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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endocrine complications of therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are common and are potentially debilitating both during and after therapy. Growth velocity slows during therapy for ALL, especially during the first year; however, children who do not receive cranial irradiation usually reach normal adult height. While growth hormone deficiency generally occurs in patients who have received 24Gy of cranial irradiation, it may also develop in those treated with lower doses (18Gy) of cranial radiation or with only high-dose methotrexate.
Obesity
commonly occurs during therapy and persists after completion of therapy. Osteopenia can occur early during therapy for ALL and can persist for many years.
Adrenal insufficiency
should be suspected in any child who has recently received glucocorticoid therapy, and stress doses of steroid should be administered in the event of metabolic stress. Screening of urine is useful for early detection of hyperglycemia during therapy with glucocorticoids and L-asparaginase. The syndrome of inappropriate secretion of anti-diuretic hormone is usually associated with vincristine therapy and may be aggravated by concurrent use of azole antifungals. Finally, patients who have received 18 or 24Gy of cranial irradiation may have clinical or subclinical deficiencies of thyroid hormones.
...
PMID:Endocrine complications in pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1235 Mar 66
After extensive suprasellar operations for hypothalamic tumor removal, some patients develop Cushing-like morbid obesity while they receive replacement doses of glucocorticoids. In this study, we examined the hypothesis that target tissue conversion of inactive 11-ketosteroids to active 11 beta-OH glucocorticoids might explain the
obesity
of some patients with hypothalamic lesions. Toward this aim, we studied 10 patients with hypothalamic
obesity
and secondary
adrenal insufficiency
and 6 control Addisonian patients while they were on glucocorticoid replacement therapy. Pituitary hormone deficiencies were replaced when medically indicated. Twenty-four-hour urine was collected after a single oral dose of 12 mg/m(2) hydrocortisone acetate. The ratios of free and conjugated cortisol (F) to cortisone (E) and their metabolites, [tetrahydrocortisol (THF)+5 alpha THF]/tetrahyrdocortisone (THE), dihydrocortisols/dihydrocortisones, cortols/cortolones, and (F+E)/(THF+THE+5 alpha THF), were considered to represent 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD) activity. The 11-OH/11-oxo ratios were significantly higher in the urine of patients with hypothalamic
obesity
. The 11-OH/11-oxo ratios, however, did not correlate with the degree of
obesity
, yet a significant correlation was found between conjugated F/E and the ratio of visceral fat to sc fat measured by computerized tomography at the umbilical level. The consequence of increased 11 beta-HSD1 activity and the shift of the interconversion toward cortisol may contribute to the effects of the latter in adipose tissue. We propose that deficiency of hypothalamic messengers after surgical injury induces a paracrine/autocrine effect of enhanced glucocorticoid activity due to up-regulated 11 beta-HSD1 activity.
...
PMID:11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity in hypothalamic obesity. 1251 80
The substitution of dexamethasone during and after surgery of childhood craniopharyngioma is necessary in order to treat and/or prevent brain edema and
adrenal insufficiency
. Early post-operative weight gain is a predictor for severe
obesity
during long-term follow-up. In a retrospective analysis of 60 patients with childhood craniopharyngioma we inquired whether dose and duration of perioperative dexamethasone therapy (n = 68) had influence on short-term post-operative weight gain and long-term development of severe
obesity
. The median follow-up period was 4.2 years, ranging from 1 to 9 years. 24 patients (14 f/10 m) developed severe
obesity
(BMI > 3 SD). 28 patients (10 f/18 m) retained normal weight (BMI < 2 SD). Eight patients presented with a BMI between 2 and 3 SD at the final visit. Differences in terms of age at surgery or follow-up period were non-detectable between the analyzed groups of craniopharyngioma patients. Duration and cumulative dexamethasone doses (mg/m2 BSA) for perioperative dexamethasone therapy were similar for severely obese patients (duration: 8.7 d; 4.5 - 17 d, cumulative dose: 74; 42 - 177 mg/m2 BSA) and normal weight patients (duration: 10.0 d; 1 - 41 d; dose: 76; 9 - 390 mg/m2 BSA). Whereas cumulative dexamethasone doses positively (p < 0.01; rho: 0.424) correlated with weight gain during the first year following surgery, long-term development of severe
obesity
was not influenced by dose and duration of perioperative dexamethasone treatment. Patients who developed severe
obesity
during follow-up had a higher (p < 0.001) BMI already at the time of diagnosis. We conclude that dose and duration of perioperative dexamethasone treatment had short-term effects on post-operative weight gain, but not on the development of long-term severe
obesity
. The results of our retrospective analysis are currently tested in a prospective surveillance study Kraniopharyngeom 2000 (www.kraniopharyngeom.com).
...
PMID:Perioperative dexamethasone treatment in childhood craniopharyngioma--influence on short-term and long-term weight gain. 1452 May 98
The symptoms of severe early-onset
obesity
,
adrenal insufficiency
, and red hair define the proopiomelanocortin (POMC) deficiency syndrome as described so far in two children with complete loss-of-function mutations of the human POMC gene. In POMC deficiency,
obesity
reflects the lack of POMC-derived peptides as ligands at the melanocortin (MC) MC4 and MC3 receptors, which are expressed in the hypothalamic leptin-melanocortin pathway of body weight regulation. Hypocortisolism and alteration of pigmentation are caused by the lack of POMC-derived peptides at the adrenal MC2 receptor and the skin MC1 receptor, respectively. Here we describe three new cases of complete loss-of-function mutations of the POMC gene. Patients were diagnosed based on the clinical trials of red hair,
adrenal insufficiency
, and early-onset severe
obesity
. One previously described translation initiation mutation (C3804A) as well as one new nonsense (A6851T) and two new frame-shift mutations (6996del and 7100 + 2G) were found in homozygosity or compound heterozygosity. The heterozygous parents were found to have high normal or mildly elevated body weight, suggesting a dosage effect of the POMC gene product on weight regulation. To compensate for the lack of hypothalamic melanocortin function, we initiated a trial in the two previously published patients with intranasal ACTH4-10, a melanocortin fragment for which an anorexic effect has been described recently. During 3 months with increasing doses of ACTH4-10, no change of body weight or metabolic rate was observed, suggesting that at least in these two POMC-deficient patients ACTH4-10 is without any compensatory effect. In the same two patients, further investigation revealed a mildly elevated TSH. However, a 1-yr treatment with thyroid hormone did not result in a significant reduction of body weight.
...
PMID:Obesity due to proopiomelanocortin deficiency: three new cases and treatment trials with thyroid hormone and ACTH4-10. 1455 33
Subclinical Cushing's syndrome (SCS) is being detected with increased frequency in patients with adrenal incidentaloma. In the current study, we evaluated the prevalence of SCS in 70 patients with adrenal incidentaloma and compared the main findings on them with other patients with nonfunctional adrenal incidentaloma (NFA). Overnight 3 mg dexamethasone (DXM) suppression test to exclude cortisol hypersecretion, and high dose DXM suppression test to find out patients with SCS, were applied to all subjects. Afterwards, biochemical and clinical findings of patients with SCS were compared with the other patients with NFA. Four of the 70 patients with adrenal incidentaloma were found to have SCS, with a prevalence of 5.7%. Basal ACTH and DHEA-S levels were significantly lower (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively), and midnight cortisol and 24-hour urinary free cortisol levels were significantly higher in patients with SCS (p < 0.001 and p < 0.05, respectively). Biochemical and metabolic bone parameters were similar in patients with SCS and in patients with NFA. Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and
obesity
were more common in patients with SCS. One of the patients with SCS developed adrenocortical insufficiency following unilateral adrenalectomy which lasted for about 6 months. Suppressed ACTH and DHEA-S levels, and high midnight cortisol levels may be some clues for SCS in patients with adrenal incidentaloma. Since patients with SCS frequently have risk factors for atherosclerosis such as hypertension, diabetes, and
obesity
, and the surgical management of SCS with adrenalectomy may offer an advantage. Patients undergoing adrenalectomy should be followed for the development of
adrenal insufficiency
.
...
PMID:Prevalence of subclinical Cushing's syndrome in 70 patients with adrenal incidentaloma: clinical, biochemical and surgical outcomes. 1459 13
We have previously described the only reported case of human proprotein convertase 1 (PC1) deficiency, in a female (Subject A) with
obesity
, hypogonadism,
hypoadrenalism
, and reactive hypoglycemia. We now report the second case of human PC1 deficiency (Subject B), also due to compound heterozygosity for novel missense and nonsense mutations. While both subjects shared the phenotypes of
obesity
,
hypoadrenalism
, reactive hypoglycemia, and elevated circulating levels of certain prohormones, the clinical presentation of Subject B was dominated by severe refractory neonatal diarrhea, malabsorptive in type. Subsequent investigation of Subject A revealed marked small-intestinal absorptive dysfunction, which was not previously clinically suspected. We postulate that PC1, presumably in the enteroendocrine cells, is essential for the normal absorptive function of the human small intestine. The differences in the nature and severity of presentation between the two cases cannot readily be explained on the basis of allelic heterogeneity, as the nonsense and missense mutations from both subjects had comparably severe effects on the catalytic activity of PC1. Despite Subject A's negligible PC1 activity, some mature ACTH and glucagon-like peptide 17-36(amide) were detectable in her plasma, suggesting that the production of these hormones, at least in humans, does not have an absolute dependence on PC1. The presence of severe
obesity
and the absence of growth retardation in both subjects contrast markedly with the phenotype of mice lacking PC1 and suggest that the precise physiological repertoire of this enzyme may vary between mammalian species.
...
PMID:Small-intestinal dysfunction accompanies the complex endocrinopathy of human proprotein convertase 1 deficiency. 1461 56
Individuals with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) generally survive into adulthood. Common causes of death are
obesity
related cor pulmonale and respiratory failure. We report on a case series of eight children and two adults with unexpected death or critical illness. Our data show age-specific characteristics of PWS patients with fatal or life-threatening illnesses. Under the age of 2 years, childhood illnesses in general were associated with high fever and rapid demise or near-demise. Hypothalamic dysfunction likely plays a role in exaggerated fever response, but also perhaps in central regulation of adrenal function. Below average sized adrenal glands were found in three children, which raises the possibility of unrecognized
adrenal insufficiency
in a subset of individuals with PWS and emphasizes the vital role of autopsy. The tub drowning death of an adult patient could be related to central hypersomnia, which has been reported in PWS. We suggest that increased risk for critical illness be considered in the discussion of anticipatory guidance for the care of infants with PWS. Since a number of children died while hospitalized, particularly close observation of PWS children who are ill enough to warrant hospital admission is recommended.
...
PMID:Unexpected death and critical illness in Prader-Willi syndrome: report of ten individuals. 1469 14
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia is a general term applied to several disorders caused by inherited recessive defects of cortisol synthesis. The most common form is 21-hydroxylase deficiency, accounting for 95% of cases. The classical forms have an incidence of one in 15,000 and the non-classical forms about one in 1,000. The classical or severe phenotype presents in the newborn period or early infancy with virilization and
adrenal insufficiency
, with or without salt-losing; the non-classical or mild phenotype presents in late childhood or early adulthood with signs of hyperandrogenism. This wide range of clinical expression is explained by genetic variation. Although there is a certain amount of genotype-phenotype correlation, discrepancies have been described. During the last 30 years there has been a substantial improvement in diagnosis and treatment of this disease, and patients with CAH now reach adulthood. Treatment of this condition is intended to reduce excessive corticotropin secretion and replace glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids as physiologically as possible. Clinical management is often complicated by periods of inadequately treated hyperandrogenism, iatrogenic hypercortisolism, or both. Long-term consequences in adult life may include short stature,
obesity
, diminished bone mass, gonadal dysfunction with low fertility rates and psychosexual dysfunction in females. New treatment approaches are under investigation, such as the use of anti-androgens, inhibitors of estrogen production and adrenalectomy for severely resistant cases.
...
PMID:Childhood-onset congenital adrenal hyperplasia: long-term outcome and optimization of therapy. 1513 1
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is a life-long disorder which poses management problems that are age- and sex-specific. The condition merits an organised, multi-disciplinary transitional care format similar to the kind that is now well established for Turner's syndrome in many centres. In the eyes of the paediatrician, achieving optimal growth is the primary target of CAH management during infancy and childhood. Fixation on this objective can be to the detriment of the patient because it may result in failure to appreciate the significance of metabolic disturbances that occur in later childhood, particularly in females, and which may be the progenitor of chronic problems with
obesity
, insulin resistance and infertility in adult life. Similarly, the care of the adult patient with CAH comprises more than just prescribing steroid replacement for primary
adrenal insufficiency
. The transition period between childhood and adulthood is an opportune time for review of the various management options and to assess the efficacy of steroid replacement, to consider alternative novel treatment modalities and to apply a checklist to the multi-faceted aspects of the medical, surgical and psychological needs of the patient.
...
PMID:Congenital adrenal hyperplasia: transitional care. 1513 80
Up to 20% of patients with adrenal incidentalomas have abnormal cortisol production, and can be classified as having subclinical Cushing's syndrome. Although these tumors do not secrete enough cortisol to lead to the development of overt Cushing's syndrome, they are likely playing a contributory role in the development of hypertension, diabetes, osteoporosis, and
obesity
. Studies suggest that many of these problems can be reversed with surgical treatment. Additionally, if this diagnosis is not sought out before pursuing an adrenalectomy for an incidentaloma, the patient can develop profound postoperative
adrenal insufficiency
.
...
PMID:Subclinical Cushing's syndrome in adrenal incidentalomas. 1514 40
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