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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The strong prejudice in this country against obese persons is evident in children as young as 6 years of age. There is discrimination against obese persons in both academic and work settings. Despite this discrimination, overweight persons in the general population show no greater psychological disturbance than do non-obese persons. Similarly, obese patients seen for medical or surgical procedures generally show no more psychopathology than do non-obese patients. Serious psychiatric disturbances associated with
obesity
include disparagement of body image and negative emotional reactions to dieting. Dieting may also be responsible for the increased incidence of
bulimia
observed in this country in recent years. Women, adolescent girls, and the morbidly obese appear to suffer the most deleterious consequences of society's contempt for the obese.
...
PMID:Social and psychological consequences of obesity. 406 26
In the past 10 years, numerous gut peptides have been tested for their satiating effect on food intake. Cholecystokinin (CCK), bombesin, pancreatic glucagon, and somatostatin have the best supporting evidence for such a specific behavioral effect. The satiety effect of CCK, somatostatin, and glucagon is abolished or markedly reduced by abdominal vagotomy, but the satiety effect of bombesin is not. The effect of vagotomy has been interpreted as the result of the loss of vagal afferent fibers that are necessary for carrying information about visceral effects of these peptides to the brain. This hypothesis is under active investigation. There are three reports that CCK decreases the size of a test meal in lean and obese humans. This suggests that CCK or the other peptides may be useful in treating human
obesity
and
bulimia
.
...
PMID:Gut peptides and postprandial satiety. 614 53
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
Many authors have pointed that precocious weaning expose infants to serious risks as hypernutrition,
obesity
, adverse reactions to foods, hypernatremia, dental caries, emotional problems as anorexia or
bulimia
, so that actually weaning is delayed after 6th month of age. Going on with the "adapted" formula is a relative nonsense because "adapted" milks have low protein and calcium contents so that they are not adequate to cover estimated and advisable intakes of 4-6 month baby unless feeding unusual higher volumes. On the other side "fresh milk" can not be considered a nutritional "chance", owing its low values of EFA, iron, vitamins, getting worse when fresh milk is diluted. So, recently was born a new milk formula "the follow up milk", on covering nutritional requirement for infants after 4 months of age. Someone is still critical about a follow up milk, also if ESPGAN in 1981 has confirmed its value in the infant feeding. Our work dealed on physical and biochemical nutritional assessment of 100 infants fed a new "liquid follow up formula" (Transilat). Nutritional assessment was performed with the following parameters: daily changes in weight according Fomon standards, plasmatic iron, cholesterol, transferrin, calcium, total proteins, hemoglobin concentration; all data are related to literature values for age. Results show that infants fed (Transilat) are growing well; nutritional data from biochemical point of view discovered any form of minimal or sporadic malnutrition. The follow up milk is a good nutritional "chance" after 4th month of age, instead of fresh cow milk; some infant with clinical problem needing a delayed introduction of cow milk can benefit of follow up milk also in older ages.
...
PMID:["Follow-up milk": general principles and evaluation of the nutritional status of 100 subjects fed a liquid transitional formula]. 664 69
Bulimia
is a poor prognostic sign in anorexia nervosa. This raised the question of whether
bulimia
represented an "end stage" of chronic anorexia nervosa or whether bulimic patients were a distinct subgroup. All subjects seen by us personally from 1970 to 1978 were included in this study provided they met modified criteria of Feighner et al (1972). Of this group, 68 experienced
bulimia
and 73 did not (restricters). Bulimic patients had a history of weighing more and were more commonly premorbidly obese. Bulimic patients were those who vomited and misused laxatives. The bulimic group displayed a variety of impulsive behaviors, including use of alcohol and street drugs, stealing, suicide attempts, and self-mutilation. With regard to family history, the high frequency of
obesity
in the mothers of bulimic patients was noteworthy. The two groups share features common to patients with primary anorexia nervosa. However, these results suggest a different group of women are predisposed to have anorexia nervosa develop with
bulimia
.
...
PMID:The heterogeneity of anorexia nervosa. Bulimia as a distinct subgroup. 693 88
In a behavioural clinic, over a period of nine years, trainee nurse-therapists treated 65 unusual referrals (8 per cent) out of a total of 800 patients. The remainder had phobic, obsessive-compulsive, sexual and social disorders, which responded encouragingly to behavioural treatment. Of the unusual referrals, useful results were obtained by behavioural treatment for stuttering, hairpulling, tics, and writer's cramp;
bulimia
is worth further study. Unresponsive conditions included compulsive gambling and
obesity
.
...
PMID:Behavioural psychotherapy of uncommon referrals. 711 54
Binge eating disorder (BED) identified in adulthood is often clinically associated with
obesity
and a lifetime history of affective disorders. Several authors have suggested that dieting may predispose individuals to
binge eating
which then may lead to
obesity
. However, few BED studies have examined the chronology of the onset of
binge eating
, dieting,
obesity
, and mood disorders. This study evaluated retrospective reports from 30 women participating in a BED treatment study. Although the majority of subjects in this adult sample were obese, initiation of
binge eating
behavior usually occurred during adolescence at a time when most subjects reported being of normal weight.
Obesity
developed several years after the age of onset of meeting BED criteria. Onset of
binge eating
usually predated that of dieting or major depressive disorder in the majority of subjects. The results support the importance of early intervention for
binge eating
.
...
PMID:Onset of binge eating, dieting, obesity, and mood disorders among subjects seeking treatment for binge eating disorder. 762 Apr 80
Since compulsive eating occurs in approximately 30% of obese females and is associated with earlier relapse following weight loss, we compared daily energy intake, dietary composition and energy expenditure among obese binge eaters and obese non-bingers. Nine obese bingers (33 +/- 4 yrs, 95 +/- 6 kg, 39 +/- 1% fat) and nine obese non-bingers (47 +/- 3 yrs, 93 +/- 5 kg, 40 +/- 1% fat) were admitted for 12 days to a metabolic unit. Binge eaters were defined as scoring > 25 on the
binge eating
scale (BES). During the initial 8 days, subjects ate ad libitum from two computerized vending machines offering a variety of foods and beverages. A weight maintenance diet was then provided for the next 4 days. Twenty-four hour energy expenditure (24EE) and respiratory quotient (24Q) were measured on the last day of both feeding periods in a respiratory chamber.
Obese
bingers showed a wider range of energy intake compared to non-bingers, but the mean daily energy intake was similar between the two groups (2587 +/- 454 vs 2386 +/- 201 kcal/d) during 8 days of ad libitum intake. 24EE was not different between bingers and non-bingers after 8 days of ad libitum intake (2298 +/- 147 vs 2109 +/- 97 kcal/d, P = 0.3) or 4 days of weight maintenance diet, even more so after adjustment for differences in fat-free mass, fat mass and age. Resting metabolic rate, sleeping metabolic rate, and macronutrient intake and oxidation were also similar between groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Food intake and energy expenditure in obese female bingers and non-bingers. 771 85
Binge eating disorder (BED) is characterized by a bulimic
binge eating
pattern without the compensatory behaviors of purging or laxative abuse. It is often associated with
obesity
. The treatment response characteristics are more like
bulimia
than other forms of
obesity
. We have shown the opiate antagonist naltrexone to attenuate bulimia nervosa in controlled clinical trials. We report here a response to naltrexone in a subject with BED similar to that previously reported for the larger population of bulimic subjects. Three consecutive periods of drug, placebo and double dose drug were used, with the order of the first two periods double blind until after the data analysis. Symptoms were reduced in the naltrexone compared to placebo period. Statistical significance was demonstrated using time series analysis for this 'n of one' study. Psychotherapy was carried out throughout all periods. Naltrexone plus psychotherapy may be more efficient than psychotherapy alone.
...
PMID:Binge eating disorder: response to naltrexone. 773 42
Binge eating
is a common problem among obese individuals, and a simple, accurate way to identify obese binge eaters is needed. This study measured the concordance of the
Binge Eating
Scale (BES) and the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE). Women seeking
obesity
treatment (N = 126) were identified as binge eaters or nonbinge eaters using the BES, and then interviewed by clinicians blind to BES score using the EDE, a semistructured interview considered to be the "gold standard" for eating disorder diagnosis. The BES accurately identified nonbinge eaters; 39 of 42 (92.9%) BES-identified nonbinge eaters were confirmed by the EDE. However, the BES did not accurately identify binge eaters; only 43 of the 83 (51.8%) BES-identified binge eaters were confirmed by the EDE. Reasons for the discrepancy between the BES and the EDE in the identification of binge eaters were explored, and modifications to the BES that might improve its accuracy were considered.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of binge eating disorder: discrepancies between a questionnaire and clinical interview. 775 96
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