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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (
hyperphagia
)
6,116
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diet protein increases whereas carbohydrates decrease urea synthesis. Traditionally, these effects have been explained by changes in substrate supply. Diet protein intake increases whereas carbohydrate decreases blood amino acid concentration. However, glucose also decreases urea synthesis by a hepatic mechanism independent of the decrease in blood amino acid concentration. Whether this is due to an effect of glucose in itself, or whether the fall in
glucagon
or the rise in insulin is responsible, was not known. This survey deals with the effect of an increase in diet protein intake and of the separate effects of glucose,
glucagon
and insulin on functional hepatic nitrogen clearance in normal man and in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. The functional hepatic nitrogen clearance is calculated as the slope of the linear regression analysis of alanine-stimulated urea synthesis rate and blood alpha-amino nitrogen concentration, and expresses urea synthesis independent of changes in blood amino acid concentration. In patients with cirrhosis, hepatic nitrogen clearance is reduced in parallel with liver cell mass, despite high
glucagon
concentration that would normally up-regulate the process. In both healthy subjects and in patients with cirrhosis, an increase in diet protein intake (plus approximately 50 g/day) for 14 days increases hepatic nitrogen clearance by 40%. Thus, in addition to the substrate effect, protein intake increases urea synthesis by an effect in the liver, probably by enzyme formation. What induces this is not clear but high postprandial levels of
glucagon
may be involved. Although the effect is qualitatively intact in the patients, the response relative to the increase in protein intake is reduced by two-thirds. The effect may be important to control blood amino acid concentration during a high protein diet and may partly explain why patients with cirrhosis usually tolerates protein
hyperalimentation
without developing hepatic encephalopathy. It is shown that the reduction of hepatic nitrogen clearance by glucose depends on hyperglycaemia, and is accomplished by the additive effects of a direct hormone-independent action of glucose, and indirectly via suppression of
glucagon
. Insulin is not a direct controller of hepatic nitrogen clearance, but is still considered an important regulator of urea synthesis by its reducing effects on blood amino acid concentration. High experimental
glucagon
levels overrule the normal suppressive effect of glucose. In contrast, it is shown that the sugar-alcohol xylitol normalises the
glucagon
induced increase in hepatic nitrogen clearance. During normal
glucagon
levels xylitol exerts only a very little decrease in hepatic nitrogen clearance. In patients with cirrhosis, glucose does not down-regulate hepatic nitrogen clearance. However, when the spontaneous high
glucagon
levels are normalised by somatostatin, glucose decreases hepatic nitrogen clearance. This shows that the direct hormone-independent effect of glucose is intact. These findings indicate that the high
glucagon
levels during spontaneous hormone responses overrule the suppressive effect of glucose. Incomplete glucose suppression of
glucagon
secretion during alanine infusion contributes to the high
glucagon
levels. The removal of the high
glucagon
levels decreases hepatic nitrogen clearance in itself. Thus, the hyperglucagonaemia may be a compensatory mechanism by which the cirrhotic liver to some extent reestablishes its capacity to produce urea. The consequence is the defective down-regulation of hepatic nitrogen clearance by glucose. The reduction in urea synthesis by glucose, i.e. its nitrogen sparing effect, is accomplished by two different mechanisms: A hepatic component (reduction of the hepatic nitrogen clearance) and a peripheral component (reduced substrate availability mediated by the insulin response). This is an extension of former thoughts according to which glucose reduces urea synthesis due solely to
...
PMID:Regulation of urea synthesis by diet protein and carbohydrate in normal man and in patients with cirrhosis. Relationship to glucagon and insulin. 923 44
Glucagon
and insulin were measured by heterologous immunoassays in plasma samples of 17 garden warblers (Sylvia borin) kept under constant ad libitum or fasting-refeeding conditions during the migratory season from September to May. Plasma levels of key metabolic indicators (glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, and free fatty acids) were measured every 2 weeks. Measurements of the two hormones concur with the general assumption of a higher
glucagon
:insulin ratio, indicating a more pronounced catabolism in birds than in mammals. The concentrations of both hormones varied (insulin: 0.7-7.7 microIU/ml, n = 66;
glucagon
: 0.4-4.5 ng/ml, n = 99), but differences between mean values per month were significant only for
glucagon
. Neither hormone titer correlated with either the seasonal or a fasting-refeeding-induced body mass cycle. However, there was a positive correlation between food intake, changes in body mass, and plasma triglycerides and insulin; in contrast, there was a negative relationship with the
glucagon
:insulin ratio.
Glucagon
showed only a small negative relationship to plasma glucose and cholesterol, but correlated directly more closely with plasma free fatty acids. The present data support the fact that
glucagon
is more lypolytic in birds than in mammals. Pancreatic hormones are suggested to participate in the regulation of premigratory
hyperphagia
and hyperlipemia.
...
PMID:A role for pancreatic hormones in the regulation of autumnal fat deposition of the garden warbler (Sylvia borin)? 924 24
Glucagon-like peptide 1
(
GLP-1
) is a physiological incretin hormone in normal humans explaining in part the augmented insulin response after oral versus intravenous glucose administration. In addition,
GLP-1
also lowers
glucagon
concentrations, slows gastric emptying, stimulates (pro)insulin biosynthesis, reduces food intake upon intracerebroventricular administration in animals, and may, in addition, enhance insulin sensitivity. Therefore,
GLP-1
, in many aspects, opposes the Type 2-diabetic phenotype characterized by disturbed glucose-induced insulin secretory capacity, hyperglucagonaemia, moderate insulin deficiency, accelerated gastric emptying,
overeating
(obesity) and insulin resistance. The other incretin hormone, gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), has lost almost all its activity in Type 2-diabetic patients. In contrast,
GLP-1
glucose-dependently stimulates insulin secretion in diet- and sulfonylurea-treated Type 2-diabetic patients and also in patients under insulin therapy long after sulfonylurea secondary failure. Exogenous administration of
GLP-1
([7-37] or [7-36 amide]) in doses elevating plasma concentrations to approximately 3-4 fold physiological postprandial levels fully normalizes fasting hyperglycaemia in Type 2-diabetic patients. The half life of
GLP-1
is too short to maintain therapeutic plasma levels for sufficient periods by subcutaneous injections. Current research activities aim at finding
GLP-1
analogues with more suitable pharmacokinetic properties than the original peptide. Another approach could be the augmentation of endogenous release of
GLP-1
, which is abundant in L cells of the lower small intestine and the colon. Interference with sucrose digestion using alpha-glucosidase inhibition moves nutrients into distal parts of the gastrointestinal tract and, thereby, prolongs and augments
GLP-1
release. Enprostil, a prostaglandin E2 analogue, fully suppresses GIP responses, while only marginally affecting insulin secretion and glucose tolerance after oral glucose, suggesting compensatory hypersecretion of additional insulinotropic peptides, possibly including
GLP-1
. Given the large amount of
GLP-1
present in L cells, it appears worthwhile to look for more agents that could 'mobilize' this endogenous pool of the 'antidiabetogenic' gut hormone
GLP-1
.
...
PMID:Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) as a new therapeutic approach for type 2-diabetes. 928 4
Medical records of 10 cats with transient clinical diabetes mellitus were reviewed. At the time diabetes was diagnosed, clinical signs included polyuria and polydipsia (10 cats), weight loss (8 cats),
polyphagia
(3 cats), lethargy (2 cats), and inappetence (1 cat). Mean (+/- SD) fasting blood glucose concentration was 454 +/- 121 mg/dL, mean blood glucose concentration during an 8-hour period (MBG/8 hours) was 378 +/- 72 mg/dL, and glycosuria and trace ketonuria were identified in 10 and 5 cats, respectively. Baseline serum insulin concentration was undetectable (6 cats) or within the reference range (4 cats) and serum insulin concentration did not increase after i.v.
glucagon
administration in any cat. Insulin-antagonistic drugs were being administered to 5 cats and concurrent disorders were identified in all cats. Management of diabetes included administration of glipizide (6 cats), insulin (3 cats), or both (1 cat), discontinuation of insulin-antagonistic drugs, and treatment of concurrent disorders. Insulin and glipizide treatment was discontinued 4-16 weeks (mean, 7 weeks) after the initial diagnosis of diabetes was confirmed. At the time treatment for diabetes was discontinued, clinical signs had resolved, mean fasting blood glucose concentration was 102 +/- 48 mg/dL, MBG/ 8 hours was 96 +/- 32 mg/dL, glycosuria and ketonuria were not identified in any cat, and concurrent disorders (except mild renal insufficiency in 1 cat) had resolved. Significant (P < .05) increases occurred in postglucagon serum insulin concentrations, insulin peak response, and total insulin secretion, compared with values obtained when clinical diabetes was diagnosed. Histologic abnormalities were identified in pancreatic islets of 5 cats in which pancreatic biopsies were obtained and included decreased number of islets (4 cats), islet amyloidosis (3 cats), and vacuolar degeneration of islet cells (3 cats). Mean beta cell density was significantly (P < .001) decreased in diabetic cats compared with control cats (1.4 +/- 0.7 versus 2.6 +/- 0.5%, respectively). Cells within islets stained positive for insulin, however, the number of insulin-staining cells per islet and the intensity of insulin staining were decreased in 5 and 2 cats, respectively. Clinical diabetes had not recurred in 1 cat after 6 years, in 4 cats lost to follow-up after 1.5, 1.5, 2.0, and 2.5 years, and in 2 cats that died 6 months and 5.5 years after clinical diabetes resolved. Clinical diabetes recurred in 3 cats after 6 months, 14 months, and 3.4 years, respectively. These findings suggest that cats with transient clinical diabetes have pancreatic islet pathology, including decreased beta cell density, and that treatment of diabetes and concurrent disorders results in improved beta cell function, reestablishment of euglycemia, and a transition from a clinical to subclinical diabetic state.
...
PMID:Transient clinical diabetes mellitus in cats: 10 cases (1989-1991). 1005 60
Increases in ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) norepinephrine (NE) levels and/or activities have been observed in a variety of animal models of the obese insulin-resistant condition. This study examined the metabolic effects of chronic NE infusion (25 nmol/h) into the unilateral VMH of normal rats. Within 4 days, VMH NE infusion significantly increased plasma insulin (140%),
glucagon
(45%), leptin (300%), triglyceride (100%), abdominal fat pad weight (50%), and white adipocyte lipogenic (100%) and lipolytic (100%) activities relative to vehicle-infused rats. Furthermore, isolated islet insulin secretory response to glucose (15 mM) within 4 days of such treatment was increased over twofold (P < 0.05). Among treated animals, fat stores continued to increase over time and plateaued at approximately 2 wk (3-fold increase), remaining elevated to the end of the study (5 wk). By week 4 of treatment, NE infusion induced glucose intolerance as evidenced by a 32% increase in plasma glucose total area under the glucose tolerance test curve (P < 0.01). Whole body fat oxidation rate measured after 5 wk of infusion was significantly increased among treated animals as evidenced by a reduced respiratory quotient (0.87 +/- 0.01) relative to controls (0. 90 +/- 0.01). VMH NE infusion induced
hyperphagia
(30%) only during the first week and did not affect body weight over the 5-wk period. Increases in VMH NE activity that are common among obese insulin-resistant animal models can cause the development of this obese glucose-intolerant (metabolic) syndrome.
...
PMID:Chronic infusion of norepinephrine into the VMH of normal rats induces the obese glucose-intolerant state. 1066 45
We report a 15-year-old Muslim boy with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) who presented with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) during the Muslim Ramadan month of day-time fasting. DKA apparently occurred due to omitting pre-lunch insulin combined with dehydration and
overeating
during the permitted sunset-to-sunrise meals. It is well-known that fasting accelerates development of lipolysis and ketosis and increases
glucagon
levels. Thus, these pathophysiological aberrations related to fasting in ketosis-prone patients, in conjunction with fasting, endanger metabolic control in IDDM.
...
PMID:[Diabetic ketoacidosis during the Ramadan fast]. 1086 72
Few studies have tried to characterize the efficacy of parenteral support of critically ill infants during short period of intensive care. We studied seventeen infants during five days of total parenteral
hyperalimentation
. Subsequently, according to the clinical conditions, the patients received nutritional support by parenteral, enteral route or both up to the 10th day. Evaluations were performed on the 1st, 5th, and 10th days. These included: clinical data (food intake and anthropometric measurements), haematological data (lymphocyte count), biochemical tests (albumin, transferrin, fibronectin, prealbumin, retinol-binding protein) and hormone assays (cortisol, insulin,
glucagon
). Anthropometric measurements revealed no significant difference between the first and second evaluations. Serum albumin and transferrin did not change significantly, but mean values of fibronectin (8.9 to 16 mg/dL), prealbumin (7.7 to 18 mg/dL), and retinol-binding protein (2.4 to 3. 7 mg/dL) increased significantly (p < 0.05) from the 1st to the 10th day. The hormonal study showed no difference for insulin,
glucagon
, and cortisol when the three evaluations were compared. The mean value of the glucose/insulin ratio was of 25.7 in the 1st day and 15. 5 in the 5th day, revealing a transitory supression of this hormone. Cortisol showed values above normal in the beginning of the study. We conclude that the anthropometric parameters were not useful due to the short time of the study; serum proteins, fibronectin, prealbumin, and retinol-binding protein were very sensitive indicators of nutritional status, and an elevated glucose/insulin ratio, associated with a slight tendency for increased cortisol levels suggest hypercatabolic state. The critically ill patient can benefit from an early metabolic support.
...
PMID:Nutritional follow-up of critically ill infants receiving short term parenteral nutrition. 1088 Oct 72
We reported a boy with panhypopituitarism after removal of a suprasellar teratoma and pituitary stalk transection at the age of 3 months. His growth was accelerated after 5 years of age without growth hormone (GH) therapy, although he had poor height growth until age 4 under treatment with hydrocortisone, levothyroxine sodium, and desamino-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP).
Hyperphagia
and obesity developed after surgery. Endocrinological examination revealed no GH response to
glucagon
, low serum levels of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1 and IGF binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3). Serum prolactin was normal, but serum insulin was high. Some patients who received an operation for craniopharyngioma were reported to achieve normal growth without GH secretion, but the mechanism is still unknown. High serum levels of prolactin or insulin can be associated with normal IGF in GH deficient patients. This patient had obesity and high serum insulin, which may be related to growth without GH secretion.
...
PMID:A boy with normal growth in spite of growth hormone deficiency after resection of a suprasellar teratoma. 1089 Jan 95
The cardinal feature of individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is severe
hyperphagia
-mediated obesity resulting from a faulty satiety mechanism. PWS is the most common genetic cause of marked obesity. Cholecystokinin (CCK) is a 33-amino-acid peptide found in high levels in the gut and brain involved in mediating the satiety response to meals. Free fatty acids (FFA) are responsible for the stimulation of CCK release after a fatty meal, and CCK and plasma FFA levels rise in tandem in normal individuals. Fasting plasma CCK levels were measured by radio-immunoassay in 33 PWS subjects with a mean age of 22.2 years +/- 8.1 years and 24 obese control subjects without a known cause of their obesity with a mean age of 28.7 years +/- 12.9 years. Consistent with previous findings, neither fasting plasma FFA levels (617.5 versus 486.8 microm/mL) or CCK levels (21.0 versus 19.1 pg/mL) were significantly different in PWS or control subjects, respectively. However, there was a significant correlation between fasting plasma FFA and CCK levels in obese subjects (r = 0. 64, P < 0.01), this correlation was completely lacking in PWS subjects (r = -0.06, P = 0.79). This difference in correlation coefficients constitutes a large effect. There were no significant effects observed for genetic subtypes (15q11-q13 deletion or maternal disomy 15), body mass index, percentage of fat, plasma levels of insulin, C-peptide,
glucagon
or leptin, age, or gender on CCK levels in our PWS subjects. These results suggest that differences in the peripheral CCK response to FFA levels may be a factor contributing to the altered satiety response in PWS subjects.
...
PMID:Plasma cholecystokinin levels in Prader-Willi syndrome and obese subjects. 1107 97
To investigate the proximate influence of a changing food availability on the seasonal fattening of migratory birds, garden warblers (Sylvia borin) following postnuptial moult were food restricted once a week. Body mass, food intake, plasma hormone and metabolite levels were measured and compared to birds which always had ad libitum food access. The food-restricted birds increased their body mass significantly earlier than the controls. The accelerated fattening was initially not accompanied by
hyperphagia
and may be due to either an increased food utilisation efficiency or a reduced metabolic rate. An increase of basal
glucagon
and corticosterone and a decrease of insulin levels prior to fattening were not significant, however, they resulted in a significant decrease of the insulin:
glucagon
ratio. This ratio was also lower in food-restricted birds than in control birds and may account for the difference in the fattening progress. We conclude that seasonal fattening may be stimulated by a catabolic impulse which could be imposed in free-living birds by a decrease of food availability and/or by an increase of energy expenditure. A negative energy balance is hypothesised to be a common proximate factor affecting migratory as well as winter fattening.
...
PMID:The autumnal fattening of the long-distance migratory garden warbler (Sylvia borin) is stimulated by intermittent fasting. 1119 68
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