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

We investigated a family in which at least 4 men in 3 generations had a syndrome of obesity, mild mental retardation, delayed puberty, macroorchidism, acanthosis nigricans, hyperinsulinemia, and later overt insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus (non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, NIDDM). The patients have markedly curly scalp hair, deficient face and body hair. Their teeth were healthy and normal in size and position. The clinical and biochemical findings and characteristics of the insulin receptors investigated in fibroblasts are reported. There was normal insulin binding to fibroblasts in the 2 brothers and their father. However, insulin-stimulated RNA synthesis was decreased as compared to that of normal control individuals. These findings suggest a postbinding defect of insulin action. The pedigree documents an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance. The diagnosis is of practical importance since it enables medical supervision of gene carriers in a preclinical state of atherosclerotic complications and overt diabetes. The findings in this family have relevance also to the explanation of familial mild mental retardation and to the study of different forms of insulin resistance due to a disturbance in biosignal transfer.
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PMID:Autosomal dominant insulin resistance syndrome due to postbinding defect. 128 80

We describe a 3-generation family in which mother, maternal grandfather, and 2 (male and female) children have variably manifestations of the ulnar-mammary syndrome, including ulnar ray defects, obesity, hypogenitalism, delayed puberty, hypoplasia of nipples and apocrine glands, and a previously undescribed ectopia of upper canines. The index patient also had split-hand appearance on the right due to complete absence of the 4th ray. To our knowledge this is the first documented example of split hand in the ulnar-mammary syndrome. The hand anomaly raises the question of a possible causal relationship between ulnar-mammary syndrome and the split hand with aplasia of the ulna syndrome, as already hypothesized by Lenz [1980].
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PMID:Possible relationship between ulnar-mammary syndrome and split hand with aplasia of the ulna syndrome. 148 52

RIA tests to determine the blood levels of gonadotropins, prolactin and different fractions of androgens have shown that the time course of the endogenous level of gonadotropins and androgens in boys aged 9 to 16 with Il-III degree of obesity without clinical signs of disturbed puberty is of the same type as that in healthy boys. However much lower concentrations of testosterone and FSH with a high level of LH and dehydroepiandrosterone were noted in the former. A single administration of chorionic gonadotropin has shown that in normal puberty first develops a mechanism of rapid excretion of testosterone into blood with its maximum concentration in 24-48 h, followed by the development of a mechanism of long-term activation of androgenesis at later stages of puberty. Obese boys with delayed puberty after the type of adiposogenital dystrophy or the syndrome of wrong puberty, demonstrate a more marked blood level of testosterone and FSH than in normal puberty. The clinical level of delayed puberty is determined by the peculiarities of the hypothalamohypophyseal system: the syndrome of wrong puberty is characterized by a sharp rise of adrenal androgenesis leading to premature pubarche, a decrease in the sensitivity of gonads to LH with a simultaneous rise of its blood concentration. Moderate activation of androgenesis in the adrenal glands was observed in false adiposogenital dystrophy, the prepubertal level of LH secretion being preserved.
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PMID:[The characteristics of the sexual development of boys suffering from obesity]. 214 42

Two cases of idiopathic hypothalamic dysfunction (one boy and one girl) are reported. Symptoms of hypothalamic dysfunction were noted by the age of 2 years: initial polyphagia and obesity with subsequent anorexia and emaciation were observed in one patient. Thermoregulation and thirst disorders, recurrent accesses of hypernatremia, acrocyanosis and profuse sweating were present. Impaired growth and delayed puberty in one case, and in the other hypogonadism, absence of growth hormone and gonadotrophins release in response to provocative stimuli were observed as well as abnormal thyroid stimulating hormone response to thyrotropin releasing hormone with hyperprolactinemia. Magnetic resonance imaging showed structural lesion in the lateral part of the lentiform nucleus in one case. Treatment with naltrexone, an opiate antagonist, had little if any effect.
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PMID:[Hypothalamic dysfunction. 2 cases: the contribution of nuclear magnetic resonance, therapeutic trial of naltrexone]. 266 35

Treatment of neonatal mice with large, repeated doses of monosodium L-glutamate (MSG) produces a syndrome of obesity and endocrinological dysfunction generally attributed to a hypothalamic lesion. We have used single injections of MSG, administered on postnatal day four, to explore the lower end of the dose-response curve for this toxin. Major features of the MSG syndrome including hypophagia, obesity, hypoactivity, reduced pituitary protein content, decreased ovarian weight, delayed puberty and elevated plasma corticosterone levels were obtained at the highest dose. Of the variables measured, feeding disturbances and reduced pituitary and ovarian weights were the most sensitive indicators of damage. The extent of damage produced in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus increased with increasing dose. A prominent lesion was also detected in the medial preoptic area of animals receiving the highest dose. Damage was not evident in other diencephalic structures associated with body weight regulation. Since little is known about the mechanisms underlying MSG obesity, a second study examined the contribution of ovarian hormones to obesity in MSG treated mice. Ovariectomy increased the body weights of animals injected with low but not high doses of MSG, suggesting that a reduction in ovarian function may contribute to the MSG obesity syndrome in the female. Measurement of hypothalamic monoamines and metabolites in these mice indicated that as with repeated doses of MSG, single injections of the toxin reduced hypothalamic dopamine levels. DOPAC levels were unchanged.
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PMID:Behavioral and endocrinological effects of single injections of monosodium glutamate in the mouse. 378 12

A 32-year-old man with a history of delayed puberty and obesity was seen initially with bitemporal hemianopsia and headache in 1974. Neuroradiologic studies showed a mass in the chiasmatic cistern and hypothalamus. Surgical exploration of the chiasm was unrevealing. Slowly progressive memory loss and intellectual impairment developed. Necropsy in 1978 disclosed a large cavernous hemangioma in the diencephalon.
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PMID:Cavernous hemangioma in the diencephalon. 723 69

The prevalence of pediatric obesity is increasing in the United States. Sequelae from pediatric obesity are increasingly being seen, and long-term complications can be anticipated. Obesity is the most common cause of abnormal growth acceleration in childhood. Obesity in females is associated with an early onset of puberty and early menarche. Puberty is now occurring earlier in females than in the past, and this is probably related either directly or indirectly to the population increase in body weight. The effect of obesity on male pubertal maturation is more variable, and obesity can lead to both early and delayed puberty. Pubertal gynecomastia is a common problem in the obese male. Many of the complications of obesity seen in adults appear to be related to increased accumulation of visceral fat. It has been proposed that subcutaneous fat may be protective against the adverse effects of visceral fat. Males typically accumulate fat in the upper segment of the body, both subcutaneously and intraabdominally. In females, adiposity is usually subcutaneous and is found particularly over the thighs, although visceral fat deposition also occurs. Gender-related patterns of fat deposition become established during puberty and show significant familial associations. There are no reliable means for assessing childhood and adolescent visceral fat other than radiologically. Noninsulin-dependent diabetes is being seen more commonly in the pediatric population. Diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance are noted particularly in obese children with a family history of diabetes. In this situation, a glucose tolerance test may be indicated, even in the presence of fasting normoglycemia. Hypertriglyceridemia and low high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels are the primary lipid abnormalities of obesity and are related primarily to the amount of visceral fat. Low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels are not typically elevated in simple obesity. The offspring of parents with early coronary disease tend to be obese. Very low-density lipoprotein and intermediate-density lipoprotein particles, which are small in size, may be important in atherogenesis but they cannot be identified in a fasting lipid panel. The propensity to atherogenesis cannot be interpreted readily from a fasting lipid panel, which therefore should be interpreted in conjunction with a family history for coronary risk factors. Hypertriglyceridemia may be indicative of increased visceral fat, familial combined hyperlipidemia, familial dyslipidemic hypertension, impaired glucose tolerance, or diabetes. Almost half of adult females with polycystic ovary syndrome are obese and many have a central distribution of body fat. This condition frequently has its origins in adolescence. It is associated with increased androgen secretion, hirsutism, menstrual abnormalities, and infertility, although these may not be present in every case. Adults with polycystic ovary syndrome adults are hyperlipidemic, have a high incidence of impaired glucose tolerance and noninsulin-dependent diabetes, and are at increased risk for coronary artery disease. Weight reduction and lipid lowering therefore are an important part of therapy. Obstructive sleep apnea with daytime somnolence is a common problem in obese adults. Pediatric studies suggest that obstructive sleep apnea occurs in approximately 17% of obese children and adolescents. Sleep disorders in the obese may be a major cause of learning disability and school failure, although this remains to be confirmed. Symptoms suggestive of a sleep disorder include snoring, restlessness at night with difficulty breathing, arousals and sweating, nocturnal enuresis, and daytime somnolence. Questions to exclude obstructive sleep apnea should be part of the history of all obese children, particularly for the morbidly obese. For many children and adolescents with mild obesity, and particularly for females, one can speculate that obesity may not be a great health risk
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PMID:Childhood obesity, adipose tissue distribution, and the pediatric practitioner. 965 56

Contiguous gene syndromes are an interesting clinical phenomenon, resulting from interstitial or terminal deletions of several adjacent genes. The phenotype results in a combination of two or more monogenic disorders and relates clinical findings to corresponding genotypes. We present the case of a male patient with Kallmann syndrome (KS), X-linked ichthyosis (XLI) and X-linked mental retardation (MRX). He was referred at the age of 15.4 years for delayed puberty and obesity. He had a previous history of pyloric stenosis, bilateral orchidopexy and surgical correction of a pes equinovarus adductus. On physical examination, generalised ichthyosis and hypoplastic external genitalia were found. KS was evident with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, hyposmia and a hypoplastic anlage of the olfactory tract in magnetic resonance imaging. Lipoprotein electrophoresis, and lack of steroid sulfatase and arylsulfatase-C activity in leucocytes confirmed XLI. DNA investigation established an interstitial deletion in Xp22.3 involving the Kallmann (KAL) gene, the steroid sulfatase (STS) gene and a putative mental retardation locus (MRX). The novel MRX locus maps to a 1-Mb region between DXS1060 and GS1.
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PMID:Analysis of an interstitial deletion in a patient with Kallmann syndrome, X-linked ichthyosis and mental retardation. 972 39

Obese female Zucker rats have several reproductive abnormalities, including delayed puberty, abnormal estrous cyclicity, and behavioral hyporesponsiveness to ovarian steroid hormones. To ascertain whether excessive body weight per se causes these reproductive abnormalities, obese Zucker female rats were fed ad lib or were food restricted to match their body weights to those of lean counterparts. Food restriction neither accelerated vaginal opening nor normalized estrous cyclicity in obese female rats. Following ovariectomy, an injection of estradiol benzoate (EB, 15 microg/kg, s.c.) induced extremely low sexual receptivity in all rats, and proceptive behaviors were never observed. After treatment with EB plus progesterone (P, 2 mg/kg, s.c.), lean rats were very receptive (lordosis quotient, LQ = 94 +/- 2%) and proceptive (PRO = 12.5 +/- 2 events/min) while both ad lib-fed and food-restricted obese rats were only marginally receptive and proceptive (LQ= 19 +/- 9%, PRO = 1.8 +/- 0.7 events/min; LQ = 31 +/- 15%, PRO = 4.7 +/- 3 events/min, respectively). A higher progesterone dose (20 mg/kg) elicited vigorous sexual receptivity (LQ = 88-99%) and proceptivity (PRO = 16.5-20.4 events/min) in all EB-treated rats. Adiposity was significantly lower in food-restricted obese rats as compared to ad lib-fed obese rats (36.5 +/- 1.7% vs. 69.4 +/- 2.7%), but greater than that observed in lean rats (24.4 +/- 1.1%). These data suggest that excessive body weight per se does not underlie reproductive abnormalities in obese Zucker rats, but do not rule out the possibility that excessive adiposity may contribute to their infertility.
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PMID:Food restriction neither improves nor exacerbates reproduction in obese female Zucker rats. 1040 20

Cutis verticis gyrata (CVG) is a rare disorder; it is characterized by thickening of the scalp which becomes raised to form ridges and furrows resembling the cerebral gyri. We report a case of CVG associated with the autosomal dominant insulin resistance syndrome. This syndrome is characterized by obesity, mild mental retardation, delayed puberty, acanthosis nigricans and hyperinsulinaemia. The association of CVG and autosomal dominant insulin resistance has not been previously described.
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PMID:Cutis verticis gyrata of the scalp in a patient with autosomal dominant insulin resistance syndrome. 1073 36


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