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

It is well known that the nutritional deficiency possibly causes cardiac dysfunction. Although social hygiene has successfully diminished these cardiac dysfunction in developed countries, patients could be found in certain number under altered clinical profiles than before. Excess intake of carbohydrate drinks and carbohydrates should make beri-beri heart in youth. Not only deficiency but recent dietary habits of excessive nutrition in these developed countries are causing new types of nutritional cardiac dysfunctions such as obesity cardiomyopathy in morbid obese. On the other hand, anorexia nervosa which sometimes shows heart failure and sudden death combines with psychosomatic disorders. In this article, the pathogenesis and treatments are discussed focusing on these three cardiac disorders.
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PMID:[Nutritional myocardial disorders]. 1088 5

Severe obesity is a grave disease in the U.S. as well as other industrialized nations. This disease has many ramifications on both an individual and social levels. It affects 12.5 million people in the U.S., according to national survey data. The health risks of severe obesity include hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, cardiomyopathy, diabetes, hypoventilation disorders, increased risk of malignancy, cholelithiasis, degenerative arthritis, infertility, and psychosocial impairments. Medical weight reduction programmes have rarely achieved long-term success. Most authorities now agree that bariatric surgery is the treatment of choice for well-informed and motivated obese patients with acceptable operative risks, who strongly desire substantial weight loss or who have severe impairments because of their weight. Surgery is indicated for patients with a BMI greater than 40 kg/m2, or for those with serious medical co-morbidities and a BMI greater than 35 kg/m2. Three procedures, the adjustable silicone gastric banding (ASGB), vertical gastric banding (VBG), and gastric bypass (GB), have produced the best results to date. Each of these procedures is much more effective than dietary therapies. Each has advantages and disadvantages, with GB producing greater sustained weight loss in the long-term, with a slightly higher risk of metabolic complications. All can be done with surprisingly low operative mortality. The pronounced weight loss induced with these operations can relieve and bring co-morbid diseases, such as diabetes and hypertension, once thought to be only barely controllable, into full long-term remission.
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PMID:Surgical intervention for the severely obese. 1093 82

The left ventricular hypertrophy is a risk marker of the cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in hypertensive patients--it contributes to sudden death, myocardial infarction, myocardial ischemia, heart failure, arrhythmias, left ventricular diastolic dysfunction, stroke and renal failure. The mechanisms by which the heart hypertrophy increases the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, however, is not completely clear yet. Pressure overload (resulting in the concentric hypertrophy) and volume overload (resulting in the eccentric hypertrophy) of the left ventricle play a significant role in the development of the hypertrophy of the left ventricle. Other risk factors, stimulating left ventricular hypertrophy, include growth factors, genetic predisposition, age, obesity, hyperinsulinemia and anemia. The hypertrophy of left ventricle most often occurs with hypertension, cardiomyopathy and aortic stenosis. Several clinical studies evaluated functional consequences of the reduction of the ventricular hypertrophy and found out that the function of the left ventricle to be improved in hypertensive patients who had undergone an effective and long-term antihypertensive treatment. However, these studies did not differentiate whether for the improvement in the function of left ventricle was the matter of the reduction of the left ventricular mass or whether it was because of the decrease of the arterial pressure during the period of anti-hypertensive treatment. On the basis of the literature studied we can emphasize that the reduction of myocardial hypertrophy resulting from a specific antihypertensive treatment appears to be more favourable than harmful for the heart's pump performance.
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PMID:[Hypertrophy of the left ventricle--etiopathogenesis, clinical consequences and prognosis]. 1104 62

Primary care physicians will be providing longitudinal health care for long-term survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with increasing frequency. Late effects (sequelae) secondary to treatment with radiation or chemotherapeutic agents are frequent and may be serious. Depending on treatment exposures, this at-risk population may experience life-threatening late effects, such as cirrhosis secondary to hepatitis C or late-onset anthracycline-induced cardiomyopathy, or life-changing late effects, such as cognitive dysfunction. Many survivors of childhood ALL will develop problems such as obesity and osteopenia at a young age, which will significantly affect their risk for serious health outcomes as they grow older. The goal of our review is to assist primary care physicians in providing longitudinal health care for long-term survivors of childhood ALL. We also highlight areas needing further investigation, including the prevalence of different late effects, determination of risk factors associated with a late effect, a better understanding of the potential impact of late effects on the premature development of common adult health problems, and the value and timing of different tests for screening asymptomatic survivors.
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PMID:Providing primary care for long-term survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1113 63

Obesity-related diseases now threaten to reach epidemic proportions in the United States. Here we review in a rodent model of genetic obesity, the fa/fa Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rat, the mechanisms involved in the most common complications of diet-induced human obesity, i.e., noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and myocardial dysfunction. In ZDF rats, hyperphagia leads to hyperinsulinemia, which up-regulates transcription factors that stimulate lipogenesis. This causes ectopic deposition of triacylglycerol in nonadipocytes, providing fatty acid (FA) substrate for damaging pathways of nonoxidative metabolism, such as ceramide synthesis. In beta cells and myocardium, the resulting functional impairment and apoptosis cause diabetes and cardiomyopathy. Interventions that lower ectopic lipid accumulation or block nonoxidative metabolism of FA and ceramide formation completely prevent these complications. Given the evidence for a similar etiology for the complications of human obesity, it would be appropriate to develop strategies to avert the predicted epidemic of lipotoxic disorders.
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PMID:Diseases of liporegulation: new perspective on obesity and related disorders. 1115 47

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the major causes of mortality in persons with diabetes, and many factors, including hypertension, contribute to this high prevalence of CVD. Hypertension is approximately twice as frequent in patients with diabetes compared with patients without the disease. Conversely, recent data suggest that hypertensive persons are more predisposed to the development of diabetes than are normotensive persons. Furthermore, up to 75% of CVD in diabetes may be attributable to hypertension, leading to recommendations for more aggressive treatment (ie, reducing blood pressure to <130/85 mm Hg) in persons with coexistent diabetes and hypertension. Other important risk factors for CVD in these patients include the following: obesity, atherosclerosis, dyslipidemia, microalbuminuria, endothelial dysfunction, platelet hyperaggregability, coagulation abnormalities, and "diabetic cardiomyopathy." The cardiomyopathy associated with diabetes is a unique myopathic state that appears to be independent of macrovascular/microvascular disease and contributes significantly to CVD morbidity and mortality in diabetic patients, especially those with coexistent hypertension. This update reviews the current knowledge regarding these risk factors and their treatment, with special emphasis on the cardiometabolic syndrome, hypertension, microalbuminuria, and diabetic cardiomyopathy. This update also examines the role of the renin-angiotensin system in the increased risk for CVD in diabetic patients and the impact of interrupting this system on the development of clinical diabetes as well as CVD.
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PMID:Diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease: an update. 1156 25

Obesity produces an increase in total blood volume and cardiac output because of the high metabolic activity of excessive fat. In moderate to severe cases of obesity, this may lead to left ventricular dilation, increased left ventricular wall stress, compensatory (eccentric) left ventricular hypertrophy, and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. Left ventricular systolic dysfunction may occur if wall stress remains high because of inadequate hypertrophy. Right ventricular structure and function may be similarly affected by the aforementioned morphologic and hemodynamic alterations and by pulmonary hypertension related to the sleep apnea/ obesity hypoventilation syndrome. The term obesity cardiomyopathy is applied when these cardiac structural and hemodynamic changes result in congestive heart failure. Obesity cardiomyopathy typically occurs in persons with severe and long-standing obesity. The predominant causes of death in those with obesity cardiomyopathy are progressive congestive heart failure and sudden cardiac death.
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PMID:Obesity cardiomyopathy: pathophysiology and evolution of the clinical syndrome. 1130 64

Therapy of acute exacerbations of congestive heart failure associated with obesity cardiomyopathy consists of dietary salt restriction, inspired oxygen, diuretics, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or, if left ventricular systolic dysfunction is present, hydralazine/isosorbide dinitrate. Digitalis may be indicated in selected cases. These measures may also be useful chronically in association with weight loss. Substantial weight loss is capable of reversing all of the hemodynamic abnormalities associated with obesity except elevation of left ventricular filling pressure. Substantial weight loss may also reduce left ventricular mass and improve left ventricular diastolic filling in those with left ventricular hypertrophy before weight loss. Left ventricular systolic function also improves after weight loss in those with impaired pre-weight-loss systolic function. These beneficial effects of weight loss occur partly because of favorable alterations in left ventricular loading conditions. Substantial weight loss in patients with congestive heart failure associated with obesity cardiomyopathy produces a reversal of many of the clinical manifestations of cardiac decompensation and improves New York Heart Association functional class in most patients.
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PMID:Management of obesity cardiomyopathy. 1130 65

The prevalence of hypertension among the obese is twice as high as that in persons of normal weight. Not only the BMI, but, and in particular, the circumference of the waist correlates with blood pressure. A relationship also obtains between BMI and left-ventricular muscle mass, with left-ventricular hypertrophy occurring twelve times more often among the obese than among slim persons. Obesity puts a strain on both the hemodynamics and metabolism of the heart. On the one hand, long-term sequelae include disordered cardiac function extending to cardiomyopathy, on the other, obesity is responsible for sympatho-adrenergic stimulation considered to be a cause of insulin resistance, and is thus, in particular in the hypertensive, closely associated with metabolic syndrome. Specific nondrug treatment options include weight reduction, a low-salt diet and physical exercise. In some cases, Sibutramine and Orlistat may have a supporting role. For the antihypertensive treatment of the obese, drugs with a favorable hemodynamic and metabolic effect should be used.
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PMID:[Hypertension and cardiomyopathy in obesity. Treat the heart simultaneously]. 1169 85

I review evidence that leptin is a liporegulatory hormone that controls lipid homeostasis in nonadipose tissues during periods of overnutrition. When adipocytes store excess calories as triacylglycerol (TG), leptin secretion rises so as to prevent accumulation of lipids in nonadipose tissues, which are not adapted for TG storage. Whenever leptin action is lacking, whether through leptin deficiency or leptin resistance, overnutrition causes disease of nonadipose tissues with generalized steatosis, lipotoxicity, and lipoapoptosis. Examples of such disorders of liporegulation include generalized lipodystrophies, mutations of leptin and leptin receptor genes, and diet-induced obesity. Lipotoxicity of pancreatic beta-cells, myocardium, and skeletal muscle leads, respectively, to type 2 diabetes, cardiomyopathy, and insulin resistance. In humans this constellation of abnormalities is referred to as the metabolic syndrome, a major health problem in the United States. When lipids overaccumulate in nonadipose tissues during overnutrition, fatty acids enter deleterious pathways such as ceramide production, which, through increased nitric oxide formation, causes apoptosis of lipid-laden cells, such as beta-cells and cardiomyocytes. Lipoapoptosis can be prevented by caloric restriction, by thiazolidinedione treatment, and by administration of nitric oxide blockers. There is now substantial evidence that complications of human obesity may reflect lipotoxicity similar to that described in rodents.
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PMID:Lipotoxic diseases. 1181 77


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