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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 3-year-old girl with a history of excessive weight gain from birth presented with
obesity
, somnolence, and cyanosis, characteristic of the
Pickwickian syndrome
.
Obesity
was familial and exogenous without endocrine or neurologic anomaly. Respiratory center sensitivity to carbon dioxide was normal. Excessive somnolence was due to the
obesity
, which during sleep caused airway obstruction, apnea, and awakening, finally resulting in sleep deprivation. The sleep apneas and the daytime somnolence disappeared with weight reduction, showing that
obesity
alone had been responsible for the disorder.
...
PMID:Sleep apnea in a child with the pickwickian syndrome. 89 58
A classical definition of
Pickwickian syndrome
associates alveolar hypoventilation,
obesity
and hypersomnia with periodic breathing.
Obesity
in itself is enough to explain the alveolar hypoventilation and some of the sleep disorders, but in fact all three elements of this syndrome are intricated.
Obesity
, whether associated with a
Pickwickian syndrome
or not, affects ventilatory mechanics similarly. With the cause of sleep disorders are associated central ventilatory pauses, appearing periodically followed by phases of apnoea secondary to buccopharyngial hypotony. The alveolar hypoventilation is therefore the consequence of
obesity
and periodic apnoea. It also results from a low respiratory frequency considering that the tidal volume is also decreased. These different elements suggest some disorder of the centers controling ventilation. One can describe different nosological forms, all having as a common factor hypersomnia with periodic respiration, the latter being a determining factor in the diagnosis. Therapy, including weight reduction and symptomatic treatment of alveolar hypoventilation, is now augmented by new drugs acting on the central nervous system.
...
PMID:[Pickwickian syndrome and hypersomnia with periodic respiration]. 103 29
Ten patients with the
Pickwickian syndrome
, characterized by
obesity
, hypoxemia, hypercapnia, polycythemia, and cor pulmonale, underwent long-term treatment as outpatients with medroxyprogesterone acetate. Although there was no significant weight change in the group, PaO2 rose 12.6 +/- 2.7 mm Hg (SEM) from 49 +/- 2.6 mm Hg to 62 +/- 2.3 mm Hg (P less than 0.001), while PaCO2 fell 13 +/- 2.6 mm Hg from 51 +/- 1.9 mm Hg to 38 +/- 1.2 mm Hg (P less than 0.001). Hematocrit fell from 56 +/- 2.5% to 50 +/- 1.2%, a mean fall of 6% (P less than 0.01), during medroxyprogesterone acetate therapy. In the 2 patients who had cardiac catheterization before and during medroxyprogesterone acetate therapy, mean pulmonary arterial pressure fell 13 and 19 mm Hg. There were no recurrences of cor pulmonale during treatment. These effects on arterial blood gas values and clinical state were sustained during therapy. On withdrawal of medroxyprogesterone acetate during 1-month period, arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide tensions deteriorated to their previous pretreatment values. Reinstitution of medroxyprogesterone acetate caused improvement in both the oxygen and carbon dioxide tensions. We conclude that sublingual medroxyprogesterone acetate therapy is useful in the management of the
Pickwickian syndrome
.
...
PMID:Progesterone for outpatient treatment of Pickwickian syndrome. 110 59
The
Pickwickian Syndrome
stimulated new pathophysiological concepts in regard to control of ventilation. With the advent of sleep laboratories, the peculiar sleep apnea occurring in some of these patients has been explained on the basis of intermittent upper airway obstruction. Two patients with different manifestations of the
Pickwickian Syndrome
are presented. The suggestion is made that these two subsyndromes should have unique designations. The Auchincloss Syndrome is manifested by right heart failure and respiratory acidosis in obese patients who are alert and have no major abnormality of breathing pattern. The fundamental cause of this abnormality is the increased work of breathing caused by the
obesity
. The cost of breathing is so high that the ventilatory regulation is compromised and respiratory acidosis results. The Gastaut Syndrome is characterized principally by hypersomnia and sleep apnea. The fundamental defect is upper airway obstruction during sleep, resulting in increased work of breathing, which together with the increased work caused by
obesity
leads to respiratory acidosis and right ventricular failure. Hypersomnia, rather than heart failure or respiratory acidosis, is the major manifestation of this syndrome, and is the result of sleep loss.
...
PMID:Pickwickian syndrome, 20 years later. 117 87
The
Pickwickian syndrome
can be divided into two primary breathing disorders, which can affect patients alone or in combination: sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) and
obesity
hypoventilation syndrome (OHS). Between 1980 and 1990, 126 patients with respiratory insufficiency underwent gastric surgery for morbid obesity, 12.5% of the entire series. These patients weighed more (164 +/- 36 vs 135 +/- 25 kg, P less than 0.0001) and were more often men (62% vs 14%, P less than 0.001) than those without pulmonary dysfunction. Sixteen had OHS alone, 65 had SAS alone, and 45 had both. Of those with OHS, 38 have been followed for 5.8 +/- 2.4 y since surgery and 29 are currently asymptomatic. In the 12 patients in whom arterial blood gases were available greater than 5 y since surgery, the PaO2 increased from 54 +/- 10 to 68 +/- 20 mm Hg (P less than 0.0001) and PaCO2 fell from 53 +/- 9 to 47 +/- 11 mm Hg (P = 0.05). Of the 110 patients with SAS, 57 were available for follow-up an average of 4.5 +/- 2.3 y since surgery and 38 were completely asymptomatic, 15 had mild SAS, and 4 had both SAS and OHS. In 40 patients with pre- and post-weight reduction sleep polysomnograms, the sleep apnea index fell from 64 +/- 39 to 26 +/- 26 (P less than 0.0001). Although respiratory insufficiency of
obesity
patients had a higher operative mortality than did patients without pulmonary dysfunction (2.4% vs 0.2% after gastric bypass), weight loss was associated with significant improvements in sleep apnea, arterial blood gases, pulmonary hypertension, left ventricular dysfunction, lung volumes, and polycythemia.
...
PMID:Long-term effects of gastric surgery for treating respiratory insufficiency of obesity. 173 36
The work analyses the results of treatment of 311 patients with extreme degrees of alimentary-constitutional
obesity
by formation of a small stomach. Fatal outcomes (1.9%) were encountered in the period of operative technique mastering. The late-term results were studied in 167 patients in follow-up periods of up to 3 years. The patients' average body weight was 149.4 kg, average height 166.2 cm, average body weight excess as compared to the ideal weight was 125.6%. Study of the late-term results of the operation showed that the postoperative weight loss depends on the initial weight excess and the diameter of the anastomosis formed between the proximal and distal parts of the stomach. The more the initial excess of weight as compared to the ideal value, the more the loss of body weight is. The diameter of the formed anastomosis should be no larger than 15 mm. Besides loss of weight, the activity of vital organs and systems is normalized after the operation, and arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, the
Pickwickian syndrome
, and metabolic polyarthritis take a milder course. The operation for formation of a small stomach made it possible for the patients to resume their customary occupation, freed them of the threat of invalidation, and reduced the duration of the disability period by 4.3 times. After surgical treatment the nature of the patients' life significantly improved; 95.8% of patients appraised the effect of the treatment as excellent and good.
...
PMID:[Late results of the treatment of patients with the extreme degree of alimentary-constitutional obesity by the method of formation of a small stomach]. 180 96
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), previously called
Pickwickian syndrome
is usually associated with
obesity
, excessive daytime sleepiness and ventilation troubles. These patients are heavy snorers and present a typical craniofacial morphology. Among several characteristics is retrognathic lower maxillary. Functional orthodontic appliances are proposed to help these patients, in order to open the superior airway and allow a better ventilation.
...
PMID:[Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome: the orthodontist's viewpoint]. 181 95
Morbid obesity is not infrequently associated with severe respiratory impairment. In our experience approximately 10 per cent of morbidly obese patients who underwent gastric surgery had severe respiratory impairment. Respiratory insufficiency of
obesity
can be divided into two primary breathing disorders: the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) and the
obesity
hypoventilation syndrome (OHS). In its most severe form, when both SAS and OHS are present, it is called the
Pickwickian syndrome
. In our series 59 morbidly obese patients with respiratory insufficiency secondary to
obesity
underwent gastric surgery for weight reduction. Fourteen had OHS, 19 had SAS and 26 had both. Of these, two patients died of postoperative complications and one died at five weeks with an inconclusive autopsy, totalling an operative mortality rate of 3.4 per cent and a total mortality of 5.1 per cent. In our overall experience morbidly obese patients lost 67 per cent of excess weight after gastric procedures. In conclusion, surgically induced weight loss will markedly improve or correct respiratory insufficiency secondary to
obesity
. It will improve arterial oxygenation, minimize CO2 retention, expand lung volumes, correct polycythemia, and reduce apnea frequency. The magnitude of changes in these variables is clinically significant. Therefore, respiratory insufficiency of
obesity
should be considered a major indication for an aggressive approach to weight reduction. The jejunoileal bypass and unbanded gastroplasty operations have an unacceptable incidence of complications or failure, respectively. There is a high degree of recidivism following dietary programs. Sweets eaters will not do well with a gastroplasty procedure. Gastric bypass for individuals addicted to sweets or the vertical banded gastroplasty for "gorgers" are currently our procedures of choice and are associated with the average loss of two thirds of excess weight and correction of breathing problems associated with morbid obesity.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function in morbid obesity. 331 3
Morbid obesity is often associated with severe respiratory insufficiency, commonly known as the
pickwickian syndrome
. This can be divided into the following two primary breathing disorders which can affect patients alone or in combination: the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (SAS); and the
obesity
-hypoventilation syndrome (OHS). Thirty-eight (14 percent) of 263 morbidly obese patients with respiratory insufficiency of
obesity
underwent gastric surgery for weight reduction. Ten had OHS, nine has SAS, and 19 had both. Of these patients, one died of postoperative complications, one died at five weeks with an inconclusive autopsy, one was lost to follow-up, and the time since surgery was too short (less than three months) in three. A total of 30 patients lost 45 +/- 25 percent (p less than 0.0001) of excess body weight within 3 to 12 months following surgery, when repeat pulmonary studies were done. Most patients continued to lose additional weight until two years, when they had lost 62 +/- 26 percent of excess weight. Nine patients failed initial surgery (gastroplasty); seven of these were successfully converted to gastric bypass. Weight loss was associated with a significant decrease in the percentage of sleep apnea from 44 +/- 15 to 8 +/- 11 (p less than 0.0001). In patients with OHS, the arterial oxygen pressure (PaO2) increased from 53 +/- 9 to 68 +/- 11 mm Hg (p less than 0.0001), and the arterial carbon dioxide tension decreased from 51 +/- 7 to 41 +/- 4 mm Hg (p less than 0.0001). Pulmonary function tests in the patients with OHS revealed significant increases, as a percentage of predicted normal, in the forced vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in one second, expiratory reserve volume, functional residual capacity, and total lung capacity. Secondary polycythemia, defined as a hemoglobin level greater than 16 g/dl associated with a PaO2 less than 60 mm Hg, was noted in 13 of 29 patients with OHS. This fell from 16.9 +/- 1.1 to 14.9 +/- 1.7 g/dl (p less than 0.001) after weight loss and improved pulmonary function.
...
PMID:Gastric surgery for respiratory insufficiency of obesity. 372 Mar 90
The characteristic signs of
Pickwickian syndrome
are the high degree of
obesity
and cardiovascular and respiratory insufficiency, to various degrees. Forty five patients with
Pickwickian syndrome
were treated at the Clinic of Metabolic Diseases. They represent 3.4 per cent of the total number of patients with
obesity
of various degrees, observed and treated. The majority of the affected were established to be males (34), mainly III and IV degree of
obesity
. The average age of the patients was 51 years. Somnolence, lassitude, enhanced appetite, cyanosis and dyspnea with unrestful sleep, with sloring were observed in all patients. The moderate motive regiment applied and the hypoenergy diet under clinical condicions with an average stay of 26 days at the clinic led to considerable reduction of body mass (with 11,7 kg on the average), resulting into an improvement of the functional respiratory parameters and ECG. The elevated values of blood pressure were normalized in the majority of the patients after the treatment. In all patients, the unpleasant subjective complaints, somnolence including, disappeared and respiratory indices were improved. The significant disorders in lipid, carbohydrate and purine metabolism were favourably influenced by the therapeutic regiment applied.
...
PMID:[Treatment of patients with the Pickwickian syndrome by reduction of body weight]. 407 73
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