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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute renal insufficiency after cardiopulmonary bypass can lead to a significant morbidity from fluid overload and electrolyte disturbance, impede pulmonary gas exchange, and postpone weaning from mechanical ventilation. The limitations placed on free
water
intake result in severe restriction of nutrition while diuretic therapy causes electrolyte imbalance. Artificial renal support either in the form of peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis may be complicated by sepsis and hemodynamic instability. We reviewed our experience with the use of continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration, an extracorporeal technique for removal of solutes, toxins, and
water
in critically ill patients with cardiac failure complicated by acute renal insufficiency and hemodynamic instability after cardiopulmonary bypass. Ten infants and children with renal insufficiency caused by low cardiac output had continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration instituted for indications including sepsis, volume overload, oliguria for more than 24 hours nonresponsive to diuretic therapy, and the need for
hyperalimentation
. All were supported by mechanical ventilation and receiving high-dose inotropic support. Arterial and venous vascular access was successfully obtained by cannulation of the femoral artery and vein in nine patients. Anticoagulation of the circuit was achieved with heparin infusion (6 to 20 micrograms/kg/hr) and monitored by measurement of activated clotting time. The continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration circuit was replaced if there was clot formation, or at 3 days after placement. Dialysis solution (Dianeal) 1.5% or 0.5% was infused as prefilter dilution. With the use of continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration, 20 to 100 m/hr of ultrafiltrate was removed, which allowed correction of hypervolemia, and caloric intake increased from 13.5 kcal/kg/day to 79.5 kcal/kg/day. Continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration was maintained between 5 hours and 8 days and was well tolerated in all patients. Serum urea and creatinine levels declined during continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration. We conclude that continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration is a safe and effective method for fluid and electrolyte homeostasis and that it thus allows
hyperalimentation
in infants and children after cardiac operations.
...
PMID:Continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration after cardiac operations in infants and children. 143 99
This paper updates the informations on the three most important anorexigenic peptides: cholecystokinin, neurotensin and corticotropin-releasing factor. Their peripheral and/or central effects on food and
water
intakes as well as on dietary preferences are detailed. Their mechanisms of action and regulation are examined. This includes the interactions with classical neurotransmitters (norepinephrine, dopamine, etc...) as well as the description of the brain nuclei and neuronal networks involved. Finally, their variations in disturbed feeding behavior (
hyperphagia
, anorexia) in man or in animal models are reviewed.
...
PMID:[Cholecystokinin, neurotensin and corticotropin-releasing factor, three important anorexic peptides]. 144 78
The hypothalamus, in addition to regulating the anterior and posterior pituitary, controls
water
balance through thirst, regulates food ingestion and body temperature, influences consciousness, sleep, emotion and other behaviors. Much has been learned of these effects in human disease through the clinical manifestations that occur with hypothalamic lesions. This study reviews the clinical pathologic correlations that have been made in recent years showing that regions of the hypothalamus exert functions in humans that are similar to those identified in experimental animals. Clinical pathologic correlations have not always provided precise analysis of hypothalamic function. The hypothalamus is small and often lesions that come to clinical attention achieve considerable size before their recognition, making local anatomic dissections of the effects of the lesions difficult. Nevertheless, the use of modern non-invasive techniques including CT scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have provided new information not previously available. This paper reviews several cases of hypothalamic disorder recognized recently. (1) A 33-year-old black man with hypothalamic sarcoidosis. Manifestations of hypothalamic dysfunction included panhypopituitarism, aggressive
hyperphagia
, polydipsia (partially due to hyperglycemia secondary to diabetes mellitus), drowsiness, depression, and irritability. (2) A 37-year-old woman with a large intrahypothalamic tumor (biopsy showed pituitary adenoma), with drowsiness, poikilothermia, lack of satiety, confusion, and memory loss. She becomes depressed when she is transiently more alert (as after hypertonic contrast-dye infusion). (3) A 60-year-old man with hypothalamic compression by a pituitary tumor, associated with syndrome of inappropriate ADH (SIADH), severe anorexia, memory loss, but preserved thirst. After surgical decompression of the tumor his appetite acutely recovered, but he developed severe hypo(poikilo)thermia. (4) A 45-year-old woman with a suprasellar craniopharyngioma presented with severe drowsiness,
hyperphagia
, depression, and memory loss post-operatively, which responded to antidepressants (except for the memory loss). She had extremely labile blood pressures and serum Na for about 1 week post-operatively.
...
PMID:Neurologic manifestations of hypothalamic disease. 148 Jul 55
Vanadyl sulfate trihydrate was given by gavage to streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats for 21 days at doses of 0, 25, 50, or 75 mg/kg/day. In marked contrast to the reduction in plasma glucose observed in diabetic animals given vanadyl sulfate via drinking
water
, diabetic rats given vanadyl by gavage were not characterized by normoglycemia. Similarly, in contrast to the normalizing effect of vanadyl in drinking
water
, vanadyl by gavage had only a minimal influence on diabetes associated
hyperphagia
and polydipsia. Despite the lack of marked effect of vanadyl by gavage on the above parameters, tissue vanadium accumulation in the gavaged rats was similar to that reported for rats given vanadium by drinking
water
. The present results (taken together with previous data) show that the administration of vanadium by gavage is not a viable alternative to the use of insulin in diabetes treatment.
...
PMID:Administration of vanadyl sulfate by gavage does not normalize blood glucose levels in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 150 5
Cancer cachexia is characterized by progressive, involuntary weight loss in patients with cancer. Cachexia is a common cause of death in patients with cancer in the advanced stage. It is well known that cancer patients with significant weight loss are subject to a high risk of postoperative complications. Intravenous
hyperalimentation
(IVH) has been applied to anticancer treatment when patients are unable to take sufficient nutrients orally. It is mandatory to take efficacy of antineoplastic therapies into account in attempting to assess response to nutritional repletion in cancer patients. Nutritional support is effective in maintaining body weight of malnourished cancer patients, although it is difficult to maintain body cell mass expressed as intracellular
water
. In other words, there is a discrepancy between changes in body composition and weight loss in undernourished patients with cancer. It seems that intravenous
hyperalimentation
has no documented benefit to cancer patients undergoing antineoplastic treatment from the standpoint of improved patient survival in the prospective, randomized trials of nutritional support. Therefore, further studies are needed in order to improve tumor-bearing host survival by means of nutritional management, i.e., glutamine enriched solution, amino acid imbalance solution, and anticachectic drugs on the basis of the deranged metabolism in cancer.
...
PMID:[Response to nutritional management in cancer patients]. 154 58
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.
...
PMID:The effects of idazoxan and other alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists on food and water intake in the rat. 168 7
Microinjection and lesion studies have implicated the midbrain dorsal (DR) and median raphe (MR) nuclei in behavioral arousal. This behavioral state is manifested as locomotor hyperactivity,
hyperphagia
, hyperdipsia and increases in plasma corticosteroid release. Intra-midbrain raphe injections of the GABAA agonist muscimol elicit this behavioral activation. We have demonstrated that similar infusions of tachykinins produce locomotor hyperactivity through activation of neurokinin-3 (NK-3) receptors located on serotonin cell bodies. The purpose of the present study was to determine the effects of intra-MR and DR infusions of senktide, an NK-3 agonist, on food and
water
consumption in nondeprived rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted with indwelling intra-MR or intra-DR cannula. Infusions of muscimol (25 ng/0.5 microliters) into the MR increased
water
intake, while MR and DR infusions increased food consumption. In contrast, intra-MR injections of senktide decreased
water
intake and intra-MR and DR injections decreased food intake. The results suggest that the behavioral states induced by muscimol and neurokinin infusions into the raphe are distinct and that raphe/neurokinin pathways are involved in consummatory mechanisms.
...
PMID:Intra-midbrain raphe injections of the neurokinin-3 agonist senktide inhibit food and water intake in the rat. 170 48
Sugar absorption by the biliary ductular epithelium under steady-state conditions was examined using isolated perfused rat liver. The test sugar and mannitol (as a putative marker of paracellular entry) were added to the glucose-free recirculating perfusate each at a concentration of 5 mmol/L, and apparent active biliary ductular absorption equated with the change in concentration of the test sugar relative to that of mannitol. A metabolizable hexose (D-glucose), pentose (D-xylose), and three nonmetabolizable hexoses (alpha-methyl-glucoside, 3-o-methyl-glucose, and L-glucose) were used. All five monosaccharides were well absorbed at constant rates for 2 hours with apparent rates of absorption (mumol.kg body weight-1.min-1, mean +/- SE) of D-glucose, 0.24 +/- 0.01; L-glucose, 0.20 +/- 0.02; 3-o-methyl-glucose, 0.19 +/- 0.02; alpha-methyl-glucoside, 0.16 +/- 0.03; and D-xylose, 0.10 +/- 0.04. The addition of phloridzin to the perfusate inhibited D-glucose absorption in part but did not inhibit L-glucose absorption. When perfusate Na+ was replaced by N-methylglucamine, the bile-plasma ratio of mannitol remained unchanged, as did the apparent absorption rate of D-glucose and 3-o-methyl-glucose. In contrast, absorption of L-glucose and alpha-methyl-D-glucoside gradually ceased. The addition of 15 mmol/L glucose to the perfusate caused decreased bile flow and increased taurocholate concentration in bile, suggesting that glucose absorption by the biliary ductules induced
water
reabsorption. It is concluded that sugars are absorbed by the biliary ductular system by Na(+)-dependent and Na(+)-independent transport systems, the substrate affinities of which differ from those reported for apical membrane hexose transport systems in renal tubular and intestinal epithelia. Ductular absorption of solutes such as glucose that enter bile passively may have biological use, because ductular absorption decreases the concentration of substrates for bacterial growth in gallbladder bile. On the other hand, ductular absorption of solutes induces reabsorption of biliary
water
, resulting in decreased bile flow; this might contribute to cholestasis during prolonged
hyperalimentation
with solutions containing glucose.
...
PMID:Sugar absorption by the biliary ductular epithelium of the rat: evidence for two transport systems. 158 53
The paradigm of long-term sleep deprivation was used as a model of chronic inescapable stress in rats. Several basic metabolic parameters (body weight changes, food and
water
intake, rectal temperature, serum glucose and creatinine), adrenal and thyroid secretion, norepinephrine and dopamine content and turnover in discrete brain regions, and open field behaviour were examined in the course of the exposure to experimental stress. Sleep deprivation over 7-9 days caused complete physical exhaustion of the animals. It was accompanied by hypothermia and
hyperphagia
. Adrenal activity was characterized by significant hypercorticism, but also by a relative decrease of the responsiveness to ACTH. A gradual decrease in the thyroid secretion was observed. Sleep deprivation elicited a depletion of norepinephrine in the hypothalamus and decreased its turnover, whereas hippocampal norepinephrine content decreased without considerable turnover alterations. Striatal dopamine content and turnover remained unaffected. Behavioural depression and altered open field activity were also observed in exhausted animals. Long-term sleep deprivation, therefore, seems to reproduce some of the biological correlates of the depressive illness, and may be useful in studying the development of coping failure as a result of chronic stress exposure.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine and neurochemical consequences of long-term sleep deprivation in rats: similarities to some features of depression. 181 84
Vanadate and vanadyl, two forms of vanadium, have been reported to exert insulin-like effects in vivo and in vitro. In the present study we compared the effectiveness of oral sodium metavanadate (NaVO3), sodium orthovanadate (Na3VO4) and vanadyl sulphate pentahydrate (VOSO4.5H2O) treatment in alleviating some signs of diabetes in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Vanadium compounds were administered in aqueous solutions of NaCl (80 mM) at concentrations of 0.20 mg/ml (NaVO3), 0.50 mg/ml (Na3VO4), and 1.1 mg/ml (VOSO4.5H2O) for two weeks. Control rats, either diabetic or non-diabetic, drank solutions of NaCl (80 mM). Although some signs of diabetes (hyperglycaemia,
hyperphagia
, polydipsia) were significantly ameliorated by the vanadium treatment, negative side effects were also observed in all of the vanadium-treated diabetic rats. Those effects included some deaths, decreased weight gain, and tissue vanadium accumulation, which are consistent with the reported toxicity of vanadium in non-diabetic rats. Vanadyl sulphate was the most effective compound of those tested in normalizing blood glucose levels. However, the results here reported suggest that chronic administration of vanadyl or vanadate in the drinking
water
is not a viable alternative treatment to insulin in human diabetes.
...
PMID:Improvement of glucose homeostasis by oral vanadyl or vanadate treatment in diabetic rats is accompanied by negative side effects. 186 88
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