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

Japan has been experiencing ever more rapid socioeconomic development and changes in eating habit, especially in children, since the end of the Second World War. These occurrences (westernized life style) have greatly affected the growth of Japanese. Nutrition is the most important factor in promoting the physical growth in childhood during food supply shortage, and for a relatively short term the secular trend in linear growth will reach a plateau if the food supply is adequate, but the secular trend is also limited. Since the condition for this limitation should be comprised by genetic factors, we are most interested in investigating and analyzing these genetic factors in the near future. Overeating adversely affects growth in childhood, with most common representatives of these ill effects being atherogenic risk factors such as obesity, hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia.
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PMID:Nutrition and the secular trend of growth. 129 20

The effect on food intake of adrenergic agonists administered into the third cerebral ventricle was studied in Zucker fatty and lean rats. The alpha 2 agonist, clonidine, produced a larger dose-related increase in food intake in lean rats than in the fatty rats. Dose-response curves show similar sensitivity, but decreased responsiveness in the lean animal. The beta 2 adrenergic agonist, salbutamol, produced similar food effect in obese and lean rats reducing food intake in the lean rats at the highest dose (300 nmol), and in the fatty rats at the two highest doses. The effects were small in both groups. The beta 3 agonist, BRL 37344, ([4-(2-((2-hydroxy-2-(3-chlorophenyl)ethyl)amino)-propyl)-phenoxy acetate]) produced a larger dose-related decrease in food intake in the fatty rat than in the lean rats. Dose-response curves showed that sensitivity of beta-receptors was similar, but the lean animals were less responsive. The beta-adrenergic blocking drug propranolol blocked the anorectic effect of BRL 37344 in the fatty rat. These studies suggest that in the fatty rat, the alpha 2 receptor system is tonically more active and the beta 3 receptor system tonically less active, a relationship that would explain the hyperphagia and development of obesity in these animals.
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PMID:Food intake of lean and obese Zucker rats following ventricular infusions of adrenergic agonists. 135 64

The Obese Zucker rat is a model of genetic obesity characterized by hyperphagia, hyperinsulinemia and other endocrine abnormalities. In order to elucidate pathogenetic mechanisms contributing to disturbed feeding behavior in these animals, the effect of food restriction on three hypothalamic neuropeptides involved in the control of food intake was studied. Eighteen male obese and 18 lean Zucker rats were randomly divided into two groups: half of the animals were food-restricted for 2 weeks, while the other half served as controls and were fed ad libitum. The levels of preproneuropeptide Y (preproNPY), preprocorticotropin releasing factor (preproCRF) and preprosomatostatin (preproSOM) mRNAs were determined using in situ hybridization technique. In addition, plasma insulin and corticosterone concentrations were analyzed. Food restriction significantly increased the expression of preproNPY mRNA in the arcuate nucleus in both Zucker phenotypes, while the expressions of preproCRF mRNA in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and preproSOM mRNA in the periventricular nucleus (PeV) were not altered. The expression of preproNPY mRNA was significantly greater in control obese animals compared to control lean animals. Food restriction lowered plasma insulin levels, but did not change plasma corticosterone levels. It is concluded that food restriction specifically activates NPY gene transcription in the arcuate nucleus the response being similar in both Zucker phenotypes. The results suggest that orexigenic NPY plays a role in the adaptation to altered feeding status.
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PMID:Hypothalamic neuropeptide expression after food restriction in Zucker rats: evidence of persistent neuropeptide Y gene activation. 136 27

The obese Zucker rat (fa/fa) is an animal model for genetic obesity characterized by hyperphagia, hyperinsulinemia, and severe insulin resistance in peripheral tissues. Adrenal steroids seem to play an important role in the onset of fatty syndrome in these animals. There is strong evidence of abnormal regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in obese Zucker rats. Considering the physiological function of arginine vasopressin (AVP) as an adrenocorticotropic hormone secretagogue, the present study was carried out to investigate the role of glucocorticoids in the control of hypothalamic AVP systems in lean and obese Zucker rats. In the first experiment, mifepristone (RU 38486), a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, was administered for 4 days (10 mg/kg orally twice daily), and the expression of AVP mRNA in hypothalamic paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei was measured using in situ hybridization, and the concentrations of AVP in the pituitary gland and in the median eminence were quantified. Plasma corticosterone levels were also analyzed. Mifepristone treatment resulted in a threefold increase in plasma corticosterone levels in lean Zucker rats, but it did not change corticosterone secretion in obese animals. Mifepristone treatment decreased AVP mRNA levels in lean animals in the supraoptic nuclei, while in obese animals the AVP mRNA content was increased in the paraventricular nuclei. Mifepristone treatment significantly increased the concentration of AVP in the median eminence in lean rats and decreased it in obese animals. Mifepristone treatment did not change concentrations of AVP in the pituitary gland. In the second experiment, mifepristone was given for 4 days (10 mg/kg orally twice daily), and its effects on 24-hour food intake and plasma AVP concentrations were measured.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Differential hypothalamic arginine vasopressin response to glucocorticoid receptor antagonism in lean and obese Zucker rats. 140 82

Female rats fed a cafeteria diet from birth developed obesity at 60 days of age and their stomach, small intestine and caecum were enlarged when compared with controls, i.e. these regions had greater food storage capacity. In spite of the enlargement, these regions had similar or reduced weight and linear density, which is seen as proof of reduced mechanical performances. Cafeteria diet produced increased glucose duodenal absorption in older animals unlike the typical reduction known in controls. Tryptophan absorption was maintained high in adulthood, compensating for the low structural nutritive properties of the cafeteria diet. The results are interpreted as an adaptation to the cafeteria diet effects and properties: the characteristic overeating of foodstuffs with greater energy density, lower mechanical requirements and lower structural nutritive value than pelleted chow.
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PMID:Morphofunctional changes in gastrointestinal tract of rats due to cafeteria diet. 141 Jul 67

The purpose of the present study was to test whether the degree of obesity or the duration of the obese state affects the reversibility of diet-induced obesity. This was accomplished by initially feeding adult female Wistar rats either a low-fat diet (Chow) or one of two high-fat diets (HFDs; 30 and 60% of total calories as dietary fat; 30% HFD and 60% HFD, respectively). Fifty-four days, reversal 1 (R1), or ninety-seven days, reversal 2 (R2), later the HFDs were substituted with the low-fat control diet in subgroups of rats. Animals from all groups were sampled at three intervals: the start of R1 (R1 start), and the completion of R1 (R1 end) and R2 (R2 end). At the end of each interval the 60% HFD-fed group had increased body weight, carcass lipid content, and retroperitoneal and parametrial white adipose tissue (RWAT and PWAT) pad weight, fat cell diameter, and fat cell volume, but not fat cell number (FCN), compared with the other groups. The 60% HFD-fed rats also exhibited a marked and persistent hyperphagia that continued even as most of the indexes of obesity approached their maximal values (R1 end). The 60% HFD group had a transient increase in RWAT and PWAT lipoprotein lipase activity that followed the development of most obesity indicators. A clear intermediate level of obesity did not develop in the 30% HFD-fed group. Instead, these animals had nonsignificant increases in these measures of adiposity, making it impossible to test whether the severity of the obesity affected its reversibility in age-matched groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Reversal of high-fat diet-induced obesity in female rats. 141 90

A high fat (HF) diet is known to induce obesity, but susceptibility to obesity induced by a HF diet differs not only among different strains of rats but also within the same strain. The present study revealed that the Lee index (an index of obesity) positively correlated with insulin, and inversely correlated with both the mitochondrial oxygen consumption in interscapular brown adipose tissue (BAT) and the resting metabolic rate (RMR) in Sprague-Dawley rats. This suggests the contribution of BAT thermogenesis and RMR, in addition to hyperphagia, to the intrastrain variation in susceptibility to HF diet-induced obesity.
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PMID:Brown adipose tissue thermogenesis and metabolic rate contribute to the variation in obesity among rats fed a high fat diet. 147 84

Obesity occurs in both clinical and animal forms in a variety of specific models which allow study of its underlining endocrine and mechanistic features. Among the neuroendocrine varieties of obesity, polycystic ovaries are probably the most common. The importance of the gonadal feedback system for regulation of food intake and obesity is indicated by the effects of castration in experimental animals which is a widely used mechanism for producing experimental obesity. Cushing syndrome and hypothalamic obesity are rare clinical syndromes. The current evidence suggests that there are two types of hypothalamic obesity from a mechanistic point of view--one associated with hyperphagia as a necessary and sufficient cause and a disturbance of the autonomic nervous system without hyperphagia as a second mechanism. Although genetic factors underlie most types of human obesity, there are several dymorphic forms of obesity including the Prader-Willy syndrome, Cohen's syndrome, Carpenter's syndrome, Ahlstrom's syndrome and the Bardet-Biedel syndrome. The Prader-Willi syndrome is characterized by obesity hypotonia hypogonadism and mental retardation. In animals, a dominant form of inheritance of obesity is seen in the yellow mouse. Current evidence suggests that this syndrome can be explained by reduced acetylation of MSH in the pituitary and/or hypothalamus. Several recessively inherited forms of obesity exist including the obese mouse, the diabetes mouse, fatty rat, the fat mouse, tubby mouse and the corpulent rat. In addition, there are a number of polygenic types of experimental obesity. The final mechanistic classification of obesity are those due to dietary manipulation. For both human beings and animals, a highly fat diet appears to be particularly problematic for the development of obesity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Genetic, hypothalamic and endocrine features of clinical and experimental obesity. 148 Jul 57

Regional hypothalamic neuropeptide Y (NPY) concentrations were compared between cp/cp JCR:LA corpulent rats, which were grossly obese, hyperphagic, and hyperinsulinemic, and lean (+/+) controls. In freely fed cp/cp rats, NPY levels in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) were 31% higher than in lean rats (p less than 0.001). In lean rats, chronic food restriction significantly raised NPY levels by 22% in the ARC (p less than 0.05) and by 44% in the dorsomedial nucleus (DMH; p less than 0.05). By contrast, food-restricted cp/cp rats showed no change in the ARC, but NPY levels rose in the DMH (by 36%; p less than 0.05) and ventromedial nucleus (31%; p less than 0.05). Increased NPY levels in the ARC, the major site of hypothalamic NPY synthesis, suggests increased NPYergic activity in cp/cp rats; given the central actions of NPY, this could contribute to hyperphagia, obesity, and hyperinsulinemia in this syndrome. Abnormal NPY responses to food deprivation further suggest dysregulation of NPY in cp/cp rats.
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PMID:Hypothalamic neuropeptide Y disturbances in the obese (cp/cp) JCR:LA corpulent rat. 152 65

Thirty-one abdominal fascial wound dehiscences occurred in 2,761 patients undergoing major abdominal surgery during a 5-year period (1%). Twenty-two specific local and systemic risk factors were analyzed and compared with the risk factors of a control group of 38 patients undergoing similar procedures without dehiscence. Through multivariate analysis, each factor was assessed as an independent statistical variable. Significant factors (p less than 0.05) were found to include age over 65, wound infection, pulmonary disease, hemodynamic instability, and ostomies in the incision. Additional systemic risk factors that were found to be significant included hypoproteinemia, systemic infection, obesity, uremia, hyperalimentation, malignancy, ascites, steroid use, and hypertension. Risk factors not found to be important independent variables included sex, type of incision, type of closure, foreign body in the wound, anemia, jaundice, and diabetes. When dehiscence and control groups were combined, 30% of patients with at least five significant risk factors developed dehiscence, and all the patients with more than eight risk factors developed a wound dehiscence. There was an overall mortality of 29%, which was directly related to the number of significant risk factors. The co-existence of 9 risk factors portended death in one third of the patients, and all the patients with more than 10 risk factors died.
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PMID:Factors influencing wound dehiscence. 832 36


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