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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lipid and carbohydrate metabolism abnormalities are reviewed with particular emphasis on the role of insulin and interrelationships between carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. The pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is discussed in terms of the association of abnormal circulating insulin levels. Some of the conditions associated with abnormal insulin levels and atherosclerosis are diabetes mellitis, hypertriglyceridemia,
obesity
,
uremia
, and oral contraceptive use. There is evidence that a proportion of subjects who have atherosclerosis or at risk have elevated circulating insulin levels. There is also increasing evidence that the arterial wall is an insulin-sensitive tissue. More women with myocardial infarction take oral contraceptives than controls do. Those who take the pill have 9 times the risk of others to develop cerebral ischemia or thrombosis. Many oral contraceptives cause abnormalities in glucose tolerance associated with elevated plasma insulin levels, and a degree of insulin resistance is induced. A number of the metabolic consequences of the pill may be caused by the elevated insulin levels.
...
PMID:The relationship of abnormal circulating insulin levels to atherosclerosis. 85 12
Thirty-one abdominal fascial wound dehiscences occurred in 2,761 patients undergoing major abdominal surgery during a 5-year period (1%). Twenty-two specific local and systemic risk factors were analyzed and compared with the risk factors of a control group of 38 patients undergoing similar procedures without dehiscence. Through multivariate analysis, each factor was assessed as an independent statistical variable. Significant factors (p less than 0.05) were found to include age over 65, wound infection, pulmonary disease, hemodynamic instability, and ostomies in the incision. Additional systemic risk factors that were found to be significant included hypoproteinemia, systemic infection,
obesity
,
uremia
, hyperalimentation, malignancy, ascites, steroid use, and hypertension. Risk factors not found to be important independent variables included sex, type of incision, type of closure, foreign body in the wound, anemia, jaundice, and diabetes. When dehiscence and control groups were combined, 30% of patients with at least five significant risk factors developed dehiscence, and all the patients with more than eight risk factors developed a wound dehiscence. There was an overall mortality of 29%, which was directly related to the number of significant risk factors. The co-existence of 9 risk factors portended death in one third of the patients, and all the patients with more than 10 risk factors died.
...
PMID:Factors influencing wound dehiscence. 832 36
The clinical use of cyclosporine A (CsA) is complicated by large intra- and interindividual variabilities in its pharmacokinetics. Several factors contribute to these variabilities. This review aims at describing these factors and their relative contribution in the clinical situation. Cyclosporine A has a highly variable absorption. The absorption is dependent on the liver function, bile flow, and gastrointestinal status. A large fatty meal may increase the absorption of CsA. Impaired absorption is observed postoperatively. The vehicle or dosage form is of no importance for the absorption. The distribution of CsA is mainly influenced by the lipoprotein concentration in plasma and to a lesser extent by the haematocrit. However, age, gender, and
obesity
are of no clinical importance for the distribution. The metabolism is presumably genetically determined and the rate of metabolism varies greatly between individuals. Furthermore, the rate of metabolism is age-related and may be affected by concomitant medication. Factors of limited importance for the metabolism include sex, lipoprotein pattern, and drug concentration. Factors such as time after transplantation, haemodialysis, haematocrit,
obesity
, and
uremia
are not associated with altered metabolism. Thus, the major factor for the intraindividual variability in CsA kinetics is the variable absorption, whereas the major cause for the interindividual variability supposedly is the inherited capacity to metabolize the drug. The factors mentioned above and other factors, found to be of minor or no importance for the kinetics of CsA, are discussed in detail.
...
PMID:Factors influencing the pharmacokinetics of cyclosporine in man. 177 43
The performance of percutaneous renal biopsy under ultrasound guidance in markedly obese patients is associated with technical difficulties because of the production of poor image quality. Fluoroscopy can be potentially used as an alternative guidance method when the kidneys are not visualized sonographically. However, the presence of
uremia
in an obese patient imposes an additional risk when fluoroscopy is used because of possible nephrotoxicity from the use of radiocontrast dye. Computerized tomography (CT) provides advantages over these two methods because of the production of excellent spatial resolution of images leading to accurate localization of the kidneys. We performed 59 consecutive percutaneous renal biopsies in 58 patients using CT as guidance. The body mass index (BMI) defined as weight in kilograms/(height in meter)2 [Watson et al. 1979], was used to assess the severity of
obesity
. Twenty-nine patients had Grade 0 (BMI less than or equal to 24.9), 17 had Grade I (BMI 25-29.9), 7 had Grade II (BMI 30-39.9) and 5 had Grade III (BMI greater than or equal to 40)
obesity
. Thirty-two patients had superimposed
uremia
of varying degrees. Image quality was maintained in all four groups, and tissues adequate for diagnosis were obtained in 98% of the attempts. Complications were minimal with no deaths, nephrectomies or surgical interventions attributable directly to the biopsy procedure itself. We recommend the use of CT guidance in the grossly obese patients (Grade II or III) when their kidneys are poorly visualized by sonography.
...
PMID:Efficacy of percutaneous renal biopsy in obese patients under computerized tomographic guidance. 203 97
Aseptic osteonecrosis has been described in many and dissimilar pathologic conditions--most frequently as the aftermath of fractures or dislocations; in falciform anemia,
obesity
, alcoholism; in diseases requiring constant and heavy corticosteroid therapy, and also following renal transplantation. Many of these pathologies, especially alcoholism, diabetes,
uremia
, and collagen vascular diseases, have a common denominator: peripheral neuropathy, which is believed to be a pathogenetic factor supporting osteonecrosis. The authors analyze 3 cases of aseptic osteonecrosis of the femoral head in cancer patients treated with vincristine and/or vinblastine. Since in these subjects severe and persistent neuropathy preceded the onset of osteonecrosis, a possible relationship is postulated between the vincristine/vinblastine treatment and the onset of femoral head osteonecrosis, through the pathogenetic mechanism of peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:[Aseptic osteonecrosis of the femoral head in cancer patients with neuropathies caused by vincristine and vinblastine]. 275 79
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common syndrome occurring in 1% to 4% of the population. While
obesity
is the most common predisposition to OSA, metabolic disorders have been associated with this syndrome. We describe a patient who presented with severe OSA while in an advanced untreated uremic state, which resolved following intensive dialysis. We speculate that the sleep disturbances, which are common in
uremia
, may be accounted for in some patients by OSA and may resolve with specific therapy for advanced renal failure.
...
PMID:Reversal of sleep apnea in uremia by dialysis. 360 92
Since 1980 we have refined a procedure for renal needle biopsy with continuous ultrasonic guidance (USRNB) which facilitates control of the needle progression through the soft tissues to the lower pole of the kidney. The advantage of this method is evident in a selected population (major
obesity
, small kidneys). We compared this procedure to the conventional blind biopsy in a series of 32 nonselected patients. Tissue samples with more than 10 glomeruli were obtained in 87% of patients with 2.8 punctures using USRNB, the difference was significant when compared to a blind technique (56%, 4.0, respectively, p less than 0.05). USRNB has been performed in 108 patients with 2 failures due to a poor echographic contrast. Reasons why this procedure should be substituted for the blind technique include: (i) Less morbidity, (ii) improvement of the quality of renal tissue, (iii) better comfort for both patient and physician, and (iv) less technical restriction of the biopsy indication when compared to blind renal needle biopsy.
Uremia
Invest
PMID:Ultrasonically continuously guided renal biopsy. 391 31
This retrospective analysis of 140 continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients followed during a 4 year period revealed a 5 percent incidence of abdominal wall hernias. Inguinal hernias were frequently manifested as unilateral scrotal swelling. Hernias too small to be appreciated by physical examination were easily demonstrable with intraperitoneal instillation of technetium 99m sulfur colloid through the continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis catheter. This procedure was also useful when differentiating dialysate leaks from inguinal hernia in the early and late postoperative periods. Recurrences developed in 27 percent of the herniorrhaphies. Factors contributing to the development of abdominal wall hernias in continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients include
uremia
,
obesity
, anemia, and chronically elevated intraperitoneal pressures.
...
PMID:Abdominal wall and inguinal hernias in continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients. 403 96
Insulin resistance is found in physiological (starvation, gestation) or pathological (diabetes,
obesity
,
uremia
, cortisol or growth hormone excess) situations. In order to study insulin resistance, a number of tests have been developed which have evolved in term of practical and conceptual complexity. In the present paper, these tests are analyzed for their reliability in answering the following questions: does an insulin resistance exist? Is it possible quantify it? What are the causes (receptor or post receptor defect) and the tissues producing or utilizing glucose involved in insulin resistance? Emphasis is placed upon a newly developed technique: the euglycemic, hyperinsulinemic glucose clamp. Progress in the knowledge of insulin resistance as well as the problems or limitations linked to this latter technique are discussed.
...
PMID:[Technics for studying insulin resistance in vivo]. 639 95
The correlation between the peripheral concentrations of gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), insulin, and glucose has not previously been quantified. This paper describes the association among the peripheral concentrations of GIP, insulin and glucose during 50-g oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) in healthy volunteers and in patients with gastrointestinal disorders,
obesity
, and
uremia
. It was found that the correlation between insulin/glucose and plasma GIP concentrations during an OGTT can be expressed by the equation: log y = log a + bx, where y = [insulin]/[glucose], and x is the plasma GIP concentration. This empirical correlation between [insulin]/[glucose] and [GIP] reduces the plasma parameters measured during OGTT to a simple relationship. It may prove valuable in the analysis of differences in the relationship glucose-insulin-GIP between groups of subjects and in the description of alterations in glucose homeostasis longitudinally in individuals undergoing therapy.
...
PMID:The association between plasma GIP and insulin after oral glucose. 701 75
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