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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD) was first described as a single disease by Stein and Leventhal in 1935, but now has been separated into several distinct entities, comprising a symptom complex. The most frequent presenting symptoms associated with PCOD are
obesity
, hirsutism, amenorrhea or anovulation, dysfunctional uterine bleeding, irregular menses, and infertility. The common finding of hirsutism in PCOD patients is a reflection of the
hyperandrogenism
resulting from elevation of all the androgens, including testosterone, androstenediol, dehydroepiandrostrone sulfate (DHEA-S), and androstenedione. Some patients with all the clinical features of PCOD can be shown, through appropriate testing, to have an attenuated form of classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). Serum follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) levels are usually low or in the normal range, and serum luteinizing hormone (LH) levels are usually elevated in patients with PCOD, resulting in an altered LH/FSH ratio. Treatment for PCOD must be based on the needs and desires of the individual patient, and on the pathophysiology of the patient's particular abnormalities. When pregnancy is desired, ovulation induction with clomiphene is indicated. Clomiphene is a weak estrogen that induces a transient rise in serum LH and FSH, followed by a gonadotropic pattern similar to normal cycles. A 72% ovulation rate and a 41.8% conception rate have been reported after treatment with clomiphene. In patients who do not respond to clomiphene, or clomiphene with added human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), human menopausal gonadotropin (hMG) can be used to induce ovulation, but the patient should be closely monitored for multiple ovulation, multiple pregnancy, or hyperstimulation syndrome. For patients not interested in conception, regular menstrual cyclicity can be restored and
hyperandrogenism
reduced with oral contraceptives (OCs).
...
PMID:Polycystic ovarian disease. 623 74
The HAIR-AN syndrome that consists of
hyperandrogenism
(HA), insulin resistance (IR), and acanthosis nigricans (AN) is an underdiagnosed endocrinopathy, because hyperandrogenic women are not commonly screened for insulin resistance or acanthosis nigricans. The distinct pathophysiologic features of the HAIR-AN syndrome are discussed in detail. In this syndrome, the primary pathophysiologic derangements are the insulin resistance and the
hyperandrogenism
. The acanthosis nigricans is an epiphenomenon of these primary processes. In patients with the HAIR-AN syndrome, the degree of severity of the insulin resistance is positively correlated with the degree of severity of the
hyperandrogenism
. In patients with adequate pancreatic beta-islet cell reserve, insulin resistance results in a long-term increase in circulating insulin levels. The hyperinsulinemia probably directly stimulates ovarian androgen production. In turn,
hyperandrogenism
itself produces insulin resistance. This positive feedback loop between insulin resistance and
hyperandrogenism
propagates the disease, and increases its severity over time. The relationship between insulin resistance and
hyperandrogenism
may explain the hyperandrogenemia seen in the following disease processes:
obesity
, acromegaly, lipoatrophic diabetes, leprechaunism, and Kahn types A and B insulin resistance.
...
PMID:Hyperandrogenism, insulin resistance, and acanthosis nigricans syndrome: a common endocrinopathy with distinct pathophysiologic features. 635 20
Hirsutism usually results from a subtle excess of androgens. As such, it is a clue to possible endocrine disturbance in addition to presenting cosmetic problems. We use the term hirsutism to mean male-pattern hirsutism--excessive growth of hair in areas where female subjects normally have considerably less than male subjects. An elevation of the plasma free (unbound) testosterone level is the single most consistent endocrinologic finding in hirsutism. The plasma free testosterone level is sometimes elevated when the total level of plasma testosterone is normal because testosterone-estradiol--binding globulin (TEBG) levels are often depressed in hirsute women. Frequent blood sampling is sometimes necessary to demonstrate subtle hyperandrogenic states since androgen levels in the blood are pulsatile and seemingly reflect episodic ovarian and adrenal secretion. The source of hyperandrogenemia can usually be determined from dexamethasone suppression testing. Those patients whose plasma free androgen levels do not suppress normally usually have functional ovarian
hyperandrogenism
(polycystic ovary syndrome variants). Very high plasma androgen levels or evidence of hypercortisolism, which is not normally suppressible by dexamethasone, should lead to the search for a tumor or Cushing's syndrome. Those patients in whom hyperandrogenemia is suppressed normally by dexamethasone have a form of the adrenogenital syndrome, a prolactinoma,
obesity
, or idiopathic hyperandrogenemia. In such patients, glucocorticoid therapy may reduce hirsutism and acne and normalize menses. The treatment of hirsutism resulting from functional ovarian
hyperandrogenism
is not as satisfactory; estrogen-progestin treatment is the most useful adjunct to cosmetic approaches to hirsutism in this country. However, other manifestations of polycystic ovary syndrome, such as infertility, may take precedence over hirsutism when an optimal therapeutic program is designed for many patients.
...
PMID:Hirsutism: implications, etiology, and management. 725 62
It has been shown that in vitro calcium channel blockers may regulate insulin secretion, and in vivo studies have demonstrated that they can reduce the degree of hyperinsulinemia and ameliorate the insulin-resistant state in subjects (particularly men) with
obesity
and hypertension. It is also commonly accepted that hyperinsulinemia may be an important factor responsible for the development of
hyperandrogenism
in obese women with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). We, therefore, investigated whether the administration of nitrendipine, a widely used calcium channel blocker, may improve both insulin levels and
hyperandrogenism
in a group of seven insulin-resistant hyperinsulinemic women with
obesity
and PCOS. They were treated for 7-8 days with oral nitrendipine (10 mg, twice daily) or placebo using a double blind, cross-over design. Before and after treatment, blood samples were obtained for androgen and sex hormone-binding globulin determinations, and an oral glucose tolerance test was performed, measuring glucose and insulin. Both nitrendipine and placebo failed to decrease basal and stimulated insulin levels. Moreover, no significant variations in testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, or sex hormone-binding globulin concentrations were observed after either treatment. Therefore, these data fail to support previous suggestions that calcium channel blockers may play a role in the treatment of
hyperandrogenism
and hyperinsulinemia in obese women with PCOS.
...
PMID:Nitrendipine treatment in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome: evidence for a lack of effects of calcium channel blockers on insulin, androgens, and sex hormone-binding globulin. 759 49
Although sex steroids have long been known to influence serum concentrations of SHBG, it is now recognized that nutritional factors may be more important in the regulation of SHBG in women. Thus, SHBG concentrations are negatively correlated with body mass index (BMI) and, more particularly, to indices of central adiposity. Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), the most common cause of anovulatory infertility, is associated with truncal
obesity
,
hyperandrogenism
and hyperinsulinaemia. There is evidence that insulin may be the humoral mediator of the weight-dependent changes in SHBG. Serum SHBG concentrations are inversely correlated with both fasting and glucose-stimulated insulin levels, and insulin has been shown to have a direct inhibitory effect on SHBG synthesis and secretion by hepatocytes in culture. However, the interrelationship of BMI, insulin and SHBG appears to be different in women with PCOS from that in normal subjects. The clinical importance of the weight-related suppression of SHBG is illustrated by the finding of a greater prevalence of hirsutism in obese women PCOS compared with their lean counterparts.
Obese
subjects with PCOS have similar total testosterone concentrations to lean PCO women but have lower SHBG and reciprocally higher free testosterone levels. Calorie restriction results in reduction of serum insulin followed by an increase in SHBG and a fall in free testosterone but an isocaloric, low-fat diet has no significant effect on SHBG concentrations. Weight reduction in obese, hyperandrogenaemic women with PCO is an important approach to the management of both anovulation and hirsutism.
...
PMID:Sex hormone-binding globulin and female reproductive function. 762 5
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is an association of oligomenorrhoea, anovulation,
hyperandrogenism
,
obesity
and enlarged polycystic ovaries. It provides a model of loss of cyclic ovarian function. It is classical to distinguish between type I and type II PCOS. In type I, the primary mechanism seems to be hypothalamic dysfunction, which causes an increase in the frequency and amplitude of LH pulses, with diminished FSH release. LH hypersecretion stimulates ovarian stroma hyperplasia while FSH insufficiency results in the failure of folliculare maturation and hence anovulation. Aromatization of androgens to oestrogens is responsible for permanent oestrogen overproduction, which favours LH hypersecretion. Type II PCOS is more frequent and may have multiple causes (local, endocrine, systemic, iatrogenic) that interfere with the gonadotropic axis and alter the FSH/LH ratio. The most efficient treatment of hirsutism is cyproterone acetate which alone has both antiandrogenic and antigonadotropic properties. Clomifene citrate remains the "first choice" treatment of infertility associated with anovulation.
...
PMID:[Polycystic ovarian dystrophies. Diagnostic criteria and treatment]. 763 20
Excessive androgen output is a well-recognized feature of adrenocortical oversecretion in women with ovarian
hyperandrogenism
, or polycystic ovary disease (PCOD). However, evidence of a concomitant alteration of cortisol secretion is lacking even though
obesity
per se, a common clinical feature of PCOD, has been shown to be associated with cortisol oversecretion. To clarify whether a subtle alteration in cortisol secretion exists, a study of 24-h episodic cortisol release and post-prandial cortisol responses was undertaken in eight women with PCOD and eight normal women comprising equal numbers of obese and non-obese subjects. All four groups showed normal biphasic 24-h cortisol secretion profiles but cortisol pulse frequency was increased in the PCOD groups. Independently, both
hyperandrogenism
and
obesity
were associated with an accelerated cortisol clearance rate. These changes, together with normal or only slightly elevated 24-h cortisol integrated area under the curve, suggest an increased compensatory cortisol production in women with PCOD. Furthermore, subjects with PCOD and subjects with
obesity
showed different post-prandial cortisol responses to normal non-obese women. In conclusion, these subtle cortisol abnormalities may be a manifestation of altered central regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and peripheral metabolic abnormalities, and may be linked to the pathophysiology of PCOD.
...
PMID:Characterization of 24-h cortisol release in obese and non-obese hyperandrogenic women. 770 64
In polycystic ovarian disease there is a strong association between hyperinsulinemia and
hyperandrogenism
but not with
obesity
alone. The magnitude of peripheral insulin resistance is similar to that seen in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Mild hyperinsulinemia in PCOD patients is not impair the carbohydrate metabolism. The elimination of the cause of
hyperandrogenism
by bilateral oophorectomy, long-acting Gn-RH agonist or antiandrogen cyproterone acetate did not improve the associated insulin resistance. In opposition to insulin resistance in the tissues responsible for metabolism of carbohydrate, the ovary remains sensitive to the effects of pancreatic hormone. Presumably this mechanism involved the interaction with IGF-I receptors to stimulate thecal and stromal androgen production. Insulin may sensitize the stroma to the stimulatory effect of LH. In the mechanism of follicular arrest take part increased level of binding proteins for IGF-I, mainly IGFBP 2, -4 and 5 inhibit FSH and IGF-I action.
...
PMID:[Insulin resistance in the pathogenesis of polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD)]. 772 20
Insulin resistance has been reported to be associated with
hyperandrogenism
and polycystic ovaries. To study the prevalence of insulin resistance in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCO) and the correlation between hyperinsulinemia and
hyperandrogenism
, 48 patients were divided into four groups: group 1, non-obese ovulatory women (n = 10); group 2, obese ovulatory women (n = 9); group 3, non-obese women with PCO (n = 14); group 4, obese women with PCO (n = 15). Each patient was submitted to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). Glucose, insulin, androstenedione and testosterone levels were determined and the blood glucose and insulin response of women with PCO and normal women were compared. Glucose intolerance was observed in group 3 (28.6%) and group 4 (40%) but not in groups 1 or 2, and hyperinsulinemia was observed in group 2 (66.7%), group 3 (64.3%) and group 4 (86.6%). There was a correlation between androstenedione and testosterone levels and insulinemia in group 4. There was also a high prevalence of insulin resistance in patients with PCO regardless of
obesity
, and
hyperandrogenism
-aggravated insulin resistance.
...
PMID:Insulin secretion in obese and non-obese women with polycystic ovary syndrome and its relationship with hyperandrogenism. 779 99
Several lines of evidence suggest that a subset of women may be at increased risk of cardiovascular disease because of unfavorable alterations in insulin action and/or production, accompanying altered apolipoprotein metabolism and altered androgenicity and/or estrogenicity. A number of cardiovascular disease risk factors, including central
obesity
, insulin resistance (with associated hyperinsulinemia), dyslipidemia, and/or diabetes mellitus, tend to cluster in these women. Another common ovarian morphology in women with
hyperandrogenism
is polycystic ovaries, which cluster with hirsutism, anovulation, infertility, gonadotropin secretion abnormalities, android fat distribution, and many important cardiovascular disease risk factors. Studies indicate that androgen excess may be a signal of increased risk for coronary artery disease, even in younger women. If androgenicity and insulin resistance are early warning signs of increasing risk of morbidity and mortality, these patients are prime candidates for preventive medicine. It is important that primary care providers begin to recognize these androgen disorders as a clue to the existence of a complex, lifelong pattern potentially placing women at risk for premature morbidity and mortality and initiate preventive treatment before irreversible thresholds are crossed.
...
PMID:Obesity, lipids, cardiovascular risk, and androgen excess. 782 38
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