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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
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The winter athlete has several potential tactics for sustaining body temperature in the face of severe cold. An increase in the intensity of physical activity may be counter-productive because of increased respiratory heat loss, increased air or water movement over the body surface, and a pumping of air or water beneath the clothing. Shivering can generate heat at a rate of 10 to 15 kJ/min, but it impairs skilled performance, while the resultant glycogen usage hastens the onset of fatigue and mental confusion. Non-shivering thermogenesis could arise in either brown adipose tissue or white fat. Brown adipose tissue generates heat by the action of free fatty acids in uncoupling mitochondrial electron transport, and by noradrenaline-induced membrane depolarisation and sodium pumping. The existence of brown adipose tissue in human adults is controversial, and although there are theoretical mechanisms of heat production in white fat, their contribution to the maintenance of body temperature is small. Acclimatisation to cold develops over the course of about 10 days, and in humans the primary change is an insulative, hypothermic type of response; this reflects the intermittent nature of most occupational and athletic exposures to cold. Nevertheless, with more sustained exposure to cold air or water, humans can apparently develop the humoral type of acclimatisation described in small mammals, with an increased output of noradrenaline and/or thyroxine. The associated mobilisation of free fatty acids suggests the possibility of using winter sport as a pleasant method of treating obesity. In men, a combination of moderate exercise and facial cooling induces a substantial fat loss over a 1- to 2-week period, with an associated ketonuria, proteinuria, and increase of body mass. Possible factors contributing to this fat loss include: (a) a small energy deficit; (b) the energy cost of synthesising new lean tissue; (c) energy loss through the storage and excretion of ketone bodies; (d) catecholamine-induced 'futile' metabolic cycles with increased resting metabolism; and (e) a specific reaction to cold dehydration. Current limitations for the clinical application of such treatment include uncertainty regarding optimal environmental conditions, concern over possible pathological reactions to cold, and suggestions of a less satisfactory fat mobilisation in female patients. Possible interactions between physical fitness and metabolic reactions to cold remain controversial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation to exercise in the cold. 388 60

The severity and persistence of corticosteroid-induced obesity were evaluated retrospectively in 23 children aged 1-14 yrs requiring more than 60 days of therapy with prednisone for idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. Mean relative weight (after clearing of proteinuria) at initiation of therapy was 107 +/- 10 percent. Peak relative weight on therapy was 119 +/- 15 percent following a mean total of 31 months of cumulative steroid therapy. The most recent available relative weight in remission at least 6 months following cessation of therapy was 107 +/- 18 percent. The number of children whose relative weight exceeded 120 percent at initiation of, during and following therapy was 3, 10, and 4, respectively. In those with normal initial relative weight (less than 110%) there was no persistent obesity. Two of three initially obese patients (relative weight greater than 120%) remained obese. All patients with persistent obesity following therapy had initial relative weight of at least 110 percent and peak relative weight of more than 130 percent. The risk of persistent obesity as a result of chronic corticosteroid therapy in initially normal weight children who do not exceed 130 percent relative weight during therapy appears to be small.
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PMID:Corticosteroid therapy-induced obesity in children. 394 57

The association between massive obesity and nephrotic syndrome has been rarely reported. We herein describe a patient with massive obesity (209 kg) and nephrotic proteinuria who had a normal renal biopsy. The patient was initially polycythemic and had a supranormal creatinine clearance. After losing 89 kg, his hemoglobin and creatinine clearance returned to normal, and proteinuria decreased to 300 mg/24 h. We postulated that increases in glomerular hydrostatic pressure may result in local alterations of glomerular basement membrane sieving characteristics (biologic membrane thixotropy) with resultant nephrotic proteinuria. Prompt remission of proteinuria with weight loss supports a reversible glomerular hemodynamic alteration as a mechanism for the proteinuria of massive obesity.
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PMID:Massive obesity and nephrotic proteinuria with a normal renal biopsy. 400 Mar 54

The major diseases associated with obesity are hypertension, atherosclerosis, and diabetes, as well as certain types of cancer. Less well-known complications include hepatic steatosis, gallbladder disease, pulmonary function impairment, endocrine abnormalities, obstetric complications, trauma to the weight-bearing joints, gout, cutaneous disease, proteinuria, increased hemoglobin concentration, and possibly immunologic impairment. A U- or J-shaped curve illustrates the relation between body mass index and the degree of these various complications. This relationship can be used to provide guidelines for assessing treatment of obesity.
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PMID:Complications of obesity. 406 25

A total of 6695 diabetic men and women, aged 35 to 54 years, from 14 centres and representing 13 national groups, participated in a vascular disease prevalence survey. A random sample was drawn after stratification of each centre's diabetic base population by sex, duration of diabetes and age. A common agreed protocol, standardized examination procedures, and centralized laboratory methods were used in the investigation. Within the age range examined there was considerable variation between centres in a number of variables, including degree of obesity (measured as Body Mass Index (BMI)), proportion treated with insulin and proportion of cigarette smokers. The latter also showed considerable sex differences within centres. Subjects with age at onset below 25 years were notably few in Hong Kong, Tokyo and Oklahoma. There was also considerable variation in the apparent prevalence of both large- and small-vessel (macrovascular and microvascular) disease between centres. In pooled data, measures of large-vessel disease were significantly and independently associated with age, blood pressure and BMI in both sexes, and with diabetes duration and plasma cholesterol in men only. Within-centre analyses showed blood pressure to be the most consistently associated variable in both sexes. In pooled data, small-vessel disease of the eye was significantly and independently associated with diabetes duration, blood pressure, BMI and type of treatment in both sexes. In within-centre analyses, diabetes duration was the most consistently associated variable, followed by blood pressure. Proteinuria as an index of small-vessel disease of the kidney was, in pooled data, significantly and independently correlated with diabetes duration, blood pressure and plasma cholesterol in both sexes. In within-centre analyses, blood pressure was the most consistently associated variable, with diabetes duration and plasma cholesterol equal second - significant in 12 of the 28 centre/sex groups. Heterogeneity of large-vessel disease prevalence in diabetic subjects is confirmed by this study, and the possibility of heterogeneity in small-vessel disease prevalence and severity is suggested.
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PMID:Prevalence of small vessel and large vessel disease in diabetic patients from 14 centres. The World Health Organisation Multinational Study of Vascular Disease in Diabetics. Diabetes Drafting Group. 406 55

The epidemiology, pathogenesis, significance and management of hypertension in diabetic subjects are discussed. In Type 1 diabetes the presence of diastolic hypertension is closely related to the presence of diabetic nephropathy, from the stage of persistent proteinuria onwards. There may also be some elevation of systolic pressure. The apparent increased prevalence of hypertension in Type 2 diabetes is largely explicable, directly or indirectly, by obesity but there may be an excess of systolic hypertension among elderly patients. Hypertension in the diabetic population is associated with an increased incidence of both microvascular and macrovascular complications, but whether the high blood pressure is causal is not clear. The possible roles of sodium and insulin, the renin-angiotensin system, catecholamines and physical factors are explored. All current antihypertensive agents have additional limitations and disadvantages when used in diabetic patients: diuretics and beta-blockers are probably the initial drugs of choice. Only in the case of diabetic nephropathy is there yet reasonable evidence of antihypertensive treatment reducing the rate of progression of the disease.
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PMID:Diabetes and arterial hypertension. 613 Oct 4

The prevalence of peripheral vascular disease (PVD) was determined in 296 Japanese diabetics (mean age 55.2 years, range 19 to 79 years), using a Doppler ultrasonic technique. PVD was diagnosed in 11.5% of the diabetic patients (7.6% females, 14.6% males). In 88% of all patients with PVD, asymptomatic impaired circulation was diagnosed. There was a clear increase of PVD with age. It was found that the increase of PVD was gradual in patients under the age of 70, from 4.3% in the younger group to 10% in patients in their 7th decade, while the frequency of PVD rose sharply to 25% in patients in their 8th decade and over. The occurrence of PVD was significantly correlated with hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia and past obesity, but not with glycemic control, serum cholesterol levels or smoking habits. Also, PVD was closely associated with persistent proteinuria, retinopathy at a rather advanced stage and calcification of leg arteries. These findings suggest that the frequency of PVD in Japanese diabetics is lower by one third and progression of PVD is more gradual than that found in similar studies in Western countries. Another distinctive feature of PVD in Japanese diabetics was the markedly high percentage of asymptomatic cases.
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PMID:Peripheral vascular disease in Japanese diabetics: screening by the Doppler ultrasonic technique. 639 37

In a five year prospective study clinical features associated with the development and progress of retinopathy were sought in 296 randomly selected diabetic men aged 20-59. None had ophthalmoscopically detectable retinopathy initially, but during follow up 66 developed the condition (47 background, 10 exudative, 9 proliferative). Linear logistic analyses (two tailed tests) showed that the initial features independently predictive of retinopathy were duration of diabetes, poor glycaemic control, impotence, and--unexpectedly--heavy alcohol consumption. Poor glycaemic control in the interim and proteinuria at review were also associated with the development of retinopathy. No relation was found with smoking or obesity. Glycaemic control and alcohol consumption were therefore the only aetiologically relevant associations identified. The development of severe retinopathy (exudative and proliferative) showed a particular association with heavy alcohol consumption, occurring in nine of the 70 heavy drinkers (13%) compared with 10 (4.4%) of the rest. Alcohol consumption may be an important independent factor associated predictively with sight threatening diabetic retinopathy.
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PMID:Alcohol: another risk factor for diabetic retinopathy? 642 83

Advances in our understanding of the mechanisms of proteinuria in humans have depended on a variety of animal models. Most of these have been partially satisfactory because they require pretreatment of the animal with chemicals or toxins or they depend on an aging-related glomerular protein leakiness. The strain in this study was obtained by Koletsky after selective inbreeding of the offspring from a hypertensive Kyoto-Wistar and a normotensive Sprague-Dawley rat. The affected animals appear in 25% of the litters, indicating an autosomal recessive gene, and present with a spontaneous and progressive nephrotic syndrome detected as early as 3-5 weeks and associated with obesity, hypertension, hypoalbuminemia, hypercholesterolemia, and hyperlipidemia. Preliminary morphologic and immunofluorescence studies of their kidneys show progressive glomerular segmental sclerotic lesions and prominent mesangial deposition of IgM, a picture which resembles a steroid-resistant form of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome in humans, namely, focal glomerular sclerosis.
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PMID:Spontaneous nephrotic syndrome in a genetic rat model. 650 87

Hypophysectomy in young male Wistar rats aged 70 days, like food restriction begun at the same age, retarded the life-long rate of collagen aging in tail tendon fibres and inhibited the development of age-associated proteinuria and renal histopathology. Hypothalamic lesions which increased the food intake of hypophysectomized rats from 7 g to 15 g/day and produced obesity did not alter the rate of either collagen aging or proteinuria development, nor reduce life expectancy, but increased the incidence of abnormal glomeruli. In the intact rats elevation of food intake from 7 g to 15 g/day increased the rate of proteinuria development, but did not affect the rate of collagen aging. Hypophysectomy was found to have a greater anti-collagen aging effect than food restriction, when food intakes were the same in both groups. These studies suggest a pituitary-hormonal effect on collagen aging and a food-pituitary-hormone-mediated effect on the development of age-associated proteinuria.
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PMID:The anti-aging action of hypophysectomy in hypothalamic obese rats: effects on collagen aging, age-associated proteinuria development and renal histopathology. 663 96


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