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

Ricardo T., aged 20 years, was a passenger in a Varig air-craft which suffered an accident on July 11th 1973. A fire developed on board whilst the plane was in the air, at about 3 p.m. After emergency landing, rescue workers (firemen and emergency ambulance teams) discovered only two survivors amongst the 122 passengers. One was in his forties and died a few moments later. The other (Ricardo) was rapidly transported to the surgical and traumatological intensive care unit of the Henri Mondor Hospital. At the time of arrival, he was in stage 1 coma with skin burns (3rd degree), burns of the airway and a high carbon monoxide blood level. Treatment consisted of assisted ventilation for 24 hours, with intermittent bronchial lavage used to eliminate ashes and calcinated debris, then for 10 days, spontaneous ventilation without intubation, with a tele-expiratory counter-pressure of 4 milibar in a mini-chamber (globe) enriched in oxygen. Intravenous hyperalimentation was started during the first few hours, continued on the 24th day by enteral alimentation. Initial chest XRays showed heavy flaky appearances, predominantly in the hilar region, and more marked on the right. At about the 15th day, XRay showed fibrous with predominance of signs of the apex. These sequellae were confirmed by respiratory function tests which gave objective evidence of a diffusion disturbance with decrease in membrane permeability coefficient. Repetition of RFT indicated a decrease in mechanical problems. On August 31st (on the 51st day) Ricardo was able to return to Rio in a good general condition, dorso-lumbar burns having healed. There was a dysphonia of mixed origin: scarred infiltrate of the vocal cords, but with normal mobility, and a decrease in vital capacity of --30%. Seen again in September 1978, Ricardo was found to be well with normal activity and slight effort dyspnea. Chest XRays showed signs of residual fibrosis.
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PMID:[Case history of a gassed patient]. 611 Dec 80

An indirect calorimetry system was assembled from three readily available major components: a digital pneumotachograph, an oxygen analyzer, and a carbon dioxide analyzer. A one-way valve, face mask, and meteorological balloon completed the system. Accuracy was assessed by comparison to direct calorimetry in hospitalized patients undergoing enteral hyperalimentation. Each subject was on continuous infusion of formula during a 7-day metabolic balance. Direct and indirect calorimetry was performed over the last 4 days of the balance. The overall agreement between the two methods was within 1%. A simple and inexpensive calorimetry system can therefore be assembled to provide an accurate measure of resting energy expenditure.
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PMID:A simple and accurate indirect calorimetry system for assessment of resting energy expenditure. 642 72

Intravenous hyperalimentation with dextrose can be associated with adverse respiratory and hepatic effects. The purpose of this study was to determine the respiratory and metabolic consequences of fat calories in excess of resting energy expenditure provided both continuously and discontinuously. No significant changes in respiratory mechanics, oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production, resting energy expenditure, serum substrates, liver function, or nitrogen balance were noted by the addition of 500 kcal of lipid emulsion to dextrose calories sufficient to meet energy requirements. The respiratory quotient declined significantly with the 12- and 24-hour lipid infusions, but persisted for the entire 24 hours only in the latter instance. The sustained and increased (46% v 36%) oxidation of lipid with a 24-hour infusion suggests that a continuous infusion of lipid is preferable to a discontinuous infusion.
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PMID:Metabolic and respiratory effects of continuous and discontinuous lipid infusions. Occurrence in excess of resting energy expenditure. 643 73

Golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) were subjected to intermittent fasting for six weeks, for three of which their environmental temperature was reduced to 4 degrees C. They were compared with a control group (fed ad libitum and kept at 22 degrees C), a group subjected six weeks only to intermittent fasting at 22 degrees C and a group fed ad libitum for six weeks, but exposed to a temperature of 4 degrees C after the third week. The effect of these various nutritional and temperature regimens on growth, on food consumption, on the formation of liver glycogen and lipid reserves and on energy metabolism was studied. Adaptation to cold raised the hamsters' food intake above the hyperphagia level observed during intermittent fasting. Cold and intermittent fasting acted synergically in raising basal oxygen consumption values and reducting the amount of body lipids. They acted antagonistically on the liver glycogen concentration; when they were used simultaneously, the effect of intermittent fasting preponderated.
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PMID:Effect of intermittent fasting followed by cold on growth, formation of reserves and energy metabolism in the golden hamster. 644 98

To study the effect of a perfluorocarbon oxygen transport emulsion (Fluosol-DA) on reticuloendothelial system (RES) function, we measured the blood clearance of human erythrocytes transfused to rats. Compared with saline treatment, Fluosol-DA at 30 ml/kg doses significantly increased both the percent 20-hour blood recovery (mean 8.9% +/- 2.7 SEM vs 1.3% +/- 0.25 SEM) and 51Cr t1/2 survival (mean 14.0 hours +/- 2.7 SEM vs 3.5 hours +/- 0.33 SEM) of the human red cells. This suppression of RES clearance function was transient and no longer detectable seven days after single Fluosol-DA doses. The Fluosol-DA-induced RES block was about three times greater than that obtainable with 4 g/kg of a soybean oil emulsion used for clinical hyperalimentation. On the other hand, the effect of ethyl palmitate (0.5 g/kg), a potent but toxic RES blocker, was 3.5 times greater than that of Fluosol-DA in this test system. If Fluosol-DA also induces RES block in humans, this emulsion could be explored as a therapeutic RES blocker in certain immune cytopenias.
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PMID:Effect of a perfluorocarbon emulsion (Fluosol-DA) on reticuloendothelial system clearance function. 669 6

Treatment of male rats with 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) causes a dose-dependent decrease in body weight, feed intake, resting and total oxygen consumption, and spontaneous motor activity. In animals treated with a nonlethal dose (5 or 15 micrograms/kg), feed intake and oxygen consumption recover within 3 weeks post-treatment to levels appropriate for the reduced weight of the animals. Rats treated with a lethal dose (50 micrograms/kg) lose weight continuously after treatment and typically die at a body weight approximately half that of age-matched, control rats. The similar dose and time dependencies for reduction of feed intake and weight suggest that hypophagia is the major factor responsible for weight loss in TCDD-treated rats. To determine if this hypophagia is a primary or secondary effect of TCDD treatment, rats whose body weights were reduced by food restriction prior to treatment (25 micrograms/kg) were studied. When allowed to feed ad libitum immediately after treatment, these animals exhibited relative hyperphagia and weight gain demonstrating that TCDD did not impair their capacity to feed. This finding suggests that the primary effect of TCDD is not on a system that controls feed intake, but rather on one that regulates body weight. It is proposed, as a heuristic model of the wasting syndrome, that TCDD treatment lowers a "set point" for regulated body weight in the rat in a dose-dependent fashion and that hypophagia serves, as a secondary response, to reduce the animal's weight to the lower regulation level determined by the dose administered.
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PMID:Characterization of the wasting syndrome in rats treated with 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin. 671 May 31

Experiments were conducted to study the effects of a low protein-high carbohydrate diet on growth and thyroid function in obese and lean male and female Zucker rats. The nine feeding regimens included animals ad libitum fed either a 22% casein and 59% carbohydrate diet (control) or an 8% casein and 73% carbohydrate diet (low protein) and appropriate pair-fed groups to control for the lean rats eating less than the obese rats and the rats fed the low-protein diet eating less than those fed the control diet. The rats were 4 weeks old at the start of the experiment which lasted 7 weeks. Final body size, tibia length and nonfat dry mass of the lean rats were dependent primarily on the amount of protein consumed, whereas growth of the obese rats was related to total energy intake rather than to protein intake. The relative hyperphagia, decreased efficiency of energy utilization and increased oxygen consumption and serum T3 concentrations in the lean rats fed the low-protein diet were consistent with the development of an adaptive thermogenesis, allowing the excess non-protein energy to be dissipated through excess heat production. There was no evidence for such an adaptive thermogenesis in the obese rats. The suggestion that the obese rats were already overeating for protein and storing the excess energy as fat and that the decreased thyroid response might be part of a protective mechanism against overheating was discussed.
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PMID:Thyroid and growth responses of young Zucker obese and lean rats to a low protein-high carbohydrate diet. 677 65

Several pre- and post-natal factors possibly important in determining which infants will develop necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) and which of these infants will die with this disease were prospectively studied in 1976 in 11 infants with radiographic or pathologic evidence of the disease from 12 institutions in the United States and 111 weight-matched, institution-matched control infants. By multivariant discriminant analysis, the authors idenfitied 10 independent significant determinants of NEC and 10 determinants predictive of a fatal outcome among case infants. Determinants of NEC were: Apgar score deterioration; presence of a patent ductus arteriosus; maternal receipt of anesthesia during delivery; infant not treated with parenteral gentamicin before the onset of disease; infant receipt of 10% dextrose solution; treatment of mother with antibiotics during pregnancy; hyperalimentation or gavage feedings; premature rupture of membranes. Important morbid events among cases included red blood cell transfusions, gas in the portal system, premature rupture of membranes, abdominal distension, isolation of Klebsiella organisms from the blood, surgery, prolonged perinatal oxygen requirement, and lower Apgar 2 score. Attempts to modify preventable risk factors may decrease the incidence (2.4 cases per 1000 live births) and case fatality (41%) documented in this study.
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PMID:Necrotizing enterocolitis: a prospective multicenter investigation. 677 21

Liver blood flow and exchange of oxygen, glucose, lactate, and amino acids were measured in pigs at the same time as the peripheral arteriovenous (A-V) difference of these substances was determined. Four groups of animals were studied; they were normal postabsorptive, septic fasted, and septic infused either with complete parenteral nutrition (4.25% mixed amino acid solution with 25% glucose) or an isocaloric solution of 1.8% leucine with glucose. Sepsis in the pig caused a rise in arterial concentration of all essential amino acids except tryptophan and a decrease of most of the others. The liver uptake of the sum of all amino acids rose from nonsignificant values to 26.03 mumol/min/kg at the same time as the peripheral A-V difference changed from +20.4 to -678.0 mumol/l. Hyperalimentation increased arterial amino acid concentration, whereas peripheral A-V difference decreased to -132.3 mumol/l. The total liver uptake of amino acids was 24.80 mumol/min/kg but with a higher proportion of essential amino acids than in the fasted septic state suggesting increased liver protein synthesis. When leucine and glucose were infused the peripheral A-V difference of the sum of all amino acids was only -45.6 mumol/l indicating an almost complete cessation of muscle proteolysis. The arterial plasma concentration of all amino acids except leucine, glutamine, and glutamate were markedly reduced. Although hepatic clearance rate of amino acids fell only slightly, due to the low plasma concentrations, the liver uptake decreased substantially to 7.37 mumol/min/kg suggesting a decreased liver protein synthesis which could be deleterious in the presence of sepsis.
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PMID:The effects of hyperalimentation and infused leucine on the amino acid metabolism in sepsis: an experimental study in vivo. 678 84

Body dimensions, composition, oxygen consumption and core temperature were measured in 2 groups of immature rats treated with PMSG. The first group weighed over 60 g on Day 27 of life and responded to PMSG treatment by ovulating; the second group weighed less than 60 g and did not ovulate after PMSG. Body composition, expressed as a percentage of body weight, was identical in the two groups, but growth rate, oxygen consumption and body temperature were all lower in the lighter animals. Oxygen consumption and body temperature were manipulated by altering temperature (i.e. 5, 22 and 30 degrees C) or by hyperphagia, and a positive correlation was found between body temperature and the occurrence of ovulation.
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PMID:Physical changes associated with the onset of precocious puberty in rats after treatment with PMSG. 688 35


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