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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pregnant Rockland-Swiss (R-S) albino mice consumed significantly more food and water and gained significantly more weight between gestation days 8-17 compared to virgin R-S females maintained in isolation for a comparable period. Postpartum (days 1-10) patterns of ingestion and weight change among thelectomized (nipple-deprived) mouse dams provided with young did not differ significantly from those of virgin animals without young. Sham- and nonoperated dams received suckling stimulation from young and consumed about 100% more food than thelectomized or virgin females (Experiment 1). Pregnancy concurrent with lactation does not increase further the hyperphagic response of female mice. Nipple presence is the principle regulator of postpartum
hyperphagia
in lactating and simultaneously pregnant-lactating mouse dams (Experiment 2).
Physiol Behav 1992
Sep
PMID:Consummatory behaviors and weight regulation in pregnant, lactating, and pregnant-lactating mice. 140 9
The historical and clinical features and the haematological and biochemical changes in 126 cats with hyperthyroidism are described; 125 of the cats were domestic short- or longhaired, and one was a chinchilla. There were 62 males and 64 females with a mean age of 13.0 years. The duration of signs ranged from two days to two years with a mean of 5.4 months. The historical and clinical features were weight loss,
polyphagia
, polyuria/polydipsia, tachycardia, hyperactivity, diarrhoea, respiratory abnormalities, other cardiac abnormalities, skin lesions, vomiting, moderately raised temperature, decreased activity, decreased appetite, congestive cardiac failure, haematuria and intermittently decreased appetite. Goitre was palpable in 123 cats. The serum total thyroxine concentrations of the cats were more than three standard deviations above the mean of the reference range. Serum total tri-iodothyronine concentrations ranged from 0.78 to 14.96 nmol/litre and were within the reference range in 11 of the cats. Mild hyperthyroidism was a much commoner cause of high normal or marginally above normal thyroid hormone concentrations than severe, concurrent, non-thyroidal illness. Other common biochemical changes were increased of serum alanine aminotransferase, urea, aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase and lactate dehydrogenase. There were minimal changes in the red cell parameters. Leucocyte changes showed two trends: a mature neutrophilia, either with or without an accompanying leucocytosis often in association with a lymphopenia, or an eosinophilia, either with or without a lymphocytosis.
Vet Rec 1992
Sep
19
PMID:Historical, clinical and laboratory features of 126 hyperthyroid cats. 141 11
Prognostic indices derived from available physiological data (SAPS), complex nutritional and biochemical tests (PNI), grip strength and serum albumin were calculated in 16 critically ill patients receiving intravenous nutrition over a six week period. The aim was to compare these independently derived prognostic indices, to assess their response to feeding, and to determine suitability for use in Irish intensive care units. Mean SAPS (7.6 +/- 0.92), PNI (3.1 +/- 0.29), serum albumin (30.3 +/- 1.03 g/l) and grip strength (17.9 +/- 1.3%) were all suggestive of an "at risk" group. Significant associations were found between the accepted SAPS index and both PNI (r = 0.6, p < 0.001, n = 35) and grip strength (r = -0.68, p < 0.001, n = 44) but not with serum albumin. No consistent improvement was seen in response to feeding in any of the derived indices. The close correlation between prognostic indices derived from either physiological, nutritional or grip strength data in this study and the failure of prognostic indices to improve during
hyperalimentation
would support a common mechanism, e.g. endogenous mediators, for metabolic and physiological disturbance in critical illness. It suggests that the role of
hyperalimentation
is supportive rather than therapeutic and re-iterates the importance of managing underlying disease processes. Simple grip strength may be a useful alternative to complex nutritional indices.
Ir J Med Sci 1992
Sep
PMID:The relationship between a nutritional index and acute physiology score in critical illness. 142 79
A case of Torulopsis glabrata osteomyelitis of the thoracic spine producing spinal cord compression and myelopathy is reported. The patient displayed several of the predisposing factors to T. glabrata infection, including diabetes mellitus, a history of abdominal surgery, and intravenous catheterization with
hyperalimentation
. The patient was successfully managed with surgical decompression, debridement, and curettage of the affected bone, postoperative immobilization, and systemic amphotericin B therapy. Her pain was relieved, spinal cord function recovered, and the vertebrae healed uneventfully. T. glabrata osteomyelitis is a rare and unpredictably progressive infection. This case demonstrates that it requires prompt therapy and close observation.
J Spinal Disord 1992
Sep
PMID:Torulopsis glabrata vertebral osteomyelitis. 152 Sep 98
Infiltration is a frequent complication of intravenous therapy using peripheral venous lines in neonatal patients. In a randomized trial of two catheter materials, Vialon (Becton Dickinson) and Teflon (DuPont), we studied 19 putative risk factors for infiltration, including 11 infusates, in 772 peripheral venous lines in patients aged 1 to 67 days. The best-fit Cox regression model identified six significant predictors of infiltration (P less than .05): catheter material, age, anatomic insertion site,
hyperalimentation
, and use of furosemide and dopamine. For the subsample of patients weighing less than or equal to 1500 g, a second Cox regression model identified time spent inserting the catheter and the number of insertion attempts as additional significant predictors. These multivariate models showed that Vialon catheter material reduced the risk of infiltration by 18% (95% CI, 1% to 32% reduction) in the total sample and by 35% (95% CI, 15% to 50% reduction) in the higher risk low-weight (less than or equal to 1500 g) subsample.
South Med J 1992
Sep
PMID:Infiltration during intravenous therapy in neonates: comparison of Teflon and Vialon catheters. 152 47
Somatostatin, gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) and gastrin were measured in the stomach of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes, insulinoma-bearing rats and their respective controls. Rats injected with streptozotocin exhibited
hyperphagia
, insulinopenia and severe hyperglycemia. Stomach weights, and the concentrations and total amounts of GRP and gastrin in the stomach, were similar to nondiabetic control rats. The concentration of somatostatin in the stomach of diabetic rats was 25% greater, but the total stomach content of somatostatin was similar to that of control rats. Insulinoma-bearing rats exhibited
hyperphagia
, hyperinsulinemia and hypoglycemia. Concentrations of GRP and gastrin in the stomach were 72% and 19% lower, respectively, than in control rats. Despite 45% greater stomach weight, the total stomach content of GRP was 61% lower. Stomach concentrations of somatostatin, and total stomach contents of somatostatin and gastrin, were similar in insulinoma-bearing and control rats. The results demonstrate abnormalities in the stomach concentrations of regulatory peptides in rats with diabetes and insulinoma. These abnormalities are not attributable to changes in food intake alone, suggesting specific effects of these metabolic diseases on gastric regulatory peptides and gastric function.
J Nutr 1991
Sep
PMID:Somatostatin, gastrin-releasing peptide and gastrin in the stomach of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes and insulinoma. 167 27
The Prader-Willi (PWS) and Angelman syndromes (AS) share the same apparent cytogenetic and molecular lesions of 15q11-13 and yet exhibit distinct clinical phenotypes. The etiology of PWS or AS appears to depend on the parental origin of the aberrant chromosome 15. Substantial clinical overlap has not been reported between deletion-positive PWS and AS patients. In the present study, we report the clinical, cytogenetic, and molecular findings in three AS patients. The first patient is a mentally retarded woman with a visible deletion of 15q11-13 with typical craniofacial, behavioral, and neurologic changes of AS. This patient is hyperphagic, and she is moderately obese for her height. Her hands and feet are small. These manifestations are more characteristic of PWS and not of AS. The molecular studies showed deletions of maternal origin for five distal PWCR loci. The most proximal locus, D15S18, was not deleted. These findings are identical to those found in our third AS patient who does not have any PWS features. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of concurrence of
hyperphagia
with consequent obesity and the AS phenotype in a patient with a del 15(q11-13) of maternal origin. These clinical findings suggest that overlap in the symptoms of PWS and AS can occur. Our second AS patient presents with atypical molecular findings in that he cannot be classed into any of the three proposed sub-groups of AS patients and may be representative of a fourth sub-group of AS patients.
Am J Med Genet 1991
Sep
15
PMID:Molecular and clinical overlap of Angelman and Prader-Willi syndrome phenotypes. 168 91
1. Idazoxan (1, 3, 10 mg kg-1, i.p.) produced a significant increase in food and water intake in freely feeding rats during the daylight phase. 2. The more selective and specific alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists, RX811059 (0.3, 1, 3 mg kg-1, i.p.) and RX821002 (0.3, 1, 3 mg kg-1, i.p.), did not produce
hyperphagia
in rats, however, the highest dose produced a significant increase in water intake. 3. The peripherally acting alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonist, L-659,066 (1, 3, 10 mg kg-1, i.p.), did not affect food intake in the 4 h following injection, but the highest dose (10 mg kg-1), produced a large increase in water intake. 4. These results indicate that alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists may increase water intake by a peripherally mediated mechanism. 5. The lack of effect RX811059 and RX821002 on food intake contrasts with the large dose-related increases induced by idazoxan and suggests that the hyperphagic effects of idazoxan are not due to alpha 2-adrenoceptor blockade but may instead reflect its affinity for a non-adrenoceptor site, a property not shared by the other alpha 2-antagonists.
Br J Pharmacol 1991
Sep
PMID:The effects of idazoxan and other alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists on food and water intake in the rat. 168 7
Ninety-one pancreatic injuries, 47 from blunt trauma, were reviewed with respect to management principles stressed in qi previous reviews. The pancreatic complication rate was 25%. Blunt injury was suspected preoperatively in only 30%. Even short-term observation led to morbidity. Operations done more than 6 hours after admission had a higher complication rate (45%) than those done less than 6 hours after admission (18%). Penrose drainage without a sump was not associated with increased complications. Distal pancreatectomy was done 32 times; splenectomy was done in only 18 patients. Individual duct ligation was rarely done and did not result in a high fistula rate. Pancreatic stump oversew with nonabsorbable suture was associated with a higher rate of pancreatic complications than absorbable suture (58% vs 30%). Only 56% of patients receiving distal pancreatectomy required
hyperalimentation
. Postoperative serum amylase values were not useful, and amylase values from drainage fluid predicted complications only when they were above 100,000 U/L. Details of pancreatic trauma management are less important than early operation in minimizing morbidity.
Arch Surg 1990
Sep
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of pancreatic injuries. An analysis of management principles. 169 47
Central and lateral hypothalamic concentrations of 9 regulatory peptides implicated in the control of feeding behaviour were measured in corpulent (cp/cp) JCR:LA-cp rats which develop spontaneous obesity, hyperinsulinaemia and hyperlipidaemia, and in lean (+/?) controls. In female cp/cp rats, central hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY), neurotensin, somatostatin and substance P were significantly lower (p less than 0.02) than in lean female controls. Following food restriction with a 16% reduction in body weight, these differences were apparently reversed and there were also significant rises in the lateral hypothalamic concentrations of neurotensin and of galanin. The other 4 peptides examined (bombesin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, neuromedin B and vasoactive intestinal peptide) did not differ significantly between cp/cp and lean females, either fed freely or food-restricted. Male cp/cp rats showed no significant differences from lean males in central or lateral hypothalamic concentrations of any of the 9 peptides. NPY and galanin are powerful and specific central appetite stimulants, whereas neurotensin, substance P and somatostatin inhibit feeding when injected centrally. Disturbances in these putative appetite-regulating peptides may be involved in the
hyperphagia
and other hypothalamic abnormalities in this spontaneous obesity syndrome. The apparent absence of differences between the male corpulent and lean groups may relate to sexual dimorphism of the syndrome, which is more marked in the females.
Diabetes Res 1990
Sep
PMID:Hypothalamic regulatory peptide disturbances in the spontaneously obese JCR: LA-corpulent rat. 172 Mar 64
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