity. We also examined the acute effects of a single dexamethasone injection on regional hypothalamic levels, to determine whether the drug had a direct action separate from that due to sustained weight loss. In the acute study, groups of rats (n = 7) were examined at 4 h after a single injection of dexamethasone or saline. NPY concentrations were significantly increased in the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA), (60%, p = 0.008) when compared with saline-injected controls, but there was no change in body weight or
glucose
or insulin concentrations during the 4h interval. Altered transport or release of NPY in the lateral hypothalamic area may be a result of acute feedback regulation by glucocorticoids on the hypothalamus.
...
PMID:The effect of dexamethasone on neuropeptide Y concentrations in specific hypothalamic regions. 140 50
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