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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A seven-year-old male Border Collie was presented with a history of lethargy, episodic circling, incoordination and polydypsia. Physical examination revealed depression,
obesity
and bradycardia. A neurological examination indicated the possible presence of a space-occupying lesion in the brain. Results of the clinical investigation revealed hyposthenuria, sinus bradycardia and increased concentration of protein in the cerebrospinal fluid. A computerised axial tomography scan revealed a mass in the region of the hypophysis. The dog was euthanased and a post mortem examination confirmed the presence of a
craniopharyngioma
.
...
PMID:A craniopharyngioma in a seven-year-old dog. 194 90
Three patients are described in whom surgical removal of a
craniopharyngioma
was followed by extreme hyperphagia resulting in
obesity
and abnormal food-seeking behavior, including foraging for food, stealing food or stealing money for food. These behaviors resemble those seen in the Prader-Willi syndrome but contrast with those noted in bulimia. This deviant behavior was a major factor in the poor outcome of surgery. Attempts at rehabilitation were unsuccessful.
...
PMID:Abnormal food-seeking behavior after surgery for craniopharyngioma. 281 93
The effect of one of the new human pancreatic growth hormone releasing factors (hpGRFs) was assessed in children or young adults with different forms of growth retardation or endocrine-metabolic diseases. Intravenously administered synthetic hpGRF-40 (1 microgram/kg) induced a clear-cut and prompt rise in plasma growth hormone (GH) levels in 8 normal prepubertal children and a definite GH rise in 11 out of 14 children with isolated GH deficiency (IGHD) and one child with the Silver-Russel syndrome. In two out of three subjects with
craniopharyngioma
hpGRF-40 did not induce any plasma GH increase. In seven out of ten children with constitutional growth delay (CGD), hpGRF-40 induced a biphasic GH response, with a prompt small GH increment followed by a second, more consistent rise. Both in children with IGHD and with CGD the rise in plasma GH following hpGRF-40 was markedly lower than in controls. In children with CGD the GH response to hpGRF-40 was defective, despite the fact that in most of them the GH response to standard pharmacological stimuli was normal according to generally accepted criteria. hpGRF induced a small but sustained plasma GH rise in four hypothyroid subjects, while in three out of four children with idiopathic
obesity
the GH response to hpGRF was strikingly reduced. These data demonstrate that hpGRF is a potent stimulus of GH release in normal prepubertal children and a physiological means of investigating GH function in diseases associated with growth impairment.
...
PMID:Growth hormone response to hpGRF-40 in different forms of growth retardation and endocrine-metabolic diseases. 308 39
Pre- and postoperative growth was analyzed in 22 children with
craniopharyngioma
. In 19 children a growth failure preceded the diagnosis by a mean of 4 years. Six children were obese preoperatively. During the first 3 postoperative months relative weight increased greater than 10% in 14/21 children (there was one surgical death). One year after surgery 13/21 were obese. Neither the size of the tumor nor the mode of surgery was decisive in the development of the
obesity
. Serum insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) were assessed in four children with growth hormone deficiency (GHD) who, after surgery for
craniopharyngioma
, were growing normally without GH substitution. One of them was normal in weight and had normal insulin and IGF-I levels; the others were obese and had supranormal insulin and subnormal IGF-I levels. One of the four and two other children with unsubstituted GHD reached final height SDS -0.8, -2.0 and -2.4. One child with normal postoperative GH response reached final height SDS -0.7. Final height SDS greater than or equal to -2.5 was gained with GH substitution by 6/11 children. It was greater than 2.0 SD below the height SDS expected from the heights of the parents in 7/11. An adequate monitoring of children's growth would lead to earlier diagnosis and probably better outcome.
...
PMID:Children with craniopharyngioma. Early growth failure and rapid postoperative weight gain. 339 13
We studied insulin-like growth factors (IGF) I and II, prolactin, and the insulin response to arginine in 19 children with
craniopharyngioma
and documented growth hormone deficiency. Patients were divided into three groups according to their growth rate during the first postoperative year. Seven patients with excessive growth (Group A) had hyperinsulinism, normal IGF values, elevated basal prolactin levels, and a delayed thyrotropin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone, which was compatible with hypothalamic lesions. In the six patients with normal growth (Group B), the insulin level was low; all other hormone values were similar to those of Group A. In the six patients with decreased growth (Group C), levels of IGF I, insulin, prolactin, and thyrotropin were low, indicating the presence of severe pituitary damage and explaining the failure to grow. Patients in all groups had low or undetectable basal levels of growth hormone. We conclude that in Group B, normal IGF permitted normal growth, and prolactin hypersecretion may have been responsible for normal IGF I values. Excessive growth in Group A may have been caused by hyperinsulinism associated with hyperphagia and
obesity
of hypothalamic origin.
...
PMID:Insulin-like growth factors I and II, prolactin, and insulin in 19 growth hormone-deficient children with excessive, normal, or decreased longitudinal growth after operation for craniopharyngioma. 635 37
Growth hormone (GH) and somatomedin (Sm) are the main factors of human growth. Sm is GH-dependent, but Sm increase after hGH injection in hypopituitary dwarfs is slow, and preceded by a decrease. The liver and kidneys are the main places of Sm production in vivo, the liver having probably also a regulatory effect. In vitro, GH-dependent production of Sm may be obtained from fibroblasts as well as from liver cells. Sm activates thymidine uptake by cultured human fibroblasts and by activated human lymphocytes, this effect needing cofactors from serum. Discrepant correlations between growth, GH and Sm are found in some pathological situations, such as
obesity
,
craniopharyngioma
, celiac disease, infantile malnutrition. Moreover, transferrin, a plasma protein, correlates also with growth.
...
PMID:[Relationships between growth, and plasma growth hormone and growth factors under normal physiological conditions and during pathological states (author's transl)]. 701 77
Following complete surgical resection of a
craniopharyngioma
, combined anterior and posterior pituitary dysfunction is present in the majority of patients. Moreover, up to three-quarters of the patients will have deficits of four or more hormones. Postsurgery,
obesity
is common and can be part of a clinical syndrome which includes hyperphagia and normal growth despite GH deficiency. Radiotherapy with or without conservative surgery is associated with fewer endocrine disturbances. Normal growth and sexual development should be possible in most patients with the use of appropriate hormonal substitution therapy.
...
PMID:Craniopharyngioma: endocrine sequelae of treatment. 784 Oct 71
The postoperative course of children undergoing surgery for
craniopharyngioma
was reviewed. Typically they were below height at presentation. All had an attempt at radical surgical resection of the tumor. Most developed diabetes insipidus in the postoperative period, which was permanent in all but 1 child. 94% required thyroid replacement therapy, and sex steroids were administered in 100% when they reached the age of puberty. 91% required maintenance corticosteroids. 54% required growth hormone replacement, but some children showed continued growth despite apparent growth hormone deficiency. Postoperative
obesity
develops in one half of patients, and may be improved with administration of growth hormone; a controlled trial is underway.
...
PMID:The endocrine outcome after surgical removal of craniopharyngiomas. 784 Oct 75
The progression of alimentary fatty liver to liver cirrhosis is a very rare observation. During the year after surgical extirpation of a suprasellar
craniopharyngioma
in a seven years old boy developed severe
obesity
and again six years later at autopsy a complete liver cirrhosis with fatty liver was established. Injury of the ventromedial hypothalamic nuclei and resulting hyperphagia is the reason for the
obesity
following suprasellar tumours. The pathogenesis of liver cirrhosis following alimentary fatty liver is not completely evident up to now, such a progression is possible--as shown in this case--also in children and within a short period.
...
PMID:[Development of complete liver cirrhosis in hyperphagia-induced fatty liver]. 815 10
In children with
craniopharyngioma
, poor growth commonly precedes diagnosis, but is observed less frequently than neurological or visual symptoms. A deficiency of growth hormone (GH) is common before, and almost universal after, treatment of the tumour, and is usually treated with GH. However, a minority of these children with GH deficiency (GHD) grow well without GH replacement therapy but exhibit other metabolic effects of GHD that are correctable by GH treatment. This article provides a review of studies in 422 children with
craniopharyngioma
whose details have been entered into the database of KIGS, the Kabi International Growth Study. The response to GH during the first year of therapy was similar to that seen in children with idiopathic GHD (IGHD). Leg length was relatively greater than sitting height and this disproportion was maintained during treatment.
Adiposity
increased in some children receiving GH treatment. At the end of GH treatment in 82 patients, there was a median gain in height SD score of 1.51, with evidence of residual growth potential still remaining in the majority. Tumour recurrence occurred in 13.5% of the total group of patients with
craniopharyngioma
within KIGS, at a median of 3.9 years from diagnosis and 2.3 years from the start of GH therapy. Tumour recurrence was not associated with an impairment in height achieved, but there was a tendency towards greater adiposity in patients in whom recurrence occurred. Adverse events during GH treatment were more frequent in children with
craniopharyngioma
than in those with IGHD, and headache was commonly reported. The results of these studies suggest that GH treatment is recommended for the treatment of children with
craniopharyngioma
on the grounds of improved growth velocity, adult height and other GH-dependent metabolic functions, and of the good safety profile of GH in these patients.
...
PMID:Effect of growth hormone treatment in children with craniopharyngioma with reference to the KIGS (Kabi International Growth Study) database. 905 21
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