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

Adiponectin is a recently identified, insulin-sensitizing and anti-inflammatory protein released by adipocytes, which is paradoxically reduced in obesity. It suppresses endothelial activation. Physiological insulin resistance occurs in normal pregnancy and is exaggerated in women with preeclampsia (PE), together with enhanced inflammatory and endothelial activation. Women with increased body mass index (BMI) and insulin resistance are predisposed to PE. We hypothesized that adiponectin concentrations are reduced in normal pregnancy compared with postpartum values and further reduced in women with PE. Fifteen women with PE and 30 control subjects with similar first trimester BMI had adiponectin concentrations measured in the third trimester; postpartum measurements were repeated in 16 control subjects. Adiponectin concentration in healthy pregnant women correlated inversely with early pregnancy BMI (r=-0.47, P=0.01) and fasting insulin concentrations (r=-0.58, P=0.001). However, adiponectin concentrations did not differ significantly in pregnancy and postpartum samples (mean change, -0.15 microg/mL; 95% CI, -2.28 to 1.98, P=0.88). Plasma adiponectin concentrations were markedly elevated (P=0.01) in women with PE (mean, 21.6; SD, 8.18 microg/mL) compared with control subjects (mean, 14.7; SD, 7.06 microg/mL). Moreover, in PE, adiponectin concentrations did not correlate with first trimester BMI or insulin or with serum urate or creatinine concentrations or urinary protein levels. We conclude that plasma adiponectin concentrations are not elevated in normal human pregnancy and paradoxically elevated (by 47%) in women with PE. This may be secondary to exaggerated nonspecific adipocyte lipolysis or as a physiological response to enhance fat utilization and attenuate endothelial damage. Future studies should determine whether adiponectin concentrations help improve prediction of PE.
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PMID:Paradoxical elevation in adiponectin concentrations in women with preeclampsia. 1475 83

The vascular placental pathology (VPP) is associated with many etiologies. Some are the consequence of a maternal genetic or acquired predisposition. Others are associated with a chronic maternal disease (hypertension, lupus, obesity, diabetes, ...). Finally, some others are associated with placental implantation leading to fetal ischemia (multiple pregnancy, chorioangioma, primiparity, feto-placental hydrops) or to environmental (altitude) or nutritional factors (famine and specific alimentary depressions). We classify these factors into three categories according to the risk level (moderate, significant and elevated). While any of these factors can increase the risk of VPP, no one is sufficiently sensitive or specific in predict inevitable onset of VPP. In most cases VPP results from a combination of two (or more) risk factors. The risk factors of VPP classified as moderate include age (> or = 35 years), increased blood pressure during the second trimester of pregnancy, a new paternity, dietetic factors or environmental factors, smoking and controlled diabetes (class B, C), or inactive systemic diseases. Risk is significantly elevated among obese (BMI > or = 25), primiparous women, women with a past familial history (first degree) of preeclampsia or eclampsia, cocaine use or association of tobacco and caffeine use, increased placental mass (associated with twin pregnancy, fetal hydrops or molar pregnancy), uncontrolled diabetes, lupus, active scleroderma. Risk is considered to be high among patients with chronic hypertension, women with a past history of preeclampsia, diabetes (class D, F, R), patients with active systemic disease or with antiphospholipid antibodies or women with lupus or renal lesions and/or proteinuria as well as chronic kidney disease resulting in proteinuria, hypertension and renal insufficiency. Finally, the risk of VPP is considered to be increased in the presence of acquired thrombophilia. It remains moderate in the presence of isolated genetic thrombophilia, except in forms presenting with multiple genetic mutations or associated with an hyperhomocysteinemia. A "high-risk group" is defined among women with past history of deep venous thromboembolic events outside pregnancy, or with a past history of placental vascular pathology (intra-uterine death, placental abruptio, severe and precocious placental, intra-uterine growth retardation, early and repetitive fetal loss) and who, in addition, present with acquired thrombophilia (antiphospholipid antibodies, thrombocytemia), unique homozygous genetic thrombophilia, amultiple genetic thrombophilia or unique heterozygous genetic thrombophilia associated with hyperhomocysteinemia. Prophylactic treatment of acquired thrombophilia and of the multiple genetic forms or associated with hypercysteinemia is a logical rationale, particularly among women with a past history of placental vascular pathology, or with a past history of venous thromboembolic events. On the contrary, prophylaxis using low-molecular-weight heparin in the event of asymptomatic genetic thrombophilic mutations and for women without a past history of deep venous thromboembolism or vascular placental pathology remains controversial.
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PMID:[Vascular placental pathology in high-risk groups: definition and synopsis]. 1502 87

Hyperuricemia (HU) is present in 5-30% of the general population, although the prevalence is higher among some ethnic groups and seems to be increasing worldwide. Classically, chronic HU has been considered a risk factor for gout or lithiasis and is associated with alcoholism, obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia/diabetes mellitus, renal failure and intake of certain drugs. HU is also associated with cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension, vascular disease, pre-eclampsia, pulmonary arterial hypertension, stroke, heart failure, ischemic heart disease and also metabolic syndrome, renal disease and increased mortality. It is uncertain if these associations are dependent or not, especially cardiovascular and renal diseases. Patients with chronic HU and also those with gout require both medical investigation for associated diseases or drugs as well as nutritional counseling and life-style changes. HU should alert physicians to possible complications.
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PMID:Primary prevention in rheumatology: the importance of hyperuricemia. 1512 Oct 34

This article provides a review of the incidence, pathophysiology, and treatment of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in pregnancy, a rare but serious complication of pregnancy. The incidence of DVT in pregnancy varies widely, but it is a leading cause of maternal morbidity in both the United States and the United Kingdom. Risk factors during pregnancy include prolonged bed rest or immobility, pelvic or leg trauma, and obesity. Additional risk factors are preeclampsia, Cesarean section, instrument-assisted delivery, hemorrhage, multiparity, varicose veins, a previous history of a thromboembolic event, and hereditary or acquired thrombophilias such as Factor V Leiden. Heparin is the anticoagulant of choice to treat active thromboembolic disease or to administer for thromboprophylaxis, but low molecular-weight heparin is being used with increasing frequency in the pregnant woman. Perinatal nurses should be aware of the symptoms, diagnostic tools, and treatment options available to manage active thrombosis during pregnancy and in the intrapartum and postpartum periods.
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PMID:Deep vein thrombosis in pregnancy. 1512 76

Preeclampsia as a serious syndrome affecting both the mother and the baby is associated with a number of socio-economic, demographic and clinical characteristics. We have filed the distribution of major epidemiological parameters in two gypsy groups, comprising 58 preeclamptic and 118 control cases. Only the classical features of preeclampsia as well as single liveborns were included in our study. Data are taken from the medical files and from a direct interview with the patients. Nonparametric and multivariate analysis are applied. The two study groups show insignificant differences in the distribution of the major epidemiological factors. Significant p-values are obtained referring to maternal age, parity, obesity. Speculations as to gypsy lifestyle are discussed as possible explanation to the achieved results.
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PMID:[Socio-economic characteristics of pregnant women with preeclampsia: a gypsies population survey]. 1531 35

Several parallels exist between preeclampsia and atherosclerosis. Both are multifactorial diseases that share risk factors such as obesity, insulin resistance, lipid abnormalities, and elevated serum homocysteine. There are also similarities in the biochemical changes seen in both diseases, including elevated serum triglycerides, decreased HDL cholesterol and enhanced formation of small, dense LDL particles as well as vascular atherosclerotic lesions. Chronic infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae has been linked to coronary artery disease. This study evaluated a possible link between the incidence of preeclampsia and infection with C. pneumoniae by examining the rate of seropositivity in 81 women with preeclampsia, and 206 women with normal pregnancies. Although our data confirmed well-known risk factors for preeclampsia such as obesity, diabetes, and hypertension, we found no difference in the rate of seropositivity between preeclampsia and normal pregnancy. On the contrary, the presence of chlamydial antibodies was lower in preeclampsia. Multiparous women with preeclampsia showed a significantly lower rate of seropositivity than multiparous normal women and nulliparous preeclamptics. In addition, women with a history of preeclampsia who developed preeclampsia in the current pregnancy also had a significantly lower rate of seropositivity.
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PMID:Preeclampsia and Chlamydia pneumoniae: is there a link? 1536 46

Preeclampsia has been linked to increased risk for cardiovascular disease and, more recently, to reduced risk for breast cancer later in life. The altered chronic disease risk associated with prior preeclampsia may reflect underlying metabolic differences. In this case-control study, we examined the metabolic profiles of older mothers with and without a history of preeclampsia in their first pregnancies. At the time of the study, subjects were non-pregnant, non-smoking women who completed their first pregnancies at age 30 or older, were pre-menopausal, and were free of serious chronic disease. Cases were 13 women who experienced preeclampsia in their first pregnancies; controls were 13 women with uncomplicated first pregnancies, frequency matched to cases on race/ethnicity, current age, and age at delivery. A fasting blood sample was collected from each subject during the luteal phase (day 19-22) of the menstrual cycle and assayed for specific factors thought to be linked to hypertensive disease or breast cancer. Compared to women with uncomplicated pregnancies, those with a history of preeclampsia had significantly elevated levels of fasting serum triglycerides, insulin and glucose, and a higher fasting insulin resistance index, suggesting that women with prior preeclampsia were relatively insulin resistant. In addition, cases had higher levels of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) and a higher molar ratio of IGFBP-3 to IGF-1 than did controls. Adjustment for obesity and other potential confounders did not appreciably alter the magnitude of these associations. This preliminary study suggests that women with a history of preeclampsia have persistent metabolic abnormalities consistent with their observed excess risk for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and their apparent reduced risk for breast cancer later in life.
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PMID:Altered metabolic profiles among older mothers with a history of preeclampsia. 1573 70

Preeclampsia still ranks as one of obstetrics major problems. Clinicians typically encounter preeclampsia as maternal disease with variable degrees of fetal involvement. More and more the unique immunogenetic maternal-paternal relationship is appreciated, and as such also the specific 'genetic conflict' that is characteristic of haemochorial placentation. From that perspective preeclampsia can also been seen as a disease of an individual couple with primarily maternal and fetal manifestations. Factors that are unique to a specific couple would include the length and type of sexual relationship, the maternal (decidual natural killer cells) acceptation of the invading cytotrophoblast (paternal HLA-C), and seminal levels of transforming growth factor-beta and probably other cytokines. The magnitude of the maternal response would be determined by factors including a maternal set of genes determining her characteristic inflammatory responsiveness, age, quality of her endothelium, obesity/insulin resistance and probably a whole series of susceptibility genes amongst which the thrombophilias received a lot of attention in recent years.
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PMID:Preeclampsia: a couple's disease with maternal and fetal manifestations. 1577 27

THE PREGNANT PATIENT: Age; maternal disease; prophylactic antibiotics; gastroesophageal reflux; obesity; starvation; genotyping; coagulopathy; infection; substance abuse; altered drug responses in pregnancy; physiological changes of pregnancy. THE FETUS: Fetal monitoring; intrauterine surgery. THE NEWBORN: Breastfeeding; maternal infection, fever, and neonatal sepsis evaluation. OBSTETRIC COMPLICATIONS: Embolic phenomena; hemorrhage; preeclampsia; preterm delivery. OBSTETRIC MANAGEMENT: External cephalic version and cervical cerclage; elective cesarean delivery; fetal malpresentation; vaginal birth after cesarean delivery; termination of pregnancy. OBSTETRIC ANESTHESIA: Analgesia for labor and delivery; anesthesia for cesarean delivery; anesthesia for short obstetric operations; complications of anesthesia. MISCELLANEOUS: Consent; ethics; history; labor support; websites/books/leaflets/journal announcements.
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PMID:What's new and novel in obstetric anesthesia? Contributions from the 2003 scientific literature. 1579 48

Obesity has become a major health problem all over the world and during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of complications, including gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, and delivery complications such as macrosomia, shoulder dystocia and higher rates of cesarean sections and infections. Maternal obesity may also be an independent risk factor for neural tube defects and fetal mortality. This review focuses on the consequences of maternal obesity during pregnancy.
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PMID:Maternal obesity and complications during pregnancy. 1584 56


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