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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Insulin resistance (IR) appears to be an important risk factor of both hypertension and
atherosclerosis
. Moreover, it is present also in
obesity
, dyslipoproteinaemia and non-insulin dependent diabetes. IR could be found in untreated hypertension and even in normotensive children of hypertensive parents. It alters carbohydrate, lipid and protein metabolism and participates directly in the development of hypertension. The diagnosis of IR is possible by simple determination of insulin and glyceamia during glucose tolerance test. The differential diagnosis is obligatory because IR is not specific just for hypertension. Treatment, with the exception of nonpharmacological measures, is unsatisfactory. However, results of newest research are highly promising.
...
PMID:Essential hypertension and insulin resistance. 174 23
Risk factors of
atherosclerosis
were examined in 63 offspring and 30 siblings of type 2 diabetics and in 22 controls. Clinical complications of
atherosclerosis
were not found very frequently in direct relatives of diabetic patients. Diabetes was detected in 17% siblings, an impaired glucose tolerance in 11% of the offspring and in 33% siblings. The offspring of diabetics had higher blood sugar values and serum insulin levels on fasting and after stimulation, as compared with controls; as to other metabolic parameters lipids and apolipoproteins, body mass indexes, uricaemia, glycated proteins, C-peptide), the two groups did not differ significantly. In middle age, i.e. in siblings of diabetic patients, the incidence of
obesity
rose significantly as well as hyperlipoproteinaemia type IV and hypertension, while smoking was less common than in offspring. The glucose tolerance deteriorated further, although the insulin levels did not increase substantially. The mentioned findings indicate the orientation for preventive provisions in families of type 2 diabetics.
...
PMID:[Arteriosclerosis risk factors in the offspring and siblings of type 2 diabetics]. 175 8
Three polymorphic sites of the apolipoprotein B gene - the insertion/deletion signal peptide, XbaI and EcoRI sites - were examined in a sample of 107 healthy men and in 46 men with evidence of coronary heart disease selected from a large population survey of South Asians aged 40-69 in London, U.K. There were no significant differences in allele frequencies between cases and controls. Frequencies of the ins (insertion) and X- (absence of XbaI cutting site) alleles were higher in South Asians than in Europeans studied previously (South Asians versus Europeans ins: 0.80 vs. 0.68, P less than 0.025; X-: 0.71 vs. 0.47-0.56, P less than 0.001). The del allele was associated with higher levels of total cholesterol (P less than 0.05) and the X+ allele with lower levels of HDL cholesterol (P less than 0.05), and thus both polymorphisms were associated with differences in the ratio of HDL cholesterol to total cholesterol (ins/del, P less than 0.01; XbaI, P less than 0.001). Mean waist-hip girth ratio was lower in the 10 men homozygous for the X+ allele than in the 42 men with X-/X+ and 55 men with X-/X- genotypes; the means (+/- SEM) were 0.92 +/- 0.02, 0.97 +/- 0.01 and 0.96 +/- 0.01 respectively (P = 0.03). These data suggest that genetic variation in linkage disequilibrium with the XbaI and ins/del polymorphisms of the apo B gene contributes to the determination of total cholesterol and HDL cholesterol levels and possibly to
obesity
in South Asians.
Atherosclerosis
1991 Dec
PMID:Apolipoprotein B gene polymorphisms are associated with lipid levels in men of South Asian descent. 178 9
Dietary fat intake is often regarded as a major determinant of coronary heart disease (CHD) rate and it has been deemed unnecessary to invoke racial or other factors to explain the differences in CHD rates among different ethnic groups. Despite a high prevalence of CHD risk factors such as hypertension,
obesity
, and smoking, CHD remains a rarity in westernized black Africans. Cord blood total cholesterol (TC), low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLC) and apolipoprotein B (apo B) levels were measured and found to be respectively 12.1%, 18.3% and 22.4% lower in black neonates when compared to white neonates. These differences were again studied in a group of young black African males and a comparable group of age-matched whites who had been exposed to the same environment and western diet for at least 2 years. Although the body mass indices and serum albumin concentrations in the adult males were not significantly different, serum levels of TC, LDLC and apo B were 10.7%, 18.7% and 39.7% lower in the blacks, respectively. Furthermore, high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC) and Apolipoprotein AI were 20.2% and 9.5% higher, homocysteine 45.6% lower and coagulation factor VII 26.6% lower in the adult black Africans. It is concluded that blacks are biochemically less responsive to an atherogenic diet than whites and these differences are already present at birth.
Atherosclerosis
1991 Aug
PMID:Ethnic immunity to coronary heart disease? 179 43
Atherosclerotic changes of carotid and lower extremity arteries were studied in the selected industrial population represented by 58 men with arterial hypertension. Affection of peripheral arterial system was detected by means of non-invasive ultrasound methods. Stenoses of carotid arteries were recorded in 19% of cases (11 of 58), stenoses of lower extremity arteries in 7% (4 of 58). Hypertonic individuals did not show neurological symptomatology, including one patients with total occlusion of the arteria carotis interna. One man underwent the attack of cerebrovascular ischemia. Stenoses of lower extremity arteries were also in the subclinical stage and without intermittent claudications. A high number of risk factors of
atherosclerosis
was found in the series:
obesity
in 90%, smoking 57%, hypercholesterolemia in 47%. Peripheral arterial changes were associated with combined risk factors (two and more). This indicates their involvement in the origin and development of atherosclerotic lesions.
...
PMID:Carotid and lower extremity arterial disease in hypertensions. 183 75
Increased cholesterol levels above 200 mg/dl, LDL levels above 130 mg/dl and total cholesterol/HDL ratio above 4.5 in males and above 5.0 in females are recognized as indicators of increased risk of
atherosclerosis
. Risk associated to increased triglyceride levels (above 200 mg/dl) must be judged in relation to associated factors such as family history of coronary heart disease, presence of remnants (type III hyperlipidemia), presence of Lp(a), increased levels of Apo B, reduced levels of HDL2 or Apo A1. VLDL and chylomicron remnants and Lp(a) have an atherogenic power in vitro 2 to 4 times that of LDL. There is a correlation between hypertriglyceridemia and reduced HDL2 and Apo A1 levels. Hypertriglyceridemia is frequently associated to other risk factors like diabetes,
obesity
, hyperinsulinism, and high blood pressure. Finally, VLDL may elevate levels of plasma plasminogen inhibitor. Thus, hypertriglyceridemia should be investigated when, evaluating risk of
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:[Cholesterol and triglycerides in atherosclerosis: epidemiologic and physiopathologic considerations]. 184
Whether early diet influences long-term health or achievement is a key question in nutrition. Such long-term consequences would invoke the concept of 'programming'--a more general process whereby a stimulus or insult at a critical period of development has lasting or lifelong significance. Data from small mammals and primates show that early nutrition may have potentially important long-term effects, for example on blood lipids, plasma insulin,
obesity
,
atherosclerosis
, behaviour and learning. Corresponding studies in man have been largely retrospective and difficult to interpret. The preterm infant is however an important model for human research because formal random assignment to early diet is practical. A large prospective randomized multicentre study has been undertaken on 926 preterm infants to test the hypothesis that early diet influences long-term outcome. Diets included human milk, standard formula and nutrient-enriched preterm formula. The diet consumed for on average the first month post partum had a major impact on subsequent developmental attainment, growth and allergic status in early childhood. That such a brief period of dietary manipulation has lasting significance implies that the neonatal period is critical for nutrition after preterm birth. These data may have broader implications for human nutrition.
...
PMID:Programming by early nutrition in man. 185 15
The purpose of this study was to determine if the major risk factors for clinical myocardial infarction also predicted coronary artery stenosis as defined by arteriography. Of a cohort of 7,591 men who were free of cardiovascular disease at entry, 357 had arteriographic studies during a 20-year follow-up period. Risk factor levels were therefore known prior to the onset of clinical symptoms and arteriographic studies. Men with arteriograms were divided into groups with and without prior clinical myocardial infarction. High blood pressure, serum cholesterol,
obesity
, and low alcohol intake predicted both severe coronary stenosis and incident myocardial infarction, thus indicating that these variables were associated with clinical events through the underlying process of
atherosclerosis
. Dietary intake of cholesterol and serum glucose also had similar but not always statistically significant patterns of association with both coronary stenosis and myocardial infarction. In contrast, serum triglyceride and cigarette smoking predicted clinical myocardial infarction, but not severe coronary stenosis. This suggests that these variables play a stronger role in the precipitation of acute clinical events than in the underlying process of
atherosclerosis
. The findings were quite different for several risk factors when analyzed in a case-control format using the arteriography series from this same data set. Examination of possible explanations for the differences raises questions concerning the use of arteriography series for etiologic studies of coronary
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Predictors of arteriographically defined coronary stenosis in the Honolulu Heart Program. Comparisons of cohort and arteriography series analyses. 186 96
Body fat distribution characterized by a high waist/hip ratio (WHR) has been described as a risk factor in the incidence of cardiovascular diseases and associated mortality. Hemorheological changes have been shown to accompany several risk factors. Gynoid and android obese women were compared in the present study with respect to hemorheological and metabolic variables and blood pressure. The android obese women had a significantly higher hematocrit and red blood cell count and showed higher blood viscosity at both high and low shear rates than women with the gynoid
obesity
type. Blood pressure was also higher in the android group. No significant differences were shown in concentration of cholesterol or triglycerides in serum nor in the microrheological properties of the red blood cells. The filterability index, which mirrors the number of rigid erythrocytes in the blood, was found to correlate with the plasma insulin concentration (r = 0.78, P less than 0.05) in the android but not in the gynoid obese women. It is concluded that the pathological changes in blood rheology observed in the android obese women may contribute to the high rate of cardiovascular events and associated mortality reported in this type of
obesity
.
Atherosclerosis
1991 May
PMID:Hemorheological disturbances, metabolic parameters and blood pressure in different types of obesity. 187 7
Rats of the JCR:LA-corpulent strain were treated with benfluorex daily at a dose of 25 mg/kg body weight. This strain of rat, if homozygous for the cp gene (cp/cp), is hyperphagous, obese, hypertriglyceridemic, insulin resistant and in the case of male rats,
atherosclerosis
prone. The benfluorex treatment produced a sharp reduction in food intake which remained suppressed despite recovery toward normal after 2 weeks of treatment. This was accompanied by sustained decreases in body weight and adipose tissue mass. The ability of adipose tissue from female rats to take up glucose and convert it to lactate, glyceride-glycerol and fatty acids was decreased. This decrease was largely due to decreased adipose tissue mass. The serum concentrations of glucose, lactate, triacylglycerol, cholesterol, phospholipids and insulin were decreased in both sexes. The treatment also improved glucose tolerance and decreased corticosterone concentrations in male rats only. While reduction of food consumption contributes to the effects seen, benfluorex clearly had significant direct metabolic effects. The effects are consistent with an improved insulin sensitivity leading to a decrease in circulating triacylglycerol. The changes produced by benfluorex are all in directions that should inhibit atherogenesis in this animal model for the human
obesity
/hypertriglyceridemia/insulin resistant syndrome.
...
PMID:Decreased serum lipids, serum insulin and triacylglycerol synthesis in adipose tissue of JCR:LA-corpulent rats treated with benfluorex. 189 72
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