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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adiposis dolorosa or Dercum's disease consists of a painful progressive localized state of obesity with four cardinal symptoms: a) painful circumscribed or diffuse fatty deposits, b) generalized obesity in women usually of menopausal age, c) asthenia, weakness and frequently tendency to fatigue and d) mental phenomena including emotional instability, depression, epilepsy, mental confusion and true dementia. Only a few cases in men have been described. The pain may be treated with intravenous administration of lignocaine or oral mexitil while no causal treatment is known. An illustrative case is reported.
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PMID:[A case of adiposis dolorosa--Dercum's disease]. 150 54

Twenty-eight patients (19 females, 9 males) were evaluated pre- and posttransplant to determine the frequency and find predictors of excessive weight gain after orthotopic liver transplant. Posttransplant, 21 patients gained and 7 patients lost weight as compared with their pretransplant dry weight. The majority of weight gain occurred between 2 and 16 months; 64.3% of patients (18/28 pts.) became overweight. All patients overweight prior to transplant (11 pts.) were more overweight posttransplant (P less than 0.005). Overweight and nonoverweight patients were similar in age, female predominance, etiology of liver disease, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertriglyceridemia pretransplant, as well as diabetes mellitus and medications including prednisone posttransplant. Overweight patients more commonly had a family history of diabetes mellitus, arteriosclerotic heart disease, and hypertension. They also had more hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, abnormal physical findings related to the liver, and abnormal results of hepatic tests posttransplant. Mean rate of weight gain for overweight patients compared with nonoverweight ones during the first 16 months after transplant was 1.5 kg/month +/- 0.9 vs 0.4 kg/month +/- 0.4 for those not overweight. After 16 months mean rate of increase was slower for overweight patients (0.3 kg/month +/- 0.3), whereas weight appeared to stabilize in the nonoverweight ones. We conclude that excessive weight gain after liver transplant is common and occurs early. Since obesity may contribute to, as well as be a separate cause, of hepatic abnormalities, confusion may result when interpreting abnormal results of hepatic tests. Obesity prior to transplant predicts excessive weight gain posttransplant, although all patients may be at risk.
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PMID:Excessive weight gain after liver transplantation. 201 32

A 52-year-old man with myxedema was evaluated for anterior chest pain that was considered to be compatible with myocardial ischemia. The night after admission he developed extreme bradycardia, hypotension, and apneic episodes lasting up to 25 s. Continuous positive airway pressure and administration of medroxyprogesterone acetate prevented further episodes and relieved much of the somnolence and lethargy that had contributed to the evidence for myxedema. Alveolar hypoventilation caused by decreased sensitivity to carbon dioxide, inadequate central neural drive, peripheral muscle force, and obesity all may have contributed to the apnea. Chest pain has not recurred, and results of electrocardiography have remained normal following full thyroid hormone replacement. The early recognition of myxedema causing sleep apnea will allow specific treatment to avoid the cardiovascular risks related to prolonged apnea and will help avoid confusion with other etiologies of cardiovascular abnormalities.
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PMID:Extreme bradycardia during sleep apnea caused by myxedema. 363 55

Forty-two patients with proven intra-abdominal sepsis were studied in a prospective clinical trial. The following parameters were evaluated: (1) Nine parameters on admission: age, sex, obesity, malnutrition, history of cardiac, respiratory or renal disease, diabetes mellitus and malignant neoplasia. Four of these parameters had a prognostic value (p less than 0.05): age 65 years, diabetes mellitus and cardiac disease. (2) Thirty parameters representing the functional status of six organic systems during sepsis: respiratory, cardiovascular, nervous, kidneys, blood coagulation, liver. Six of these parameters had a prognostic values: PEEP 0-10 cm H2O to keep PaO2 greater than 60 mmHg (p less than 0.001), serum creatinine greater than 3.6 mg/dl (p less than 0.01), prothrombin time greater than 15'' or platelet count less than 100,000/mm3 (p less than 0.001), need of vasoconstrictive drug to keep arterial pressure greater than 100 mmHg (p less than 0.001), bilirubin greater than 3 mg/dl (p less than 0.01) and mental confusion. The combination of these ten statistically significant prognostic criteria for each patient showed that the mortality was 0 with 0-2 criteria, 36% with 3-5 criteria, 94% with 6-8 criteria and 100% with 8-10 criteria. Patients with more than five of these criteria had a significant higher mortality risk (p less than 0.001).
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PMID:Prognostic criteria in intra-abdominal sepsis. 367 39

A family systems model of obesity is developed that attempts to integrate systems epistemology, Minuchin's work on psychosomatic disorders, and a review of the literature on obesity. The model presents obesity as being inextricably embedded in relationship patterns that fundamentally influence its etiology and maintenance. It is argued that the emergent properties of these relationships need to be the focus of analysis, rather than the elementary components residing within the individual, which are emphasized in traditional theories of obesity. The radical shift involved in moving from the traditional mechanistic models to a systems perspective is also discussed because these approaches are based on different epistemologies. The fundamental differences between these epistemologies are important and often underemphasized, which has led to much confusion in past research. Based on the model developed here and supportive data from the obesity literature, the conclusion is reached that obesity research and treatment are likely to be advanced by adopting a systemic approach.
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PMID:Epistemology, family patterns, and psychosomatics: the case of obesity. 375 17

The findings of small anterior and posterior relatively echo-free spaces adjacent to the epimyocardium by echocardiography is more often indicative of pseudopericardial effusion due to subepicardial fat deposition rather than true pericardial effusion (PE), at least in older obese and Type II diabetic patients. This conclusion was based on the echo and computed tomography (CT) correlation performed in 10 consecutive patients (8 women, 2 men). The mimicry of various extracardiac and cardiac causes resulting in confusion with anterior and posterior PE is emphasized. Subepicardial fat deposition is one of the most common causes which mimic presence of small PE on echo and can be confirmed easily by limited CT of the chest. Age, sex, obesity, and diabetes mellitus (Type II) appear to be the most common predisposing factors for the accumulation of excess subepicardial fat.
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PMID:Pseudopericardial effusion: echocardiographic and computed tomographic correlations. 380 3

The winter athlete has several potential tactics for sustaining body temperature in the face of severe cold. An increase in the intensity of physical activity may be counter-productive because of increased respiratory heat loss, increased air or water movement over the body surface, and a pumping of air or water beneath the clothing. Shivering can generate heat at a rate of 10 to 15 kJ/min, but it impairs skilled performance, while the resultant glycogen usage hastens the onset of fatigue and mental confusion. Non-shivering thermogenesis could arise in either brown adipose tissue or white fat. Brown adipose tissue generates heat by the action of free fatty acids in uncoupling mitochondrial electron transport, and by noradrenaline-induced membrane depolarisation and sodium pumping. The existence of brown adipose tissue in human adults is controversial, and although there are theoretical mechanisms of heat production in white fat, their contribution to the maintenance of body temperature is small. Acclimatisation to cold develops over the course of about 10 days, and in humans the primary change is an insulative, hypothermic type of response; this reflects the intermittent nature of most occupational and athletic exposures to cold. Nevertheless, with more sustained exposure to cold air or water, humans can apparently develop the humoral type of acclimatisation described in small mammals, with an increased output of noradrenaline and/or thyroxine. The associated mobilisation of free fatty acids suggests the possibility of using winter sport as a pleasant method of treating obesity. In men, a combination of moderate exercise and facial cooling induces a substantial fat loss over a 1- to 2-week period, with an associated ketonuria, proteinuria, and increase of body mass. Possible factors contributing to this fat loss include: (a) a small energy deficit; (b) the energy cost of synthesising new lean tissue; (c) energy loss through the storage and excretion of ketone bodies; (d) catecholamine-induced 'futile' metabolic cycles with increased resting metabolism; and (e) a specific reaction to cold dehydration. Current limitations for the clinical application of such treatment include uncertainty regarding optimal environmental conditions, concern over possible pathological reactions to cold, and suggestions of a less satisfactory fat mobilisation in female patients. Possible interactions between physical fitness and metabolic reactions to cold remain controversial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation to exercise in the cold. 388 60

In an attempt to resolve the prevailing confusion about erythrocyte sodium pump activity in obesity, we measured sodium-potassium-ATPase, ouabain-inhibitable (active) sodium efflux rate constant and intracellular sodium concentration in erythrocytes from 107 non-obese and obese subjects, with a body-mass index ranging from 17 to 54 kg X m-2. All the three independently measured variables were not significantly different between the two groups and no correlations were found between these three indices and body-mass index. The expression of ATPase activity in units of membrane protein allowed our previous data to be compared with this study and other reports. Our studies and most of the published reports suggest that there is no difference in erythrocyte sodium-potassium-ATPase and sodium transport between the vast majority of obese and non-obese subjects, but there is a subgroup of obese subjects (about 5%) with abnormally high erythrocyte sodium pump activity. The variable treatment of data from this subgroup and the small numbers of obese subjects studied by various investigators are largely responsible for the conflicting results about erythrocyte sodium pump activity.
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PMID:Erythrocyte sodium pump activity in human obesity. 609 47

Problem areas in the necropsy diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease are reviewed, potential sources of confusion delineated, and diagnostic guidelines proposed. The entire spectrum of alcoholic liver disease, including alcoholic hepatitis, may be perfectly mimicked by severe obesity, diabetes, and perhexiline maleate toxicity. Focal fatty change in the liver introduces sampling errors in the assessment of steatosis. Nodular regenerative hyperplasia of the liver mimics a micronodular cirrhosis both clinically and macroscopically. Measurement of the liver iron concentration reliably differentiates between alcoholic liver disease with siderosis and idiopathic hemochromatosis. The evaluation of preexisting fibrosis or cirrhosis in cases of massive hepatic necrosis is aided by stains for elastic fibers. Alcohol abusers taking acetaminophen (paracetamol) in excessive, but not suicidal doses are at risk of developing fatal "late" acetaminophen hepatotoxicity. Fatal viral hepatitis may be overlooked in an alcoholic with preexisting liver disease.
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PMID:Problems in the necropsy diagnosis of alcoholic liver disease. 673 1

A neurological syndrome characterized by episodes of confusion, slurred speech, and unsteadiness is described in patients who have undergone jejunoileostomy for obesity. This syndrome has been noted in seven of 110 patients studied, although it may be more common. It appears to subside spontaneously or may respond to oral food restriction, with or without intravenous fluid plus vitamins and minerals. Episodes tend to recur in a given patient. Reversible changes in the EEG have been observed. Pertinent clinical and laboratory findings are described but no definite etiologic factor has been identified. The possible mechanisms involved in this syndrome of metabolic encephalopathy following jejunoileostomy are discussed.
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PMID:Encephalopathy following jejunoileostomy. 725 81


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