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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diet is one of the major causes of cancer. The epidemiologic data on which this conclusion is based has been derived from analytic epidemiologic studies, buttressed by descriptive (ecologic) epidemiology and studies in experimental animals. Although the evidence is not entirely consistent, high dietary fat intake appears to be a major cause of breast cancer, and more consistently, of colorectal cancer, and probably prostate cancer as well.
Obesity
is an important cause of endometrial cancer, and increases the risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women, though increasingly there is evidence that suggests that
obesity
is protective for breast cancer in premenopausal women. There is inconsistent evidence that dietary fibre is protective for colorectal cancer, though good evidence that vegetable consumption is protective. Several studies have pointed to a protective effect of betacarotene for
lung cancer
, but betacarotene may be acting as an indicator of other protective factors in diet. Recommendations for dietary modification, congruent with recommendations for the prevention of cardiovascular and other chronic diseases, are now appropriate.
...
PMID:Diet and cancer. A review. 217 51
Recent studies of vegetarian diets and their effects on morbidity and mortality are reviewed. Vegetarian diets are heterogeneous as are their effects on nutritional status, health, and longevity. Mortality rates are similar or lower for vegetarians than for nonvegetarians. Risks of dietary deficiency disease are increased on vegan but not on all vegetarian diets. Evidence for decreased risks for certain chronic degenerative diseases varies. Both vegetarian dietary and lifestyle practices are involved. Data are strong that vegetarians are at lesser risk for
obesity
, atonic constipation,
lung cancer
, and alcoholism. Evidence is good that risks for hypertension, coronary artery disease, type II diabetes, and gallstones are lower. Data are only fair to poor that risks of breast cancer, diverticular disease of the colon, colonic cancer, calcium kidney stones, osteoporosis, dental erosion, and dental caries are lower among vegetarians. Reduced risks for chronic degenerative diseases can also be achieved by manipulations of omnivorous diets and lifestyles.
...
PMID:Health aspects of vegetarian diets. 304 2
A defined general population of 159,200 male and female native Swedes born in the period of 1911-1940, from an urban catchment area of the then only general hospital, was followed over a decade (1970-1979) with regard to inpatient hospitalization for all kinds of diagnoses. Psoriasis cases (n = 372) are significantly (p less than 0.001) associated with a spectrum of diseases: male as well as female psoriatics seem to show excess rates of viral infections, alcoholism, hypertension, pneumonia, liver cirrhosis, urticaria, and rheumatoid arthritis. Psoriasis in males only seem to be associated with iritis and ankylosing spondylitis, whereas psoriasis in females only is associated with
lung cancer
, diabetes,
obesity
, myocardial infarction and asthma.
...
PMID:Diseases associated with psoriasis in a general population of 159,200 middle-aged, urban, native Swedes. 308 49
Subcutaneous adipose tissue was examined in 77 patients with breast cancer, 61 patients with
lung cancer
and in a control group of 23 male and 27 female with non-tumor pathology; the weight and age of controls matched those of cancer patients. The
obesity
in breast cancer patients was of the hypertrophic type, and of combined type (hypertrophic-hyperplastic) in patients who were more than 50% overweight. The increased level of adipose tissue in
lung cancer
patients was mostly due to the larger size of adipocytes. The concentration of unsaturated fatty acids in adipose tissue in breast cancer patients was in direct correlation with the level of this tissue and adipocyte size, while, in
lung cancer
group, this correlation was reversed. There was no inverse correlation between the size and c-AMP level of adipocytes in both cancer groups. Resistance to the inhibitory effect of glucose on lipolysis occurring in adipose tissue was more frequent in cancer patients than in controls. Antilipolytic effect of insulin in subcutaneous adipose tissue of breast cancer patients was less pronounced than in
lung cancer
group. Liposynthetic activity in adipose tissue was identical in all study groups. Lipolytic activity in adipose tissue was enhanced in both cancer groups, but in the breast cancer group it was in direct correlation with overweight, while in
lung cancer
patients--with the degree of tumor progression.
...
PMID:[Morphometric and biochemical peculiarities of fatty tissue in patients with cancer of the breast and lung]. 630 31
We examined data on body weight and height from 55 male and 26 female
lung cancer
cases and up to 10 sex-ethnicity-age matched controls per case from a large prospective cohort. All four body mass indices (W/H, W/H2, W/Hp) were highly intercorrelated. Conditional logistic regression, using each index as the exposure variable, yielded odds ratios for
lung cancer
with magnitude and dose-response gradient that were somewhat different among the four indices. These results suggest that the body mass indices are not necessarily interchangeable in measuring
obesity
-disease associations.
...
PMID:Are body mass indices interchangeable in measuring obesity-disease associations? 670 69
Obesity
has been associated with an increased risk of cancer at a number of sites. A notable exception appears to be
lung cancer
, for which several studies suggest a modest inverse association. However, cigarette smoking is directly associated with
lung cancer
and inversely associated with body mass index. To investigate the hypothesis that body mass index is associated with
lung cancer
independent of cigarette smoking, the authors analyzed data from a prospective cohort study of 41,837 Iowa women aged 55-69 years at baseline in 1986. In addition, they examined whether central adiposity (high waist/hip ratio) was associated with
lung cancer
incidence. Through 1992 (6 years of follow-up), 233 cases of
lung cancer
were identified through the State Health Registry of Iowa. The body mass index at several ages was calculated from self-reports of height at baseline and weights at ages 18, 30, 40, and 50 years and at baseline. Current and former smokers generally had lower mean body mass indices than did nonsmokers at all ages except 18 years. Cases generally had lower body mass indices than did noncases at all ages except 18 and 30 years but, among current smokers, cases had higher mean body mass indices than did noncases at all ages except baseline, although the differences were not statistically significant. An apparent positive association of a high waist/hip ratio with
lung cancer
in the total cohort was found to be primarily accounted for by a higher waist/hip ratio in current and former smokers. When stratified by smoking status and adjusted for other risk factors, including age and pack-years of smoking, the body mass index at baseline, body mass index at age 50 years, and waist/hip ratio were not associated with
lung cancer
. The results of multivariate analyses suggest that the inverse association of body mass index with
lung cancer
can be explained by smoking status and that the positive association of waist/hip ratio with
lung cancer
can be explained by pack-years of smoking.
...
PMID:Association of body mass index and body fat distribution with risk of lung cancer in older women. 765 68
Large-scale studies have demonstrated that
obesity
increases the risk of developing some forms of cancer. The association between
obesity
and cancer may result from factors such as fat distribution or sex hormone levels. Studies have also shown a relationship between a high-fat, low-fiber diet and cancer risk. High estrogen levels and low progesterone levels are associated with an increased risk of endometrial cancer.
Obesity
is known to raise estrogen levels and may lower progesterone levels.
Obesity
may increase the risk of breast cancer, but the evidence is less clear, since factors, such as age, country of origin, body-fat distribution, and family history, also play a major role in determining breast cancer risk. Sex hormones, insulin, and nutritional factors are also involved in the etiology of breast cancer. The incidence of
lung cancer
is inversely related to body weight.
...
PMID:Obesity and cancer. 767 13
Cancer mortality rates for Aberdeen Area Indians exceed U.S. rates with
lung cancer
being the leading cause of cancer death. The Sioux Cancer Study, an ancillary study of the Strong Heart Study, investigated cancer and cancer risk factors among tribal members aged 45-74 in three Sioux tribes in North and South Dakota. An Indian-specific health risk appraisal was used to collect data and provide specific recommendations to participants. The high rates of smoking (56% for men and 48% for women) explain the high
lung cancer
mortality rates. Intensive smoking cessation and prevention programs will likely have the greatest impact in reducing preventable cancer deaths. More accessible cervical and breast cancer screening provided by female health care providers is needed to reduce preventable cancer deaths among Sioux women. Pap smear screening is an especially high priority since cervical cancer mortality is 4.4 times higher than U.S. rates, all races. Programs targeted to reduce
obesity
and excessive alcohol use will also likely reduce preventable cancer deaths associated with high rates of
obesity
, diabetes and binge drinking. Community-based cancer prevention and control programs tailored to the cancer risk factor profile of the community are the best strategy to reduce preventable cancer deaths in Indian communities.
...
PMID:Cancer risk factors in three Sioux tribes. Use of the Indian-specific health risk appraisal for data collection and analysis. 816 Sep 19
Recent studies have used preoperative cardiopulmonary exercise testing to improve risk assessment of pulmonary resection for
lung cancer
. These studies have demonstrated inconsistent correlation between peak oxygen uptake (VO2) and postoperative complications but have not systematically examined other methods of risk stratification. We analyzed the findings in 42 patients who had cardiopulmonary exercise testing prior to
lung cancer
resection. Preoperative clinical data combining pulmonary factors (
obesity
, productive cough, wheezing, tobacco use, ratio of the forced expiratory volume in 1 s over the forced vital capacity [FEV1/FVC] < 70 percent, and PaCO2 > 45 mm Hg), and an established cardiac risk index were used to generate a cardiopulmonary risk index (CPRI). When analyzed using the risk index, the incidence of postoperative complications increased with higher CPRI scores. Those with a CPRI of 4 or greater were 22 times more likely to develop a complication, compared to a CPRI of less than 4 (p < 0.0001). We found that patients with a peak VO2 less than 500 ml/m2/min (body surface area) were 6 times more likely to experience a cardiopulmonary complication (p < 0.05). With multiple logistic regression analysis, peak VO2 was not an independent predictor of postoperative complications. Analysis also demonstrated that a CPRI of 4 or greater was associated with significant reductions in peak VO2. We conclude that both the peak VO2 during cardiopulmonary exercise testing and a multifactorial CPRI are highly predictive of complications after lung resection. Adding the peak VO2 did not enhance the risk estimation generated by the CPRI. The association between postoperative complications and peak VO2 may be explained by the correlation between identifiable cardiopulmonary disease (CPRI) and reduced oxygen uptake with exercise.
...
PMID:Predicting complications after pulmonary resection. Preoperative exercise testing vs a multifactorial cardiopulmonary risk index. 836 78
One hundred male U.A.E. nationals (50 smokers and 50 non-smokers) rated their own risk for developing heart disease, developing arthritis and having an automobile accident; and the risks facing the average smoker and average non-smoker. Smokers in the U.A.E., like smokers in the U.K., exhibited "constrained optimism." Non-smokers, unlike non-smokers in the U.K., were "pessimistic" about their chances of developing heart disease and having an accident. Eighty-two male doctors, 41 smokers and 41 non-smokers, were asked to respond to two hypothetical patients (one with long-term
obesity
newly diagnosed as being hypertensive, the other a long-term smoker newly diagnosed as having
lung cancer
). Compared with smoker doctors, doctors who themselves did not smoke expected to feel more uncomfortable when managing the smoker patient, and perceived him as more responsible for his condition. Possible reasons for these results, their implications and ways of pursuing the issues raised are discussed.
...
PMID:The reactions of patients and doctors in the united arab emirates towards smoking. 872 48
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