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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Conjugated MHPG is an indicator of the adrenergic tonus having clinical use in the follow-up of affective disorders, arterial hypotension,
anorexia nervosa
and recently of
obesity
. Little is known about the significance of the unconjugated, free MHPG in various body fluids. Nineteen healthy and 38 obese children were studied as regards the urinary excretion of free MHPG (MHPGF), conjugated MHPG (MHPGC), total MHPG (MHPGT) and also free noradrenaline (NA) valnillyl mandelic acid (VMA) and metanephrines (MN). Part of the obese received a short-term course of drug therapy (diethyl-propion-DEP or thyroid extract) and were subjected to a low-carbohydrate diet containing 800-1000 calories a day. The same urinary determinations were made after diet alone or after diet and drug therapy. MHPGC and MHPGT were significantly higher in the obese children. The level of MHPGF was essentially the same in both groups and did not change significantly following any drug or after diet alone. It was concluded that esterification mechanisms are not involved in the pathological states expressing high or low levels of MHPGC. Suggestion is made that these mechanisms may not be saturated unless huge amounts of MHPG outflow from the brain into CSF.
...
PMID:Free 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG) in human urine: metabolic routes, biochemical and clinical significance in healthy and obese children. 341 39
Anorexia nervosa
(AN) is a state of self-induced malnutrition characterized by a marked pursuit of thinness and the fear of
obesity
. Although low fasting blood glucose and insulin have been demonstrated, there is contradictory data on insulin sensitivity and a lack of information about insulin metabolism and its metabolic effects in AN. Insulin sensitivity, kinetics, and metabolic effects were measured using the euglycemic clamp in nine females with AN (age 25.2 +/- 1.9 years and 70.6 +/- 2.2% ideal body weight), and the results compared with seven female normal controls (NC) (age 23.6 +/- 1.0 years and 92.7 +/- 2.5% ideal body weight). Fasting plasma glucose (FPG), immunoreactive insulin (IRI), and C-peptide were significantly lower in AN as compared to NC (84.3 +/- 1.5 v 91.5 +/- 1.7 mg dL-1, 9.3 +/- 1.0 v 13.5 +/- 1.4 microU mL-1, and 0.26 +/- 0.03 v 0.41 +/- 0.02 pmol mL-1) (P less than 0.05). During the glucose clamp, the glucose metabolized (M), the metabolic clearance rate of glucose (MCRg), and the glucose metabolized per unit of insulin (M/I ratio) were all higher in AN as compared to NC (M, 8.7 +/- 1.2 v 6.9 +/- 0.6 mg min-1 kg-1; MCRg, 9.9 +/- 1.5 v 7.4 +/- 0.6 mL min-1 kg-1; M/I ratio, 8.6 +/- 1.6 v 5.0 +/- 0.3 mg min-1 kg-1/microU mL-1 X 100), but only the M/I ratio attained statistical significance (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Changes in insulin sensitivity and clearance in anorexia nervosa. 353 30
Nine male patients with bulimia nervosa, accounting for one in 24 bulimic patients attending a clinic for eating disorders, are described. Symptomatology and demographic characteristics were similar in males and females. A history of either
anorexia nervosa
or
obesity
was always present, and a chronic course was seen in 6 patients. Five of the men showed atypical sexuality.
...
PMID:Bulimia nervosa in the male: a report of nine cases. 382 97
The first 95 patients admitted to an inpatient Eating Disorders Program and diagnosed as having bulimia (binge eating only), bulimarexia (binging and purging), and
anorexia nervosa
(food restriction only) were evaluated for depression, suicidality, and family history. Major depression was found in 80% of patients; 20% had made suicide attempts in their life; and 40% of those attempting suicide made potentially lethal attempts. Patients with anorexia and bulimarexia tended to be younger, single, and Protestant. Patients with bulimarexia had overeating, oversleeping, more preoccupation with suicide, and more depression in their mothers. Patients with anorexia had more relatives with anorexia and bulimarexia, and patients with bulimia had more relatives with
obesity
. These findings suggest that eating disorders are unique disorders and not variants of affective disorder or alcoholism.
...
PMID:Depression and suicidality in eating disorders. 385 65
Five cases of
anorexia nervosa
in black American patients are presented. All had lost parents by death or divorce. Three had a family history of
obesity
and of a physical illness related to
obesity
. Two were male and both of these had a previous history of serious psychiatric disturbance. Three patients had a first or second degree relative with affective disorder. Two patients showed a primary lack of sexual interest and one male was bisexual. Four of the patients came from social classes 3-5.
...
PMID:Anorexia nervosa in American blacks. 404 39
We studied plasma concentrations of TSH (basal and after TRH), thyroxine (T4), 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine (T3), 3,3',5'-triiodothyronine (reverse T3; rT3), free T4 and free T3 in thirty obese subjects, twenty patients with
anorexia nervosa
, fifteen malnourished subjects and twenty normal weight subjects. Total serum T4 values were similar for the four groups of subjects while serum free T4 values were slightly increased in
anorexia nervosa
and normal in the other groups. Serum total and free T3 levels were both significantly decreased in
anorexia nervosa
and malnutrition, and within normal limits in
obesity
. The mean serum rT3 level was increased in
anorexia nervosa
and malnutrition while was reduced in
obesity
. A delay in peak response of TSH to TRH stimulation (30' rather than 20') was noted in anorexia and malnourished patients. The results suggest that these alterations of serum iodothyronines are due to a different peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 according to nutritional status.
...
PMID:Thyroid function in altered nutritional state. 641 28
Several multinucleated giant neurons were demonstrated in the arcuate nucleus of hypothalamus in 5 of 35 autopsied patients. In the 2 male patients, these cells showed intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions characteristic of a persistent humoro-neural feedback effect in gonadal atrophy. Presumably, they had no pathologic effect on the neuroendocrine function of the arcuate nucleus. In the remaining 3 patients, markedly obese females, multinucleated giant neurons showed dysgenetic, dysplastic features but no evidence of feedback effect. Since severe adiposity associated with giant neurons were present in only these 3 patients, the question of a special form of hypothalamic
obesity
arises. Likewise, neuronal hypertrophy of the pars subventricularis of the arcuate nucleus, as demonstrated in
anorexia nervosa
[Hart 1971], suggests a possible participation of this nucleus in the regulation of nutrition and of body weight. Until now, it has been attributed to the ventromedial nucleus and to the lateral portions of the hypothalamus. This appears to support the proposed interpretation in our cases.
...
PMID:On the clinico-pathological significance of multinucleated giant neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. 647 79
Bulimia is an eating disorder characterized by the ingestion of large amounts of food, usually followed by self-induced vomiting or laxative abuse. Although sometimes a symptom of
obesity
or
anorexia nervosa
, bulimia is often associated with borderline weight and nutritional status and thus may be difficult to detect. Since secrecy and shame accompany this syndrome, patients are reluctant to seek treatment. We present ten diagnostic clues for identifying bulimic patients: (1) preoccupation with weight, (2) gastrointestinal complaints, (3) dental and oropharyngeal changes, (4) salivary gland enlargement, (5) edema and bloating, (6) amenorrhea, (7) dermatologic complaints, (8) substance abuse, (9) laboratory changes, and (10) serious consequences. A case study illustrates the major features of the disorder and its treatment.
...
PMID:Bulimia: diagnostic clues. 657 18
Anorexia nervosa
(AN) can be considered a result of complex instrumental conditioning. It is postulated that in healthy nonsatiated individuals, the sight and smell of the preferred food, acting as a conditioned stimulus (food CS), activates a memory pattern of associations "eating--desirable sensory input" (approach pattern). This leads to the instrumental reaction of eating which is reinforced by sensory satisfaction. In victims of AN, in addition to the approach pattern the food CS activates another pattern of associations consisting of such components as "eating--
obesity
--failure" and " noneating --thinness--success" (avoidance pattern). The establishment of the avoidance pattern depends on such factors as social preferences and pressures to be slim, inborn dispositions, and personal psychological problems. If the activation of the avoidance pattern prevails over the activation of the approach pattern, the individual refrains from eating. The refusal to eat is here an instrumental avoidance reaction; its performance is reinforced by satisfaction derived from successful self-control and losing weight. A prolonged activation of the avoidance pattern leads to malnutrition and ultimately to death. In cases in which the approach pattern and the avoidance pattern are frequently activated simultaneously to the same degree, a neural conflict may develop. In a variation called "bulimia nervosa," an activation of the approach pattern alternates with the activation of the avoidance pattern. First, overeating takes place; it is reinforced by oral-gastric satisfaction. Then, the avoidance reaction of self-induced vomiting or purging follows; it is reinforced by satisfaction derived from preventing weight gain.
...
PMID:Anorexia nervosa as a case of complex instrumental conditioning. 672 79
There have been many investigations of body image in cases of
anorexia nervosa
in adolescent females. However, there has been limited research with normal adolescent girls who happen to be overweight. In this study, 27 girls found to be obese (at least 20 percent above average body weight for age, sex and height) among 203 girls in home economics classes of four suburban high schools were compared to 20 girls seeking help for their
obesity
on an outpatient basis in hospital-affiliated programs for weight reduction in a nearby city. The two groups were assessed and compared regarding body image factors. The clinical subjects showed a significantly greater difference in their selection of outline drawings of the female figure perceived to represent their actual as compared to ideal body sizes. No significant difference was found in articulation of body concept as revealed in human figure drawings judged according to Witkin's Articulation of Body Concept (ABC) Scale, and in the mean number of uncomplimentary adjectives used to describe present appearance. However, the difference between the mean scores of the two groups in the latter two variables, when submitted to t tests, were shown to approach significance (.017 less than p less than .05).
...
PMID:Body image of obese adolescent girls in a high school and clinical setting. 675 98
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