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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A young girl 12 old, sent to us for
obesity
, and coxa-
epiphysiolysis
showed signs of mental retardation and bilateral thumb ankylosis. The fact that the mother was also affected by both of these signs, led to a more detailed genetic research. The latter revealed that not only the daughter, the mother, but also their own mother and may be, the sister, the grand-mother and the great-aunt of the patient had a retardation, a slight dysmorphia, a type A brachydactylia, signs of
obesity
and an identical ankylosis of both thumbs. This vertical inheritance, affecting apparently females only, but not associated with a high rate of miscarriage, has, it seems, never been reported. The characteristics of this family are being considered and discussed.
...
PMID:[Regular dominance of thumb ankylosis with mental retardation transmitted over 3 generations]. 663 21
Two Shetland Sheepdogs that did not have a history of trauma were referred because of a gradual onset of lameness in the hind limbs. Bilateral slipped capital femoral epiphysis was diagnosed. Separation of the proximal femoral epiphysis that is not associated with trauma is recognized as a distinct clinical syndrome in adolescent human beings and swine, causing a condition called
epiphysiolysis
. The precise cause of this type of injury is unknown. Histologic lesions observed in the growth plates could have been the result of an abnormally high mechanical load imposed by
obesity
. It is not known whether cartilaginous lesions observed in the physis of 1 dog represented a preexisting cartilaginous defect (dyschondroplasia) or a late stage of repair after separation of the capital femoral epiphysis.
...
PMID:Bilateral epiphysiolysis of the femoral heads in two dogs. 910 23
Three young people, a boy aged 15 years and two girls aged 9 years and 13 years, had already suffered groin pain and knee pain for many months. They exhibited an antalgic walk, diminished function of the hip and radiographic signs of a slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE). The complaints disappeared following in situ fixation with one or more screws.
Epiphysiolysis
of the caput femoris through the growth plate is a disorder of the growing hip. It is the most prevalent hip disease in adolescents.
Obese
boys are the most commonly affected. The aetiology is not known. The later SCFE is diagnosed and treated, the greater the chance of premature coxarthrosis. Avascular necrosis and chondrolysis are complications that can arise as a result of the operation.
...
PMID:[Pain and gait problems in 3 (almost) adolescents with a dislocated hip]. 1145 Jun
Southwick's angles measured in the anteroposterior and Lauenstein frog-leg views have been used for planning surgical treatment of deformities caused by slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE). Clinically established
epiphysiolysis
is associated with a decrease in anteroposterior angles and an increase in Lauenstein angles.
Obesity
is one of the factors involved in the development of SCFE, but its influence in Southwick's angles has not been previously described. Additionally, few reports describe normal values adjusted for sex and bone age. In this study, we determined Southwick's angles in normal control participants (n=70), in patients with
obesity
(n=31) and in patients with
epiphysiolysis
(n=33). The intra-observer variations were 1.7 and 23.3% for the anteroposterior and Lauenstein angles, respectively. No significant differences were detected in the control group when these individuals were compared according to sex or chronological age.
Obese
patients showed a significant increase in the anterposterior angle when compared with control individuals. The hip with
epiphysiolysis
presented a significant reduction in the anteroposterior angle and an increase in the Lauenstein angle, when the same was compared with the contralateral hip or with the control values. In patients with unilateral SCFE the Lauenstein angle of the normal hip was detected as increased, which was possibly related to the
obesity
associated with decreased insulin resistance presented by these patients. We conclude that the detection of risk for developing SCFE should include an expanded clinical and radiological profile characterized by pubertal males who present
obesity
associated with insulin resistance and an increase in Southwick's anteroposterior angle.
...
PMID:Southwick's head-shaft angles: normal standards and abnormal values observed in obesity and in patients with epiphysiolysis. 1519 79
Measurement of the Southwick's anteroposterior (AP) angle (shaft epiphysis proximal femoral AP angle) is not only a useful tool for planning the surgical treatment of deformities caused by slipped capital femoral epiphysis, but seems to be also important for recognizing the risk of
epiphysiolysis
development in obese patients (increased AP angle) or to confirm the diagnosis of slipped capital femoral epiphysis (decreased AP angle). To establish normal reference values of the Southwick's AP angle, we studied 97 normal nonobese adolescents (42 females, 55 males), with ages ranging between 8 and 16 years. The mean (SD) AP angle was 151.2 (5.0), ranging from 140 to 164. The limits for the first (p25) and third (p75) quartiles were 148 and 155, respectively. No difference was observed in the AP angle in males when compared with females. The AP angle was evaluated according to sex, chronological age, bone age, weight, height, and pubertal stage of development. We observed an inverse correlation of the AP angle with chronological age (r=-0.57) and bone age (r=-0.52). A weak inverse correlation was also found with stature (r=-0.33). Only a tendency toward an inverse correlation with weight (r=-0.27) or body mass index (r=-0.26) was observed. No significant correlation with the pubertal stage was found. When chronological and bone ages were divided into intervals, a significant reduction of the AP angle was observed only in patients older than 14 years compared with those younger than 10 years of age. In this study, we propose that the AP angle should be considered to be normal if it varies between 148 and 155. We conclude that the normal AP angle does not depend on sex; however, it tends to decrease with stature, and chronological and bone ages. In the normal weight range also, the AP angle decreases, contrasting with our previous findings in obese adolescents, in which the AP angle increases with the severity of
obesity
.
...
PMID:Normal reference values of Southwick's anteroposterior angle in prepubertal and pubertal normal adolescents. 1790 34