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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Genetic epidemiology gives no priority to genes or environment in the search of disease causation. However, a major problem in this field is the disentangling of the effects of environment and genes. The study of subjects separated very early in life from their biologic parents and adopted by unrelated parents provide a strong tool for estimation of genetic and familial environmental influences. The degree to which the trait or disease frequency of the adoptees is similar to that seen among the biologic relatives is an indication of the strength of the genetic influence. Similarity to the adoptive relatives suggests influences of the family environment shared between them. Adoption studies of adult
obesity
show that it is genes, and not the family environment, that is responsible for the familial aggregation of
obesity
. A study of the mortality of adult adoptees and their biologic and adoptive parents indicates a genetic influence on the risk of premature death from all causes, from natural causes, infections, and cardio- and cerebrovascular conditions, and suggests familial environmental influences on death from the vascular causes and from
cancer
.
...
PMID:Genetic epidemiology utilizing the adoption method: studies of obesity and of premature death in adults. 192 21
A hospital-based case-control study was conducted over 4 years in Southern France to assess the pattern of established risk factors for breast cancer and to examine its variation according to age at diagnosis. Cases studied (450) were women admitted to the Montpellier
Cancer
Institute, with histologically confirmed primary breast carcinoma. Controls (576) were patients from a nearby hospital admitted in the early stages of a neurological or mild psychological diseases and from a clinic for general surgery. Any patient with malignant tumours, chronic and cardiovascular diseases were excluded. The total population globally showed the commonly reported pattern for these risk factors. When stratified by age, the reproductive factors occurring early in life (menarche, first full term pregnancy) were shown to be significant risk factors only in the youngest group of patients and do not seem to influence risk in older women, for whom risk factors are those occurring later in life (menopause,
obesity
). This suggests a complex involvement of the reproductive and sociodemographic features with the various stages of the 'natural history' of breast cancer.
Br J
Cancer
1991 Nov
PMID:The pattern of risk factors for breast cancer in a southern France population. Interest for a stratified analysis by age at diagnosis. 193 17
Starvation and malnutrition are associated with low concentrations of plasma insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). To evaluate the utility of IGF-I as a screening test for malnutrition, we compared plasma IGF-I concentrations with anthropometric measurements of nutritional status in 99
cancer
patients. Forty-three percent of patients were overweight and 4 percent were underweight. Log IGF-I correlated negatively with body weight (r = -0.31, P = 0.002), midarm muscle area (MAMA) (r = -0.31, P = 0.001), triceps skinfold thickness (TSF) (r = -0.24, P = 0.03) and body mass index (r = -0.31, P = 0.003). In males plasma IGF-I correlated with TSF but not MAMA; in females IGF-I correlated with MAMA but not TSF, suggestive of a sexual dimorphism between plasma IGF-I and indices of adiposity. We conclude that
obesity
was far more prevalent than undernutrition, and that plasma IGF-I correlated negatively with indices of adiposity in a gender specific fashion. Because IGF-I is significantly reduced in the obese as well as in the malnourished, measurements of plasma IGF-I are unlikely to be of adequate clinical specificity to serve as a useful screening test for subtle alterations in nutritional status.
...
PMID:Effect of obesity on plasma insulin-like growth factor-I in cancer patients. 193 95
We examined the relationship between body mass [weight (kg)/height (m)2] and breast cancer using data from the
Cancer
and Steroid Hormone Study. The study compared 4323 women aged 20-54 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer identified through population-based tumor registries with 4358 women randomly selected from the general population of the same geographic areas. Among naturally menopausal women, risk of breast cancer increased with increasing body mass index (BMI); those severely overweight (BMI greater than or equal to 32.30) had nearly 3-fold higher risk of breast cancer compared with women in the leanest category (BMI less than 20.00). This positive association appeared stronger with increasing years since menopause and in women who had ever used estrogen replacement therapy. A positive association between body mass and breast cancer risk also was observed among premenopausal women; however, risk estimates were substantially lower. Substantial weight gain from adolescence to adulthood was a more important risk factor than lifelong
obesity
. Prevalence of
obesity
increases with age; our results suggest that interventions that prevent this trend could have an important effect on breast cancer risk, especially during the menopausal years.
...
PMID:The relationship between body mass and breast cancer among women enrolled in the Cancer and Steroid Hormone Study. 161 62
Seventy-five patients with isolated calf vein thrombi were prospectively monitored with sequential duplex scans at 3- to 4-day intervals. Twenty-four patients (32%) propagated and 11 of these 24 (46%) into the popliteal or larger veins of the thigh. Sex, age,
obesity
, trauma, estrogen use,
malignancy
, varicose veins, smoking, surgery, and activity level were not predictive for proximal propagation. Proximal soleal vein thrombi had the highest incidence in both propagating and non-propagating groups. Thrombus extent and bilateral involvement were not predictive of propagation. Five percent (4 of 75 patients) had highly probable ventilation perfusion scans as their initial indication for duplex scanning. Deep vein thrombosis isolated to the calf is not a benign problem. If anticoagulant therapy is contraindicated, the progress of the thrombus can be followed by duplex scanning.
...
PMID:Lower extremity calf thrombosis: to treat or not to treat? 194 69
A cohort of 8,006 Japanese-American men living in Hawaii was examined from 1965 to 1968 and followed for about 20 years. The study identified 1,155 incident cases of histologically confirmed
cancer
and 648 deaths due to
cancer
. There was no association between systolic or diastolic blood pressure and total
cancer
incidence or deaths due to
cancer
. The relative risk was 1.03 for
cancer
incidence and 1.00 for
cancer
mortality for subjects with a systolic pressure of 160 mmHg or greater. Adjustment was made for age, smoking, alcohol, and measures related to
obesity
. When cancers of specified sites were studied, blood pressure was positively associated with the incidence of kidney cancer (17 cases). After adjustment for the significant effect of taking antihypertensive medication, the effect of blood pressure became nonsignificant. Among seven other
cancer
sites, there were no statistically significant associations with blood pressure after adjustment for confounding factors.
...
PMID:The association of blood pressure with cancer incidence in a prospective study. 195 Dec 91
A 42-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with a chief complaint of hypertension. Endocrinologically, the plasma cortisol level was increased, but its diurnal rhythm had disappeared and the plasma cortisol level was not suppressed by dexamethasone loading at 2 mg or 8 mg. The plasma ACTH level was low. Computerized tomographic scan, echography and adrenocortical scintigraphy showed an adrenocortical tumor on the right adrenal gland. Physical examination did not reveal typical Cushingoid symptoms such as moon face, central
obesity
and violaceous striae. Thus we diagnosed this case as non-Cushingoid Cushing's syndrome and performed right adrenalectomy. Histological examination showed adreno-cortical adenoma without
malignancy
.
...
PMID:[A case of non-Cushingoid Cushing's syndrome]. 196 57
This study addresses the effect of
obesity
and body fat distribution on axillary lymph node involvement, tumor size, and estrogen receptor (ER) level in breast cancer patients. Anthropometric measurements were prospectively obtained on 248 consecutively and newly diagnosed women with invasive breast cancer. The anthropometric measurements evaluated were abdomen, thigh, subscapular, and midaxillary skinfolds; weight; and height. Weight and Quetelet Index (kg/m2) were significantly (P = 0.001) associated with lymph node involvement in postmenopausal patients. The abdomen:thigh skinfold ratio was significantly higher in premenopausal patients (P = 0.004) and postmenopausal (P = 0.03) without axillary node involvement compared with women with 4+ axillary node involvement. The abdomen:thigh skinfold was higher (P = 0.05) in women with smaller breast cancers (less than 2.0 cm) and higher ER levels. Weight and Quetelet Index did not affect tumor size or ER level. This study demonstrated that obese postmenopausal women who developed breast cancer tend to have more axillary node involvement than their leaner counterparts. Generalized obesity did not affect tumor size or ER level. Premenopausal and postmenopausal women with upper body fat distribution appear to be a subset of women who have a more favorable prognosis as measured by less lymph node involvement, smaller tumors, and higher levels of ER in their tumors.
Cancer
1991 Jan 15
PMID:Obesity and body fat distribution and breast cancer prognosis. 193 87
A case-control study was undertaken to evaluate the roles of
obesity
and body fat distribution in the etiology of endometrial cancer. The study also included an evaluation of the associations of serum estrone, estradiol, and androstenedione with
obesity
, body fat distribution, and endometrial cancer risk. The study included 168 cases and 334 control subjects identified at an optometry clinic. A strong, positive relationship between overall
obesity
and endometrial cancer was found. The relative rate of endometrial cancer for women in the upper 90th percentile of a body mass index compared to those below the median was estimated as 5.5 with 95% confidence limits of 3.2-9.6. There was no association between endometrial cancer and the waist to hip ratio, an index of upper versus lower body fat distribution. A statistical test of trend across the four quartiles of the waist to hip ratio yielded a P value of 0.45 after adjustment for confounding by the body mass index. On the other hand, there was a statistically significant, independent positive effect of a high subscapular to tricep skinfold ratio, a measure of central versus peripheral
obesity
, on endometrial cancer risk. The relative rates of endometrial cancer for the second, third, or fourth quartile compared to the first quartile of this index were 1.5, 1.9, and 2.7, respectively (P = 0.007), after adjustment for the body mass index. Serum estrone and estradiol, but not androstenedione, were statistically significantly correlated with the body mass index among control subjects (r = 0.37 and 0.40 for estrone and estradiol, respectively). On the other hand, each of the sex hormones was uncorrelated with the waist to hip ratio after adjustment for body mass. The correlations between each of the three hormones and the subscapular to tricep skinfold ratio among controls were weak and were not statistically significant (0.10, 0.10, and 0.14 for estrone, estradiol and androstenedione, respectively). Cases had statistically significantly higher mean serum estrogen and androstenedione levels than did controls and these elevations did not simply reflect a higher prevalence of
obesity
among them. The findings are equivocal with respect to fat patterns and endometrial cancer. We suggest that future epidemiological studies of
cancer
and body fat distribution more carefully distinguish among the various types of fat patterns.
Cancer
Res 1991 Jan 15
PMID:Endometrial cancer, obesity, and body fat distribution. 198 74
Obesity
has been investigated as a risk factor for various
malignancies
, including colon cancer. A case-control study was conducted on patients in three colonoscopy practices in New York City to determine possible risk factors for colorectal adenomatous polyps, a known precursor lesion for most cases of colorectal cancer. Among 301 case subjects with incidence adenomatous polyps (174 men and 127 women) and 506 control subjects (223 men and 283 women), an increased risk was observed with increasing body mass index in women (odds ratio 2.1, 95% confidence interval 1.1-4.0; for highest versus lowest quartile, linear trend P = .02). A nonsignificant trend was observed for men. The increased risk seen in women is consistent with prior observations regarding reproductive hormonal and dietary risk factors for colorectal cancer.
J Natl
Cancer
Inst 1991 Mar 06
PMID:Obesity and colorectal adenomatous polyps. 199 19
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