Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With the aim of examining central opioid influences on the control of luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion, we evaluated the LH response to naloxone, an opioid receptor antagonist, in patients affected by normo-, hyper-, and hypogonadotropic amenorrhea, polycystic ovarian disease and hyperprolactinemia. The results indicate that opioid influences are altered in well-defined pathologic conditions (hyperprolactinemia, obesity), in addition to being modified by gonadal steroids.
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PMID:Impairment of opioid control of luteinizing hormone secretion in menstrual disorders. 388 35

Polycystic ovarian disease represents a poorly defined spectrum of clinical disorders having oligo-ovulation or anovulation as a common feature. There is no single, universally accepted biochemical or clinical definition. Clinical findings usually include anovulation resulting in irregular uterine bleeding and infertility, androgen excess resulting in hirsutism and acne, and obesity. The patho-physiology involves altered functions of the hypothalamus, pituitary, ovary and adrenal glands, resulting in failure of folliculogenesis to regularly proceed to ovulation. The cause of the initiating event in this disease process remains enigmatic. Therapy for the various abnormalities in polycystic ovarian disease is tailored to a patient's needs and may include preventing endometrial hyperplasia, controlling irregular uterine bleeding, controlling hirsutism and inducing ovulation.
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PMID:Polycystic ovarian disease. 392 38

To determine whether insulin resistance occurs in polycystic ovarian disease (PCO) in the absence of obesity and acanthosis nigricans, circulating levels of insulin in response to oral glucose administration were measured in 10 nonobese PCO patients without acanthosis nigricans and in 10 normal women matched for weight and height. Mean serum testosterone (T), androstenedione (A), dehydroepiandrosterone (D), D sulfate, and LH levels were significantly elevated in the PCO patients compared to those in control subjects. In PCO patients, the mean +/- SE basal insulin level (18.7 +/- 2.9 microU/ml) and the sum of the insulin levels in response to glucose (674 +/- 119 microU/ml) were significantly greater than those in the control group (11.0 +/- 0.8 microU/ml and 248 +/- 29 microU/ml, respectively). In all subjects, serum levels of T and A, but not D and D sulfate, were significantly correlated to basal insulin levels and insulin sums. Serum cortisol, GH, and PRL levels were similar in both groups. These results indicate that in PCO, a significant degree of insulin resistance exists, which clearly is not related to obesity. The positive correlation of serum T and A levels to circulating insulin levels in this study suggests that the insulin resistance in PCO may be, in part, a consequence of hyperandrogenism.
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PMID:Insulin resistance in nonobese patients with polycystic ovarian disease. 622 44

Serum binding capacity of sex-hormone binding globulin (SHBG-BC), steroid concentrations, and secretion patterns of LH and FSH were compared between groups of seven nonobese and seven obese patients with polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD). Obese patients with PCOD differed from those with normal weight in having very low SHBG-BC and elevated serum levels of free and albumin bound testosterone. Compared to healthy women in the follicular phase, both nonobese and obese patients with PCOD showed equally elevated serum levels of androstenedione, estrone, and albumin-bound and free estradiol. Pattern of gonadotropin secretion was studied from blood samples taken at 15 min intervals for 6 h. In 6 patients of both groups low pulses of FSH were found coincidently with pulses of LH. Serum level of LH showed a clear pulsatile pattern in all patients with PCOD, varying from 4.5 to 7.5 pulses per 6 h. The mean pulse rate in the groups of nonobese and obese patients with PCOD was similar, 5.9 pulses per 6 h. In the obese patients the mean LH levels were, however, less elevated and the pulse amplitudes were smaller than those in the nonobese patients. We suggest that this difference is due to high levels of biologically active testosterone in obese patients with PCOD.
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PMID:Obesity, serum steroid levels, and pulsatile gonadotropin secretion in polycystic ovarian disease. 622 11

Endometrial cancer is the cause of considerable morbidity among women, but the disease has been underrated and its management more casual than its virulence warrants. Endometrial carcinoma is the most frequently diagnosed invasive neoplasm of the female genital tract in the US, and is third in incidence after breast and colonic cancer. The white population of the US has the highest age standardized incidence of endometrial cancer in the world, India and Japan have the lowest, and the European countries occupy intermediate positions. Between 75% and 80% of women diagnosed with endometrial cancer are postmenopausal, and the mean age at diagnosis is about 60 years. In many cases endometrial hyperplasia is misdiagnosed as frank malignancy. The predisposing factors for endometrial cancer seem to be obesity, hypertension, diabetes mellitus or an abnormal glucose tolerance curve, and prolonged or unopposed estrogen stimulation. Raised estrogen levels may occur in the following situations: 1) women with functioning ovarian tumors that produce estrogen; 2) women with polycystic ovarian disease; 3) women with ovarian dysgensis (Turner's syndrome) managed with estrogen replacement therapy; 4) women taking high estrogen sequential oral contraceptives (OCs); and 5) women undergoing estrogen replacement therapy. There is an increased risk of endometrial carcinoma associated with nulliparity. Carcinoma of the endometrium occurs in a variety of subtypes, the most frequent being adenocarcinoma, followed by adenocanthoma, adenosquamous carcinoma, clear cell carcinoma, papillary adenocarcinoma, and secretory carcinoma. Overall 5-year survival rates are 72% for adenocarcinoma, 68% for adenocanthoma, and 26% for adenosquamous carcinoma. The true extent of endometrial cancer can be ascertained only after exploratory laparotomy and then various therapies may be used according to the stage of the disease.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the endometrium. 637 16

Two patients are described with obesity, acanthosis nigricans, acral hypertrophy, basal hyperinsulinism and exaggerated insulin responses to oral glucose. One patient, a diabetic female showed features of virilisation due to polycystic ovarian disease and underwent gonadectomy with some resolution of her androgenisation and acanthosis nigricans. Binding of labelled insulin to erythrocytes was significantly decreased in both patients compared with normal or obese control subjects. In contrast, the receptor concentration in adipose tissue obtained from the patient undergoing gonadectomy was higher than seen in obese control subjects. Thus, somatic growth may be stimulated by insulin in some tissues in these hyperinsulinaemic patients due to relative preservation of receptor numbers.
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PMID:Insulin resistance with acanthosis nigricans and acral hypertrophy. 658 21

Twenty-three women considered to have polycystic ovarian disease (PCO) were studied in an effort to better understand the mechanism of inappropriate secretion (IGS) which is so characteristic of these women. Criteria for PCO included oligomenorrhea, infertility, an obesity index (ponderal index, PI) < 12, and an LH:FSH ratio > 3. The mean +/- SE weight and PI for this group were 175 +/- 7.5 lbs. and 11.2 +/- 0.2 respectively. Weight was not correlated with steroid levels in PCO or control women. The mean (+/- SE) of serum androgen concentrations (DHEA-S: 2.9 +/- 0.5 micrograms/ml; androstenedione: 2.6 +/- 0.3 ng/ml; and testosterone: 47 +/- 5 ng%) were all significantly higher than those in control women (p < .05). Total serum estradiol (E2) was comparable to those of controls in the follicular phase, while estrone (E1): E2 ratios averaged 2:1. Serum sex hormone binding globulin-binding capacity (SHBG-BC) averaged 56.8 +/- 4.2 nM which was significantly lower than that of controls (p < .05). The percent unbound E2 was significantly elevated in PCO (62% vs 37%). The mass of unbound E2 was also significantly higher in PCO women (40 +/- 3 pg/ml) than in controls (17 +/- 2 pg/ml) (p < .005). Serum LH:FSH ratios had a positive correlation with the relative and absolute concentration of unbound E2. In control women, unbound E2 correlated significantly with LH levels. This suggests that IGS characteristically found in PCO patients and exemplified by elevated LH;FSH ratios, is the result of the feedback response to elevated levels of unbound (i.e., biologically active) E2.
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PMID:Elevations in unbound serum estradiol as a possible mechanism for inappropriate gonadotropin secretion in women with PCO. 677 90

Although a variety of disorders are associated with polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD), obesity, hirsutism, and menstrual dysfunction are the most frequent manifestations. We investigated the possibility that obesity per se may give rise to androgen excess through alterations in estrogen metabolism and, consequently, through alterations in gonadotropin secretion. Eighteen obese, infertile women with PCOD were compared with 20 control women. Plasma androstenedione (A) was 252 +/- 18 ng/dl (mean +/- standard error of the mean [SEM]) in the obese women compared with 173 +/- 9 ng/dl in the controls (P less than 0.001); plasma testosterone (T) was 66 +/- 5.7 ng/dl, compared with 41 +/- 3 ng/dl (P less than 0.001). Thirteen of the obese women lost greater than 15% of their body weight by dietary restriction; ten of these women (77%) conceived spontaneously. In seven of the ten women who conceived, we remeasured plasma androgens following weight reduction but prior to conception. A decreased from 295 +/- 19 ng/dl to 179 +/- 5 ng/dl; T decreased from 75 +/- 8 ng/dl to 39 +/- 5 ng/dl (P less than 0.001). We conclude that obesity may play a role in the genesis of PCOD.
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PMID:Effect of body weight reduction on plasma androgens in obese, infertile women. 681 36

The importance of late-onset congenital adrenal hyperplasia as a cause of hirsutism is controversial. Two of 35 women with a chief complaint of hirsutism met the criteria of 21-hydroxylase deficiency. In one, who presented with hirsutism, oligomenorrhea, obesity, infertility, and enlarged cystic ovaries, the initial diagnosis was polycystic ovarian syndrome. Family data showed that her disorder was autosomal recessive and linked to the histocompatibility leukocyte antigens (HLA), as in the classic form of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. Carriers were thus detectable by HLA typing. Thus late-onset congenital adrenal hyperplasia appears to be an allelic variant of congenital virilizing adrenal hyperplasia with a milder enzymatic defect. The diagnosis cannot be made clinically because the disease has the same presentation as idiopathic hirsutism or polycystic ovarian disease. Basal plasma 17-hydroxyprogesterone levels, unlike in classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia, can be normal, and an ACTH stimulation test or sequential measurements of plasma 17-hydroxyprogesterone throughout the day may be needed to show the abnormality. The incidence among hirsute women is estimated to be 6% to 12%, and the calculated gene frequency for the allele coding for attenuated expression of 21-hydroxylase deficiency is 0.015 to 0.057.
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PMID:Late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency mimicking idiopathic hirsutism or polycystic ovarian disease. 697 82

In polycystic ovarian disease there is a strong association between hyperinsulinemia and hyperandrogenism but not with obesity alone. The magnitude of peripheral insulin resistance is similar to that seen in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Mild hyperinsulinemia in PCOD patients is not impair the carbohydrate metabolism. The elimination of the cause of hyperandrogenism by bilateral oophorectomy, long-acting Gn-RH agonist or antiandrogen cyproterone acetate did not improve the associated insulin resistance. In opposition to insulin resistance in the tissues responsible for metabolism of carbohydrate, the ovary remains sensitive to the effects of pancreatic hormone. Presumably this mechanism involved the interaction with IGF-I receptors to stimulate thecal and stromal androgen production. Insulin may sensitize the stroma to the stimulatory effect of LH. In the mechanism of follicular arrest take part increased level of binding proteins for IGF-I, mainly IGFBP 2, -4 and 5 inhibit FSH and IGF-I action.
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PMID:[Insulin resistance in the pathogenesis of polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD)]. 772 20


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