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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relation between obesity and adenomatous polyps of the sigmoid colon was investigated in male self-defense officials who received a retirement health examination at three hospitals of the Self-Defense Forces in Japan between January 1991 and December 1992. Body mass index (BMI) and waist-hip circumference ratio (WHR) were used as indices of obesity. A total of 228 adenoma cases and 1484 controls with normal sigmoidoscopy were identified in 2228 men: cases having small adenomas (< 5 mm in diameter) and those with large adenomas (5 mm or greater) numbered 115 and 102, respectively. Smoking, alcohol use, physical activity, rank, and hospital were controlled for by multiple logistic regression analysis. BMI and WHR were classified into four levels using the 30th, 60th, and 90th percentiles of each distribution in the control as cut-off points. There was a significant two-fold elevation in the overall adenoma risk among men at the highest BMI level (> or = 26.95) compared with those at the lowest level (< 22.48), but the risk did not linearly increase: a similar increase was also noted for large adenomas. While WHR was only weakly related to the overall adenoma risk, the risk of large adenomas progressively increased with increasing levels of WHR; odds ratio (OR) 2.9 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.4-5.9) for the highest (> or = 0.958) versus lowest (< 0.878) levels. BMI was not materially associated with adenoma risk after additional adjustment for WHR, but a positive association between WHR and large adenomas was independent of BMI: OR 3.4 (95% CI 1.5-7.6) for the highest versus lowest levels. These findings suggest that obesity is associated with an increased risk of colon adenomas, probably with adenoma growth.
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PMID:Obesity and adenomatous polyps of the sigmoid colon. 801 5

A 61-year-old woman with hyper-catecholaminemia and hyper-glucocorticoidemia due to a mixed tumor of the right adrenal gland is described. The patient, who had been medicated for hypertension since 1977, complained of thirst and general malaise in 1986. Body weight loss was remarkable. There was neither absolute truncal obesity nor moon face. In September 1986, her blood pressure was 180/110 mmHg and blood glucose level was 400mg/dl. Noradrenaline levels in plasma and in urine were remarkably elevated (1659 pg/ml and 120 micrograms/day, respectively), and adrenaline levels were also high (397 pg/ml in plasma, 34 micrograms/day in urine). Plasma cortisol and urinary 17-OHCS were elevated (39.2 micrograms/dl and 11.9 mg/day, respectively). Plasma ACTH was in the normal range (42.6 pg/ml). Oral administration of neither 1mg nor 8 mg of dexamethasone suppressed plasma cortisol or ACTH levels. Both 131I-metaiodobenzylguanidine and 131I-adosterol accumulated in the right adrenal gland. In 1987 the adrenal tumor (3.0 x 3.5 cm, 30 g) was resected. After the operation, her blood pressure and blood glucose level returned to normal, so that the medication became unnecessary. Histologically it was revealed that the tumor was a mixed adenoma consisting of adreno-medullary and cortical cells (corticomedullary adenoma). The literature on 21 cases of pheochromocytoma associated with Cushing's syndrome was briefly reviewed. Mathison (1969) reported the first case of a mixed tumor of adreno-medullary and cortical cells. So far as we know the present case is the second.
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PMID:[A case of adrenal mixed tumor of pheochromocytoma and adrenocortical adenoma presenting diabetes mellitus and hypertension]. 837 53

Carney's complex is an unusual disorder consisting of a variety of endocrinological and urological manifestations. The characteristic gonadal and adrenal features of Carney's complex should become familiar to urologists. A patient was evaluated for obesity, cushingoid features, hyperlipidemia, glucose intolerance, coronary artery disease, a left adrenal mass, bilateral testicular masses and cardiac myxomas. Pathological evaluation revealed the testicular tumors to be of Sertoli cell origin, the adrenal mass to be an adrenocortical adenoma and intracardiac lesions consistent with myxomas. The features of Carney's complex are discussed.
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PMID:Carney's complex in a patient with hormone-producing Sertoli cell tumor of the testicle. 841 42

Most case-control studies of colorectal cancer have shown a positive association with energy intake. In contrast studies which have considered physical activity have found the most active to have a lower risk of colonic cancer and obesity appears to be no more than weakly related to colorectal cancer. We therefore compared energy intake determined by a diet history interview, self-reported height and weight, together with measures of lifetime job activity levels and leisure activity in the year prior to interview in 147 cases with colorectal adenomas and two control groups (a) 153 age-sex matched FOB-negative subjects (b) 176 FOB-positive subjects in whom no adenoma or carcinoma was found. Unconditional logistic regression was used to estimate relative risks (RR) and 95% confidence intervals () adjusted for age, sex and social class. No association with weight or body mass index was found. The only association with physical activity found with both control groups was an inverse association with running or cycling for half an hour continuously at least once a week RR 0.46 (0.2-1.3) compared with control group (a), and RR = 0.32 (0.1-0.8) compared with (b), but few subjects engaged in such activity. There was an inverse association with energy intake (trend chi 2 = 5.3, P < 0.025) in the comparison with control group (a) only, a finding which is consistent with those of two previous studies of asymptomatic adenoma.
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PMID:Colorectal adenomas and energy intake, body size and physical activity: a case-control study of subjects participating in the Nottingham faecal occult blood screening programme. 842 77

We conducted a case-control study, using 429 cases with histologically confirmed sigmoid adenoma, 75 cases with rectal adenoma, and 3101 controls showing normal colonoscopy at least up to 60 cm from the anus. The subjects were male Self-Defense Forces personnel aged 48-56 who received a retirement health examination including a routine sigmoid- or colonoscopy. Lifestyle characteristics were ascertained by a self-administered questionnaire. Smoking in the recent past (< or = 10 years preceding the colonoscopy) and smoking in the remote past (> 10 years before the colonoscopy) were both significantly associated with risk of sigmoid adenoma but not with rectal adenoma as a whole. After reciprocal adjustment for smoking in the two periods, only smoking in the recent past was associated with both sigmoid colon and rectal adenomas. Odds ratios (OR) of sigmoid adenoma (and 95% confidence interval) for the categories of 0, 1-150, 151-250 and > or = 251 cigarette-years were 1.0 (reference), 1.9 (1.3-2.8), 2.1 (1.4-3.0) and 3.0 (1.9-4.7), respectively (P for trend < 0.01), and those for rectal adenoma were 1.0 (reference), 1.2 (0.4 3.2), 3.5 (1.4-8.5) and 2.0 (0.6 6.7), respectively (P for trend = 0.03). Alcohol use was significantly positively associated with sigmoid adenoma, and insignificantly associated with rectal adenoma. Body mass index was significantly positively associated with sigmoid adenoma, especially large ones. No such association was found for rectal adenoma. These findings suggest that smoking, especially in the recent past, and alcohol use are common risk factors for sigmoid colon and rectal adenomas while obesity may be exclusively related to the growth of sigmoid adenoma.
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PMID:The relation of smoking, alcohol use and obesity to risk of sigmoid colon and rectal adenomas. 856 91

Interest in risk factors for the recurrence of adenomatous polyps derives from the use of recurrent adenomas as surrogate end points in longitudinal studies of invasive colorectal cancer. In this case-control study, the effect of increased body mass index (BMI) on the risk of recurrent adenomas was investigated. Subjects consisted of patients seen at three colonoscopy practices in New York City, all of whom had a previous history of adenomas. On index colonoscopy, recurrent cases had an adenoma, whereas controls were normal. Men and women were analyzed separately, with different logistic models developed using backward elimination from a full model containing the covariates age at diagnosis, age-at-highest-weight, pack-years of smoking, activity level, energy intake, and fat and fiber intake. Men in the upper quartiles of BMI were found to be at greater risk of recurrent adenomas. In a model which controlled for age at diagnosis, age-at-highest-weight, activity level, pack-years of smoking and kilocalories, the estimated odds ratios were 2.2, 1.9 and 1.9 respectively for the second, third and fourth quartiles compared to the first quartile. Only the estimate for the second quartile was found to be statistically significant. No effect was observed for women, even in a model which controlled for age at diagnosis, age-at-highest-weight, pack-years and total fat. Obesity may play a role in adenoma recurrence. Confirmation of this finding would have important implications for possible prevention strategies in the future.
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PMID:Recurrent adenomatous polyps and body mass index. 872 24

The relationship between physical inactivity, body mass index (BMI) (wt[kg]/ht[m]2), and pattern of adipose distribution with risk of colorectal adenomas (precursors of cancer) was examined in 13,057 female nurses in the United States, 40 to 65 years of age in 1986, who had an endoscopy between 1986 and 1992. From 1986 to 1992, 439 participants were newly diagnosed with adenomas of the distal colorectum. After controlling for age, prior endoscopy, parental history of colorectal cancer, smoking, aspirin, and intakes of animal fat, dietary fiber, folate, methionine, and alcohol, physical activity was associated inversely with risk of large (> or = 1 cm) adenomas in the distal colon (relative risk [RR] = 0.57, 95 percent confidence interval [CI] = 0.30-1.08, comparing high and low quintiles of average weekly energy expenditure from leisure-time activities; P trend = 0.05). Much of the benefit came from activities of moderate intensity such as brisk walking. In addition, BMI was associated directly with risk of large adenomas in the distal colon (multivariate RR = 2.21 [CI = 1.18-4.16], P trend = 0.0001, for BMI > or = 29 cf < 21 kg/m2). Waist circumference and the waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) were not related significantly to adenoma independently of BMI, but women with both a high BMI and high WHR were at greater risk of large colon adenoma (multivariate RR = 1.99, CI = 0.98-4.05) than women with high BMI but relatively low WHR (multivariate RR = 1.35, CI = 0.61-2.97). BMI was not related to small (< 1 cm) adenoma risk but physical activity had an inverse association with small adenomas in the distal colon (multivariate RR = 0.68, CI = 0.40-1.15, P trend = 0.03). The relationships between BMI or physical activity were considerably weaker and inconsistent for rectal adenomas. These results, in women, support an inverse association between physical activity and occurrence or progression of adenomas in the distal colon; obesity is associated with an elevated risk of large adenomas.
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PMID:Physical activity, obesity, and risk of colorectal adenoma in women (United States). 874 Jul 38

Associations between polyps and cancer of the gastrointestinal tract have been fully documented for adenomatous polyps and cancer of the large bowel. The geographic, gender, and age distribution of colorectal adenomas parallels that of colorectal cancer incidence, and individuals with a history of adenomas are at increased risk for metachronous adenomas and cancer. Observational studies of risk factors for incident adenomas have found elevated risk associated with dietary variables including: high fat, low fiber, and low vegetable intake; family history; obesity; smoking; and other exposures, some of which also are associated with cancer. Dietary intervention trials with adenoma recurrence as an endpoint, however, have had little success. Screening with polypectomy has proved effective in reducing cancer incidence and may change the epidemiology of colorectal cancer.
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PMID:Epidemiology of gastrointestinal polyps. 882 17

A 43-year-old woman presented with obesity and lumbago. Endocrinological examinations revealed normal plasma cortisol levels and a suppressed serum adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) level. On venous sampling, markedly elevated plasma cortisol levels were observed for bilateral adrenal veins (243 and 62.3 micrograms/dl on the right and left sides, respectively). Although the computed tomogram revealed bilaterally enlarged adrenal glands, 131I-adosterol scintigram showed a strong uptake only on the right side. Right adrenalectomy successfully relieved Cushing's syndrome. Pathological diagnosis was adrenocortical adenoma, 3.5 cm in diameter. Cushing's syndrome recurred in 9 years. At that time, she underwent left subtotal adrenalectomy including a 3-cm adrenocortical adenoma. Postoperative convalescence has been uneventful with oral steroid supplementation. All 14 previously reported cases of bilateral adrenocortical adenoma (BAA) causing Cushing's syndrome as well as the present case were concurrent and dominant in females of reproductive age. This suggests that some cofactors other than ACTH, such as estrogen, contribute to the pathogenesis of BAA.
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PMID:[A case of concurrent bilateral adrenocortical adenoma causing Cushing's syndrome]. 916 55

A case of hyperaldosteronism caused by adrenal cortical cancer observed in a 32-year-old man was reported. The patient showed marked hypertension and hypokalemia, but neither obesity nor hyperglycemia was observed. Endocrine studies revealed hyperaldosteronism and concurrent excessive secretion of cortisol, but diurnal rhythms of plasma ACTH and cortisol were normal. Imaging studies revealed a large left adrenal mass, and the positive accumulation of radiolabelled material by adrenal scintigraphy was observed both in the tumor and the contralateral adrenal gland. The removed tumor was predominantly composed of dark compact cells with marked nuclear pleomorphism, and mitotic figures and sinusoidal invasion were also observed. The analysis of steroidogenic enzyme activities revealed that the activity of aldosterone-synthesizing enzyme (P-450aldo) which was usually undetectable in normal adrenal tissues and adenomas other than aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) was detectable as one-third of that of APA. Although activities of other enzymes were reduced, the expression of P-450aldo activity was considered to be the specific character of this cancer.
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PMID:Aldosterone-producing adrenal cortical cancer: a case report and analysis of steroidogenic enzymes in the tumor. 944 88


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