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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Issuing from the present state of the influence of the basic nutritive substances (protein, fat, carbohydrates) and various nutritive factors discussed again and again (cholesterol, erucaic acid, sodium, calcium/magnesium quotient, pressor amines) on the development of the arteriosclerosis, the indididual factors of influence are critically evaluated. The investigations are getting under way, so that ascertained results are standing beside insufficiently claified or open problems, From the abundance of the observations conclusions are drawn which are of significance for practice. Unfavourable influences of nutrition on the factors of risk (hyperlipoproteinaemia, disturbance of the carbohydrate tolerance, hyperuricaemia, hyperalimentation) and on the manifest diseases (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, uric arthritis,
obesity
) of the
metabolic syndrome
which finally contribute to the development of arteriosclerosis are emphasized. In front of this background a clinically and ambulatorily tested basic metabolic diet is described. About 20% of the energy content (kcal or kJ) of this diet are protein, 35% fat and 45% are carbohydrates. The saturated fatty acids lie below 30%, the manifold saturated fatty acids, however, above 20% of the total fat proportion. The cholesterol content is below 400 mg, the purin-nitrogen below 200 mg, and the sodium content is about 2g per day. This diet can be produced for the treatment of persons with normal weight and overweight in different energetic degradations.
...
PMID:[Nutrition and arteriosclerosis]. 70
The diagnostics of hyperlipoproteinaemias is essentially based on the proof of biochemical parameters. The simultaneous determination of triglycerides and cholesterol in the serum is the most important measure for establishing disturbances of the lipid metabolism. The behaviour of these two lipids, the consideration of the serum and the lipoprotein electrophoresis in most cases make possible a classification according to the distributed all over the world and clinically relevant division according to Fredrickson. Loading tests for the early recognition of hyperlipoproteinaemias - analogus to protodiabetes - are hitherto not yet known. Within the diagnostics shoude be taken into consideration that hyperliproproteinaemias are frequently associated with other metabolic diseases (
obesity
, gout, diabetes mellitus, hypertension) as so-called
metabolic syndrome
.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of primary hyperlipoproteinemias]. 90 91
Recent studies have indicated that the waist/hip circumference ratio (WHR), an index of abdominal fat distribution, is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and diabetes, in parallel with other previously established risk factors.
Obesity
, without taking fat distribution into account, seems to be associated with WHR in its relationship to the metabolic risk factors for these diseases. The important component of the WHR is probably the mass of visceral fat. This cluster of phenomena constitute what has recently been called the
metabolic syndrome
or syndrome X. Visceral fat mass is probably increased by a multiple endocrine aberration, where steroid hormones are important. This seems to cause insulin resistance by direct effects on the periphery, which may be amplified by the metabolism of the enlarged visceral adipose tissues.
...
PMID:Abdominal fat distribution and the metabolic syndrome. 128 66
The
metabolic syndrome
(syndrome X) is characterised by an association of elevated insulin levels, a tendency to
obesity
of the android type, a disturbance of lipid metabolism with elevated triglyceride levels and commonly associated hypertension. The underlying common cause of this syndrome appears to be insulin resistance of the skeletal muscles, which is related in particular to the non-oxidative glucose utilization on the part of the muscle. The molecular cause of this syndrome has not been clarified, but a defect in the signal transduction chain between the insulin receptor and glycogen synthase is suspected. Epidemiological studies have shown that the
metabolic syndrome
may be considered a preliminary stage of manifest type II diabetes. In addition, it appears to play a major role in the development of cardiovascular complications in certain high-risk groups.
...
PMID:[Pathophysiologic principles of metabolic syndrome. Consequences for early diagnosis and prevention]. 148 14
Epidemiological studies have documented the association between cardiovascular disease and high blood pressure, dyslipidaemia, impaired glucose tolerance, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), and central
obesity
. In fact, several of these abnormalities, often all of them, can be identified in the very same individuals, constituting the entity of the multiple
metabolic syndrome
. Furthermore, many of these abnormalities seem to run in families. These findings raise important questions about the genetic epidemiology of the disease and about the molecular genetic background of the most likely common nominator of this syndrome, namely insulin resistance. Therapeutic actions must also be carefully considered to avoid the encouragement of some abnormalities while treating others.
...
PMID:Multiple metabolic syndrome: aspects of genetic epidemiology and molecular genetics. 148 39
Recent prospective, epidemiological research has demonstrated the power of an increased waist/hip circumference ratio (WHR) to predict both cardiovascular disease (CVD) and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) in men and women.
Obesity
, defined as an increased total body fat mass, seems to interact synergistically in the development of NIDDM, but not of CVD. Increased WHR with
obesity
(abdominal obesity) seems to be associated with a cluster of metabolic risk factors, as well as hypertension. This
metabolic syndrome
is closely linked to visceral fat mass. Increased WHR without
obesity
may instead be associated with lift style factors such as smoking, alcohol intake, physical inactivity, coagulation abnormalities, psychosocial, psychological and psychiatric factors. Direct observations show, and the risk factor associations further strengthen the assumption, that abdominal (visceral)
obesity
is more closely associated to NIDDM than CVD, while an increased WHR without
obesity
may be more closely linked to CVD than NIDDM. It remains to be established to what extent, if any, an increased WHR in lean men, and particularly in lean women, indicates fat distribution. Other components of the WHR measurement might be of more importance in this connection.
...
PMID:Abdominal fat distribution and disease: an overview of epidemiological data. 157 56
Many studies have shown that hyperinsulinemia and/or insulin resistance are related to various metabolic and physiological disorders including hypertension, dyslipidemia, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. This syndrome has been termed Syndrome X. An important limitation of previous studies has been that they all have been cross sectional, and thus the presence of insulin resistance could be a consequence of the underlying metabolic disorders rather than its cause. We examined the relationship of fasting insulin concentration (as an indicator of insulin resistance) to the incidence of multiple metabolic abnormalities in the 8-yr follow-up of the cohort enrolled in the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. In univariate analyses, fasting insulin was related to the incidence of the following conditions: hypertension, decreased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration, increased triglyceride concentration, and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Hyperinsulinemia was not related to increased low-density lipoprotein or total cholesterol concentration. In multivariate analyses, after adjustment for
obesity
and body fat distribution, fasting insulin continued to be significantly related to the incidence of decreased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and increased triglyceride concentrations and to the incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Baseline insulin concentrations were higher in subjects who subsequently developed multiple metabolic disorders. These results were not attributable to differences in baseline
obesity
and were similar in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. These results support the existence of a
metabolic syndrome
and the relationship of that syndrome to multiple metabolic disorders by showing that elevations of insulin concentration precede the development of numerous metabolic disorders.
...
PMID:Prospective analysis of the insulin-resistance syndrome (syndrome X). 158 98
Dependent on the dosages used, digestion and absorption inhibitors or disaccharidase inhibitors, such as Acarbose, might cause malabsorption of nutrients, and hence, among other effects, affect caloric balances. This negative effect on caloric balance has actually been well documented in animal experimentation. However, in nondiabetic subjects with excessive degrees of
obesity
, no consistent weight reduction could be induced by disaccharidase inhibitors. Subsequently, Acarbose has been advocated for type 2 diabetic patients in dosages that might reduce postprandial hyperglycemia and insulinemia, whereas significant degrees of malabsorption should be excluded. At these dosages of the drug, there is no clinical perspective with regard to weight-reducing (side) effects of disaccharidase inhibitors. Whether a hypothetical diminution of serum insulin daily profiles during Acarbose treatment in obese type 2 diabetic patients might contribute to a normalization of the
metabolic syndrome
and to a facilitation of weight-reducing efforts remains speculative. At present, there does not seem to be much rationale in trying to exploit digestion and/or absorption inhibitors for weight-reduction therapies in
obesity
, unless they are used to enforce a negative caloric balance by malabsorption of nutrients.
...
PMID:Pharmacological treatment of obesity: digestion and absorption inhibitors-clinical perspective. 172 47
Data from a health screening survey with over 18,000 adult participants were used to determine the relations between serum calcium concentration and the cardiovascular risk factors hypertension, hyperglycaemia, and hyperlipidaemia. Blood pressure and serum glucose and cholesterol concentrations were all positively related to each other independent of age, sex, kidney function, and
obesity
. Similar relations between the risk factors were found in subjects with hypertension or hyperglycaemia independent of the degree of overweight. These results suggested that there might be a
metabolic syndrome
of cardiovascular risk factors. Serum calcium concentration was positively related to systolic and diastolic blood pressures and serum glucose and cholesterol concentrations. Thus a common feature in the syndrome is an increased serum calcium concentration. The relations between serum calcium concentrations and the cardiovascular risk factors were not limited to the upper parts of the distribution, being seen over a wide range. Changes in calcium metabolism seem to be related to a
metabolic syndrome
of hypertension, impaired glucose tolerance, and hyperlipidaemia.
...
PMID:Relation of serum calcium concentration to metabolic risk factors for cardiovascular disease. 314 67
We have compared the capillary density and muscle fiber type of musculus vastus lateralis with in vivo insulin action determined by the euglycemic clamp (M value) in 23 Caucasians and 41 Pima Indian nondiabetic men. M value was significantly correlated with capillary density (r = 0.63; P less than or equal to 0.0001), percent type I fibers (r = 0.29; P less than 0.02), and percent type 2B fibers (r = -0.38; P less than 0.003). Fasting plasma glucose and insulin concentrations were significantly negatively correlated with capillary density (r = -0.46, P less than or equal to 0.0001; r = -0.47, P less than or equal to 0.0001, respectively). Waist circumference/thigh circumference ratio was correlated with percent type 1 fibers (r = -0.39; P less than 0.002). These results suggest that diffusion distance from capillary to muscle cells or some associated biochemical change, and fiber type, could play a role in determining in vivo insulin action. The association of muscle fiber type with body fat distribution may indicate that central
obesity
is only one aspect of a more generalized
metabolic syndrome
. The data may provide at least a partial explanation for the insulin resistance associated with
obesity
and for the altered kinetics of insulin action in the obese.
...
PMID:Skeletal muscle capillary density and fiber type are possible determinants of in vivo insulin resistance in man. 330 99
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