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

A young man with severe multiple injuries following a motorcycle accident was admitted with head and mandible fractures, coma, fracture dislocation at C5-C6 resulting in total leg paralysis, partial paralysis of the right arm and intercostal muscles, and closed chest injury with possible pulmonary contusion. On the fourth day he developed fulminating mediastinitis and massive empyema, and was found to have a ruptured esophagus. Recovery became possible with surgical drainage of the pleural cavity and mediastinum, proximal and distal decompression of the esophagus, antimicrobial therapy, irrigation of the pleural cavity, complete intravenous hyperalimentation, and infusions of salt-poor albumin. The patient was discharged after 95 days, and 7 months after injury is neurologically intact except for a partial right wrist drop. This rare esophageal rupture should be suspected in any chest injury patients, especially those characterized by extreme cyanosis, dyspnea, shock, and prostration incompatible with thoracic cage injury.
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PMID:Rupture of the thoracic esophagus from blunt trauma. 59 47

Glucose tolerance and insulin responses have been examined over extended periods in severely obese, but otherwise healthy, subjects. Three significant points emerge from this study. First, it was shown that obese, supposedly ketosis resistant, subjects may deteriorate in a brief time span from a state of normal glucose disposal and adequate or increased insulin responses to insulin-deficient diabetes, culminating in ketoacidosis. Unusually high blood glucose levels complicating the ketoacidosis in two patients suggest hyperosmolarity obesity and added risk factor in severely obese diabetics. It appears that, after long-standing obesity and after years of hyperinsulinemia, a large weight gain due to prolonged overeating may impose an excessive challenge to islet cells of marginal competence. Such an event by itself or a superimposed stress or both may then cause acute insulin deficiency and/or insulin resistance leading to diabetic ketoacidosis. Hyperosmolarity may be exacerbated in the obese with cessation of food intake due to large losses of salt and water. Second, many symptoms and manifestations of hyperphagic obesity are similar to the early functional abnormalities of decompensated diabetes. The advent of the critical phase of uncontrolled diabetes, therefore, fails to alarm the obese patient and may escape timely recognition by the physician. Third, technical and mechanical difficulties due to severe obesity are apt to cause critical delays in therapy. These factors, when added to coexisting hyperosmolarity and ketoacidosis, probably account for the high mortality in these patients.
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PMID:Evolution of diabetic ketoacidosis in gross obesity. 80 48

Cholestasis has been previously described after long-term hyperalimentation in infants. The present case documents the development of cholestasis in an adult after a relatively short period of total parenteral nutrition (TPN), i.e., hyperalimentation. Other causes for cholestasis, such as exogenous or endogenous hepatotoxic agents or allergic type hepatitis, do not offer an adequate explanation for the changes observed in this patient. The changes observed are consistent with the hypothesis that a taurine deficiency would interfere with bile salt conjugation and form a block at the cellular level.
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PMID:Cholestasis in association with short-term parenteral alimentation. 83 73

Dopamine, an ancestral catecholamine, is physiologically natriuretic and vasodilating, thus essentially protecting against hypertension. Its actions are overshadowed by the opposite effects of its main biological partner, norepinephrine, and this is accentuated with aging. Clinical observations combined with molecular biology approaches to catecholamine-synthesizing and catecholamine-metabolizing enzymes and receptors permit the identification of some inborn defects. Subtle changes in the dopamine-norepinephrine balance may account for the enhanced peripheral noradrenergic activity seen in the setting of decreased dopaminergic activity in advanced age. These changes may contribute to the diminished ability of the aged kidney to excrete a salt load, as well as to the finding that systolic blood pressure increases with age in populations with a high, but not in those with a low, intake of salt. The attainment of advanced age in Western societies with adverse lifestyle changes (mental rather than physical stress, excess salt intake, overeating, sedentarism) appears to facilitate the development of hypertension. The adaptation to all the preceding lifestyle changes necessitates an increased dopamine generation, which may initially compensate to maintain appropriate natriuresis and vasodilation since many patients with initial borderline essential hypertension express their sympathetic hyperfunction, in addition to increased norepinephrine release, by excessive dopamine release. However, the progression of hypertension is accompanied by a peripheral dopaminergic deficiency and diminished ability to excrete salt. This may represent an eventual inadequacy of a phylogenetically redundant system resulting in decreased natriuresis and vasodilation and may account for the responsiveness of established chronic hypertension to salt restriction, diuretics, and dopaminomimetic medication.
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PMID:Peripheral dopamine in pathophysiology of hypertension. Interaction with aging and lifestyle. 168 57

The physician, faced with the formidable statistic of one person in the five having hypertension, should be prepared to instruct patients about the role of dietary factors, such as salt, alcohol, and overeating, in the etiology, treatment, and prevention of high blood pressure and to provide counseling and help in making dietary changes. The physician can enlist the aid of a dietitian in all phases of the task.
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PMID:Dietary considerations in hypertension. 723 52

In the energy balance equation, physical activity represents one component of energy expenditure. From various studies it appears that exercise-training does not affect clearly thermogenesis which depends on brown adipose tissue (BAT) activity. In the present work we examine how exercise-training can influence food intake and body weight regulation in relation to BAT thermogenesis. The proton conductance of the uncoupling protein of BAT was examined in male adult Wistar trained 2 h/day for 20 days and compared to that of sedentary (2 h of fasting instead of exercise) or control animals. All animals were provided with separate sources of the 3 macronutrients (protein, fat and carbohydrate) containing an identical percentage of vitamins, salt mixture and cellulose powder. At the end of training, rats were placed at 5 degrees C during 10 days, then during 4 days at 28 degrees C. This condition has been demonstrated to favour and amplify BAT responsiveness to moderate modifications of stimulation. The body weight of trained rats became significantly lower than that of the control and sedentary rats and this difference persisted all throughout the experiment. When placed at 5 degrees C, all rats increased their total ingestion: control rats enhanced fat intake, while sedentary and trained rats enhanced carbohydrate ingestion. When placed at 28 degrees C, all rats had identical total energy and that of the 3 items intakes. BAT proton conductance was about 40% lower in the trained compared with the sedentary plus the control rats. This indicated a lower BAT thermogenic activity in the trained animals. It could be concluded that exercise-training in rats induces negative energy balance; the reduced BAT activity could restrain weight loss and overeating.
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PMID:Exercise-training reduces BAT thermogenesis in rats. 761 Jan 27

Effects of salt loading by drinking 0.9% NaCl solution on the myocardial performance in nondiabetic and diabetic Wistar rats were studied using the isolated working heart apparatus. Body weight and fluid and food intakes of these animals were monitored. Blood pressure and plasma levels of glucose, insulin, cholesterol, and triglycerides were also measured. Diabetes was induced by intravenous injection of streptozotocin (60 mg/kg). Diabetic rats were found to develop myocardial dysfunction at 8 weeks after STZ injection, accompanied by significant increases in food and fluid intakes, slowed body weight gain, hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, and hyperlipidemia but without significant changes in blood pressure. Salt loading did not cause significant changes in any of the parameters studied in nondiabetic rats. However, in streptozotocin-diabetic rats given saline to drink, the impaired myocardial function was significantly improved and was associated with a significant reduction in hyperphagia and hyperlipidemia. Plasma glucose levels significantly decreased at weeks 1-3 but increased to the levels of untreated diabetic animals at weeks 4-7. There was an increase in fluid intake, but neither blood pressure nor plasma insulin levels were significantly affected. It is suggested that the improvements in cardiac function and hyperlipidemia in diabetic rats by salt loading may be related to each other; however, the mechanisms for these effects are not clear but are unlikely to be due to changes in glycemic control.
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PMID:Improvement in cardiac function in streptozotocin-diabetic rats by salt loading. 776 68

To clarify the validity of the health habit index, we evaluated risk of death by health habit index in residents in Aichi Prefecture. Subjects were 7,662 residents aged 40-79 years living in a rural area of Aichi Prefecture who responded to a questionnaire in 1988, that included 12 health habit items on diet, physical activity, rest, mental health, smoking, drinking and regular health check. Data on death and migration in this cohort group was collected from 1990 to 1997. The risk ratios (RRs) of death for all causes, cancer and cardiovascular diseases were estimated by Cox's proportional hazard model. The number of all causes of death, cancer and cardiovascular diseases was 650, 240 and 197, respectively. Proper health habits of adequate but not over eating, regular physical activity, properly managing stress, non-smoking or smoking cessation for one year or more and regular health examinations in men and regular physical activity and non-smoking in women related to lower age-adjusted RR of death for all causes, while smoking cessation of less than one year in men with increased RR. Lower RR of cancer was observed for non-smoking men, and for women who occasionally have enough sleep. Proper health habits on adequate but not overeating, enjoying mealtime, regular physical activity, properly managing stress, moderate drinking (< 2 "go"/day) or occasional heavy drinking and regular health examinations related to lower RR of cardiovascular diseases in men, while regular physical activity related to lower RR in women. Multivariate analysis for the RR of death for all causes showed similar results, except higher RR in the men who avoided excess salt consumption, and decreased RR in the women who occasionally have enough sleep. In conclusion, the present study suggested that regular physical activity is associated with decreased risk from death for all causes, especially for cardiovascular diseases. Health habit index in the present study included various items with or without association to risk for death. It is important to apply this index to health promotion on the basis of its specific characteristic.
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PMID:[Risk of death by health habit index from a cohort study among the residents of a rural area in Aichi, Japan]. 1056 82

Previous analyses have suggested that factors that stimulate the sympathetic nervous system and catecholamine release can trigger acute myocardial infarction. The wake-up time, Mondays, winter season, physical exertion, emotional upset, overeating, lack of sleep, cocaine, marijuana, anger, and sexual activity are some of the more common triggers. Certain natural disasters such as earthquakes and blizzards have also been associated with an increase in cardiac events. Certain unnatural triggers may play a role including the Holiday season. Holiday season cardiac events peak on Christmas and New Year. A number of hypotheses have been raised to explain the increase in cardiac events during the holidays, including overeating, excessive use of salt and alcohol, exposure to particulates, from fireplaces, a delay in seeking medical help, anxiety or depression related to the holidays, and poorer staffing of health care facilities at this time. War has been associated with an increase in cardiac events. Data regarding an increase in cardiac events during the 9/11 terrorist attack have been mixed. Understanding the cause of cardiovascular triggers will help in developing potential therapies.
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PMID:Natural and unnatural triggers of myocardial infarction. 1651 49

Kidney transplantation has a powerful influence on the nutritional status of patients with end-stage renal disease. How to control diet varies in different races and periods after kidney transplantation. In general, malnutrition in patients with end-stage renal disease slowly recovers after kidney transplantation; however, several dietary interventions are required throughout the post transplant course. While hyperalimentation is warranted to control the hypercatabolic state immediately following the transplant operation, dietary restriction of protein, salt and calories is recommended to prevent life-style related diseases, which affect patient and graft survival. No consensus on dietary control in kidney transplant recipients has been reached yet. Herein, we present the nutritional status of Japanese kidney allograft recipients, discuss some unresolved nutritional problems and review the recent literature.
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PMID:Diet therapy after kidney transplantation: a comparative debate between Japan and western countries. 1736 16


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