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

Glucose tolerance was assessed in 100 cases of adrenocortical hyperfunction (79-Cushing's disease and 21-Cushing's syndrome). Overt diabetes was found in 19 cases. Of the remaining 81 patients 37 had normal glucose tolerance, in 23 glucose tolerance was impaired and in 21 patients diabetes was diagnosed. Glucose tolerance expressed as 60 and 120 min glucose values did no correlate with hormonal parameters of adrenocortical hyperfunction nor with age of the patients and degree of obesity. The authors discuss the complex mechanism of the effect of glucocorticoid excess on glucose tolerance.
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PMID:[Glucose tolerance in adrenocortical hyperfunction. Analysis of 100 cases]. 797 80

Adrenal arterial embolization with absolute ethanol was performed for the treatment of Cushing's syndrome. A 55-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with complaints of obesity, hypertension, and back pain caused by left adrenal hyperplasia after surgical resection of the right adrenal gland. Therapeutic adrenal arterial embolization was performed by the coaxial technique using absolute ethanol (AE) as an embolic material. No severe complications were encountered during the procedure, and the patient was discharged without symptoms or abnormalities on laboratory tests.
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PMID:A case with Cushing's syndrome treated with arterial ablation of adrenal gland by absolute ethanol. 815 65

A 46-year-old man with known arterial hypertension for 10 years had, over the last two years, developed increasing obesity, particularly of the trunk, with other symptoms typical of Cushing's syndrome. Hormone analysis demonstrated hypercortisolism and decreased plasma ACTH concentration. The dexamethasone inhibition test failed to show any significant suppression of serum cortisol. Plasma ACTH was not increased in the corticotrophin-releasing hormone and the metyrapone tests. In the short ACTH test there was an excessive cortisol increase. Abdominal computed tomography revealed both adrenals to be enlarged (6 x 4 cm) and coarsely nodular. Adrenolytic treatment with ketoconazole (400 mg daily) caused symptoms of adrenal insufficiency, but a reduced dosage of 200 mg daily lowered the cortisol level to between 5 and 11 micrograms/dl and normalized the blood pressure and clinical signs of Cushing's syndrome disappeared. Subsequent bilateral adrenalectomy confirmed the diagnosis of massive macronodular adrenal hyperplasia. Substitution treatment with twice daily 25 mg cortisone acetate and 0.05 mg fludrocortisone was started postoperatively.
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PMID:[Bilateral massive macronodular adrenal gland hyperplasia. A rare cause of Cushing's syndrome]. 830 53

The authors describe a case of a female obese patient with cushingoid habitus who was not suffering from Cushing's syndrome or disease but from empty sella syndrome. The authors emphasize the importance of a systematic search for possible causes of obesity, especially if it joins with a particular habitus.
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PMID:[Empty sella syndrome in obese patient with cushingoid features. Description of a clinical case]. 833 44

A 61-year-old woman with hyper-catecholaminemia and hyper-glucocorticoidemia due to a mixed tumor of the right adrenal gland is described. The patient, who had been medicated for hypertension since 1977, complained of thirst and general malaise in 1986. Body weight loss was remarkable. There was neither absolute truncal obesity nor moon face. In September 1986, her blood pressure was 180/110 mmHg and blood glucose level was 400mg/dl. Noradrenaline levels in plasma and in urine were remarkably elevated (1659 pg/ml and 120 micrograms/day, respectively), and adrenaline levels were also high (397 pg/ml in plasma, 34 micrograms/day in urine). Plasma cortisol and urinary 17-OHCS were elevated (39.2 micrograms/dl and 11.9 mg/day, respectively). Plasma ACTH was in the normal range (42.6 pg/ml). Oral administration of neither 1mg nor 8 mg of dexamethasone suppressed plasma cortisol or ACTH levels. Both 131I-metaiodobenzylguanidine and 131I-adosterol accumulated in the right adrenal gland. In 1987 the adrenal tumor (3.0 x 3.5 cm, 30 g) was resected. After the operation, her blood pressure and blood glucose level returned to normal, so that the medication became unnecessary. Histologically it was revealed that the tumor was a mixed adenoma consisting of adreno-medullary and cortical cells (corticomedullary adenoma). The literature on 21 cases of pheochromocytoma associated with Cushing's syndrome was briefly reviewed. Mathison (1969) reported the first case of a mixed tumor of adreno-medullary and cortical cells. So far as we know the present case is the second.
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PMID:[A case of adrenal mixed tumor of pheochromocytoma and adrenocortical adenoma presenting diabetes mellitus and hypertension]. 837 53

A 62-year-old male with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) associated with Cushing's syndrome and diabetes insipidus (DI) is reported. The patient was referred to our hospital for treatment of SCLC. A diagnosis of paraneoplastic Cushing's syndrome was made on the basis of an elevated serum ACTH (623.5 pg/ml) level, elevated excretion of urinary 17-OHCS (18.01 mg/day), obesity, hypertension, hyperglycemia, persistent hypokalemia, alkalosis, and no history of diabetes mellitus. He was also diagnosed as having DI based on polyuria and polydipsia, low specific gravity of the urine (1.007-1.010), low serum ADH (1.4 pg/ml) level, normal plasma osmolarity (29 mOsm/kg H2O), and the results of water deprivation test. DI and a left visual field defect was suggestive of metastasis to the pituitary region, but no lesion was detected by either CT scan or MRI scan. The patient failed to show a good response to intensive chemotherapy, and died of the tumor five months after commencing chemotherapy. Post-mortem examination revealed metastases to the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal region, lungs, liver, adrenal glands, bone, bone marrow, and hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes.
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PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer associated with diabetes insipidus and Cushing's syndrome]. 839 May 89

Obesity is a multifactorial heterogenous condition. The location of excess fat on the body determines the risk of morbidity and mortality for significant disease. Visceral, or intraabdominal, fat is the fat depot most highly associated with illness and death from cardiocerebrovascular disease and diabetes. Visceral fat is also associated with a quartet of metabolic disturbances. Referred to as the metabolic syndrome, these abnormalities include hypertension, hyperlipidemia, hyperinsulinemia, and insulin resistance. The metabolic syndrome is also present in Cushing's syndrome, which is characterized by primary hypercortisolism as well as profound visceral adiposity and obesity. The interrelationship between hyperactivation or hypersensitivity of the stress axis and disease can be elucidated by an understanding of the effect of excess glucocorticoids upon energy storage and metabolism. The complex interactions of the stress axis upon the growth and reproductive axes, as well as upon the adipose tissue, suggest that chronic stress, whether psychological and/or physical, exerts an intense effect upon body composition, which, in turn, significantly affects the longevity and survival of the organism.
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PMID:Hypercortisolism and obesity. 859 40

A 70-year-old woman was referred to our hospital for diagnosis and treatment of a pulmonary mass detected on a chest X-ray film. Small cell lung cancer was diagnosed from pathological examination of a specimen of the tumor obtained by transbronchial biopsy. Paraneoplastic Cushing's syndrome was diagnosed on the basis of an elevated serum ACTH level (2000 pg/ml), the serum cortisol level (171.9 micrograms/dl), elevated excretion of urinary 17-OHCS (67 mg/day), persistent hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, hyperglycemia, central obesity, hypertension, systemic pigmentation, and the lack of a history of diabetes mellitus. Immunohistochemical staining with a polyclonal anti-ACTH antibody of a biopsy specimen from a lymph node with metastasis showed that tumor cells were weakly positive. The patient responded well to intensive chemotherapy with VP-16 (100 mg/m2 day 103), CBDCA (100 mg/m2 day 1-3), and CDDP (80 mg/m2 day 1). Complete response was obtained after 6 courses of chemotherapy. The serum ACTH level decreased rapidly as the tumor shrank. The primary tumor, however, relapsed after 3 months and the patient died of progressive disease, 11 months after diagnosis.
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PMID:[Small cell lung cancer associated with ectopic ACTH syndrome]. 862 81

The regulation of adipose tissue distribution is an important problem in view of the close epidemiological and metabolic associations between centralized fat accumulation and disease. With visceral fat accumulation multiple endocrine perturbations are found, including elevated cortisol and androgens in women, as well as low growth hormone (GH) and, in men, testosterone (T) secretion. These abnormalities probably derive from a hypersensitive hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, with hyperinsulinemia related to a marked insulin resistance as a consequence. These hormonal changes exert profound effects on adipose tissue metabolism and distribution. At the adipocyte level cortisol and insulin promote lipid accumulation by expressing lipoprotein lipase activity, while T, GH and probably estrogens exert opposite effects. The consequences will most likely be more expressed in visceral than subcutaneous adipose tissues because of a higher cellularity, innervation and blood flow. Furthermore, the density of cortisol and androgen receptors seems to be higher in this than other adipose tissue regions. The endocrine perturbations found in visceral obesity with an abundance of the lipid accumulating hormones cortisol and insulin, and a relatively low secretion of the lipid mobilizing sex steroid hormones and GH would therefore be expected to be followed by visceral fat accumulation. The potential significance of local synthesis of steroid hormones in adipose tissue requires more attention. Although studies in vitro are informative when elucidating detailed mechanisms of hormonal interactions, they might not give a true picture of the regional integrated regulation of adipose tissue lipid storage and mobilization. Such information can be obtained by regional measurements of lipid mobilization by free fatty acid turnover or by microdialysis techniques, both showing lower rates of mobilization in leg than in upper body adipose tissues. More detailed information can be obtained by physiological oral administration of triglycerides, labelled with a small amount of oleic acid, followed by measurements of the regional uptake and turn-over of adipose tissue triglycerides. Such studies show lipid uptake in the order omental = retroperitoneal > subcutaneous abdominal > subcutaneous femoral adipose tissues in men, with a similar rank order for half-life of the triglyceride, indicating also a turn-over of triglycerides in that order. T amplifies these differences in men. In premenopausal women subcutaneous abdominal has a higher turnover than femoral adipose tissue. Results of studies in vitro indicate that this difference is diminished at the menopause, and restored by estrogen substitution, suggesting that the functional effects of estrogens in women are similar to those of T in men. The mechanisms are, however, probably indirect because of the apparent absence of specific estrogen and progesterone receptors in human adipose tissue. This interpretation from the studies referred to above fits well with physiological, and clinical conditions with increased visceral fat mass, where the balance between the lipid accumulating hormone couple (cortisol and insulin) and the hormones which prevent lipid accumulation and instead activate lipid mobilization pathways (sex steroid hormones and GH) is shifted to the advantage of the former. Such conditions include Cushing's syndrome, the polycystic ovary syndrome, menopause, aging, GH-deficiency, depression, smoking and excess alcohol intake. With appropriate interventions against hypercortisolemia and substitution of deficient sex steroids and GH, visceral fat mass is decreasing. Based on this evidence from physiological, clinical, interventional observations and detailed studies of mechanisms at cellular and molecular levels it is suggested that the combined endocrine abnormalities in the syndrome of visceral obesity direct storage fat to visceral adipose depots. Therefore, measurements of visceral fat accumulat
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PMID:The regulation of adipose tissue distribution in humans. 868 Apr 55

Hyperandogenemia in women is manifested typically by clinical features that may include hirsutism, acne, central obesity, male pattern baldness, increased waist-to-hip ratio, clitoral hypertrophy and deepening of the voice. The differential diagnosis include Cushing syndrome, PCO and iatrogenic hirsutism. Complications include cardiovascular disease, intravascular disease and insulin resistance. An interdisciplinary approach to management is strongly recommended. Risk reduction strategies include correction of dyslipidemias, low-dose aspirin for primary prevention of myocardial infarction, maintenance of ideal weight, smoking cessation, use of oral contraceptives with low progestin, and postmenopausal estrogen replacement.
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PMID:[Epidemiology, classification and clinical aspects of hyperandrogenemia]. 875 98


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