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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the diabetic patient, the foot is particularly vulnerable to disorders resulting from vascular insufficiency, neuropathy, and infection. Without proper treatment, these disorders can lead to serious disability or amputation. Hyperglycemia, smoking, hypertension, and
obesity
contribute to the development of foot lesions. Early recognition of pedal lesions allows institution of measures (eg, special shoes, fitted inserts) that reduce risks of serious disorders. Patient education regarding foot care also plays an important role in prevention and management of disease. Aggressive treatment of infection and local care of lesions prevent extension of disease to adjacent areas. In cases of established infection or occlusive
vascular disease
amenable to bypass procedures, surgical intervention is frequently necessary. When amputation is required, rehabilitation professionals can assist the physician in patient education regarding personal care and readjustment.
...
PMID:Foot disorders in diabetics. Source of serious morbidity. 688 95
All contributory factors to the unusual occurrence of stroke in young people were evaluated in patients under age 40 admitted to the Stroke Unit of the Austin Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Over the August 1977 to December 1980 period there were 700 admissions. Of these 14 patients were under the age of 40. There were 7 males and 7 females whose ages ranged from 17-38 years. Each patient was screened for factors which might contribute to premature
vascular disease
including hypertension, diabetes, smoking,
obesity
, and hyperlipidemia. In addition, the following tests were performed to exclude an arteritic process: full blood examination; ESR; protein electrophoresis; syphilis serology; and the presence of antinuclear factor. Each of the 14 patients suffered cerebral infarction. A summary of each case is presented in a table. In 9 patients, infarction occurred in the carotid territory of supply. Large cortical infarcts with or without subcortical involvement occurred in cases 1-8, of whom 5 had major vessel occlusion demonstrated angiographically and another had stenosing and ulcerative atheromatous disease at the extracranial carotid bifurcation. In a further 4 patients, infarction occurred within the vertebrobasilar territory and was either confined to the brain stem, the occiptal cortex, or involved both. Angiograms were performed in 2 of these patients and showed irregular narrowing of the vertebral artery which was interpreted as spasm and segmentally narrowing of the basilar artery. The final patient had several ischemic events which included right sided amaurosis fugax, and left frontal, right parieto-occipital and left occipital infarctions. Angiography was normal. All patients survived the stroke and were able to go home. There may be an interrelationship between the pathological findings of Irey et al. (1978) and the effect oral contraceptives (OCs) has on migraine. This is relevant to Case 13. Sustained exposure to OCs may produce the pathological changes described (visible as segmental narrowing angiographically). In 2 patients cerebral infarction was caused by atheromatous or hypertensive occlusive
vascular disease
. In Case 3 an embolus occluded the middle cerebral artery. Infarction complicating migraine was diagnosed confidently in 4 patients on the basis of typical migrainous symptomatology in the past and accompanying the stroke. Of the 12 patients fully evaluated, there were no cases of polycythemia or thrombocytosis. There were no abnormalities of the clotting factors. Almost every patient had some form of emotional upset, and there were 7 who had significant psychiatric illness and emotional problems of extreme magnitide.
...
PMID:Stroke syndromes in young people. 692 82
Systemic hemodynamics, intravascular volume, and plasma renin activity were determined in 135 lean, midly obese, or distinctly overweight subjects who were normotensive or had borderline or established essential hypertension. Cardiac output (but not index) was higher and peripheral resistance lower in obese than in lean subjects, except in borderline hypertension. Intravascular volume was increased in obese patients, and more so when corrected for body height; correction for body weight led to relative volume contraction. Intravascular volume correlated directly with cardiac output in the entire population, as well as in the subgroups. Intravascular volume correlated inversely with total peripheral resistance in all subjects and in each subgroup. Both correlations remained significant when an approximation was used to correct influences of
obesity
on total blood volume. Sodium excretion was higher in obese than in lean subjects. Thus, despite the expanded intravascular volume in
obesity
, the pathophysiologic relationship between systemic hemodynamics and intravascular volumes remains unchanged. Relatively low peripheral resistance in
obesity
may decrease the risk of systemic
vascular disease
. Nevertheless, since circulating volume is increased, the greater venous return adds an additional load to a left ventricle that is already burdened by a high afterload caused by arterial hypertension.
...
PMID:Obesity and essential hypertension. Hemodynamics, intravascular volume, sodium excretion, and plasma renin activity. 700 72
During a 1-year period all Black patients admitted to two medical wards in the Johannesburg General Hospital were screened for malignant hypertension. Of the 62 patients eligible for inclusion in the study, 51 were thought to have essential malignant hypertension (hospital prevalence 2,2%). There was a striking absence of the cardiovascular and hypertensive risk factors usually described -- excessive smoking, alcohol consumption and
obesity
. The presenting features and complications were similar to those described in other series. Cardiac failure was present in 45% of the patients, neurological complications in 33%, and advanced renal failure in 47%. Twenty patients required dialysis. No evidence of ischaemic heart disease or atheromatous
vascular disease
was found. Red cell fragmentation was present in 25% of the patients. The hospital mortality rate was 25%. Only 24% of the patients had previously been diagnosed as having hypertension, although 43% had been examined by a doctor during the preceding 2 years. Of the patients discharged to the hypertension clinic, only 28% returned for short-term follow-up. Malignant hypertension is therefore a major medical and social problem in the Johannesburg Black community.
...
PMID:The malignant phase of essential hypertension in Johannesburg Blacks. A prospective study. 708 52
In a random house-to-house study of 1 000 Indians in Durban the prevalence of primary hypertension according to World Health Organization criteria was found to be 19% (females 22%, males 15%). This prevalence was higher than that in published data from India. Hypertension among Indians in South Africa was found to be closely associated with diabetes mellitus and
obesity
and to be more common in widows or separated people, in those from the lower socio-economic groups and in those with poor education. Hindu males were more commonly affected than Muslim males. Ischaemic heart disease was also found to be more common in Indians in South Africa than in those in India. Cardiovascular diseases are just as much an 'epidemic' among the Indians of South Africa as among the the Whites, and the 'epidemic' of ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease and hypertensive disease is of more serious proportions in Indians than in Whites. It appears that emigrant Indian populations have a higher incidence of
vascular disease
than Indians in India. This is because of the combination of hypertension and diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Hypertension and ischaemic heart disease in Indian people living in South Africa and in India. 708 65
Hypercortisolism alters the distribution of body fat, causing truncal
obesity
, moon facies, buffalo hump, and other localized fatty deposits. In a patient with a mixed collagen
vascular disease
(overlap syndrome), who received high systemic doses of prednisone, prominent painless bitemporal masses developed in association with moon facies. Punch biopsy specimens of the lesion disclosed normal adipose tisue. This unappreciated feature of hypercortisolism is described, and other clinical manifestations of glucocorticoid excess involving fat tissue are reviewed briefly.
...
PMID:Temporal fat pad sign during corticosteroid treatment. 743 47
The purposes of this study were to look for the inferior mesenteric artery in patients undergoing abdominal sonography, to determine in what percentage of patients it is visible, and to characterize Doppler flow patterns of the inferior mesenteric artery in fasting patients without intestinal
vascular disease
. The inferior mesenteric artery was sought in 100 consecutive fasting adults (mean age, 54 years; 63 women, 37 men), as follows: the infrarenal aorta was scanned in a transverse plane; the origin of the inferior mesenteric artery was identified on the left anterolateral surface of the aorta; the inferior mesenteric artery was then traced caudally along the left side of the aorta. The inferior mesenteric artery and the superior mesenteric artery were studied with Doppler sonography in 50 different subjects without clinical or Doppler sonographic evidence of abdominal
vascular disease
(mean age, 44.9 years; 17 men, 33 women). Pulsed Doppler samples were taken within the inferior mesenteric artery in sagittal planes. The resistive index was calculated from the superior mesenteric artery and the inferior mesenteric artery. The inferior mesenteric artery was detected in all but eight patients (92%). In seven patients
obesity
prevented visualization. The eighth patient had undergone abdominal surgery on the previous day, limiting the sonographic examination. The diastolic flow in the inferior mesenteric artery was less than that in the superior mesenteric artery in all patients. The resistive index was 0.959 +/- 0.045 in the inferior mesenteric artery and 0.856 +/- 0.046 in the superior mesenteric artery (P < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Doppler sonography of the inferior mesenteric artery: a preliminary study. 866 90
The study of women with androgen excess as a biologic experiment in nature may improve our understanding of hormonal determinants of cardiovascular risk. These women, who have androgen and estrogen excess, also have altered apolipoprotein metabolism, which correlates with insulin resistance. They often have android
obesity
, which appears to aggravate their metabolic alterations. Insulin resistance seems to have more of an influence on altered apolipoprotein metabolism than does endogenous ovarian androgen or estrogen, at least in hirsute women who are obese. It is hypothesized that adrenal dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate may modify the effects of insulin resistance, as reflected in androgen and apolipoprotein lipid metabolism. These hormonal interactive influences, which require further investigation, may hold clues to why men and women differ in the time of onset of the multifactorial problem of coronary
vascular disease
.
...
PMID:Role of endogenous estrogen in the hirsutism paradigm. 804 Aug 43
Twenty obese subjects (Males = 8, Females = 12; average age = 39.5 +/- 2.5 years; B.M.I. = 36.2 +/- 2.5), 20 overweight subjects (Males = 8, Females = 12; average age = 38.5 +/- 2 years; B.M.I. = 28.8 +/- 0.4) and 20 non obese healthy subjects as controls, matched for sex and age (Males = 8, Females = 12; average age = 37.5 +/- 2 years; B.M.I. = 22.4 +/- 0.8) were selected. We determined: blood glucose, triglycerides, total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, Apolipoproteins A1 and B, Factor VII, fibrinogen and plasminogen. Before and after a venous occlusion test were also measured: t-PA Antigen, PAI activity and haematocrit. Metabolic, coagulative and fibrinolytic pathological changes were observed in overweight and obese subjects and the interaction of these risk factors may contribute to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis
vascular disease
and to the high rate of thromboembolic events reported in
obesity
.
...
PMID:Evaluation of cardiovascular risk factors in overweight and obese subjects. 807 94
von Willebrand factor (vWf), risk factors for atherosclerosis, body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) were measured in 108 non-diabetic patients attending lipid and
vascular disease
clinics and in 107 normal asymptomatic controls. High levels of vWf and increased BMI relative to controls were found in patients with hyperlipidaemia and
vascular disease
, but WHR was higher only in patients with
vascular disease
. Total serum cholesterol concentration (P < 0.001), systolic blood pressure (P < 0.001), smoking (P < 0.02) and BMI (P < 0.001), but not WHR, were associated with vWf. As raised levels of vWf are a probable indicator of endothelial damage in
vascular disease
, these data suggest that
obesity
has an adverse influence on the endothelium and may help explain its link with cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:von Willebrand factor, the endothelium and obesity. 811 78
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