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

To investigate the hypothesis that insulin resistance plays a role in the etiology of hypertension and hyperlipidemia, we measured serum lipid levels, the fasting glucose/insulin ratio, and the insulin response to oral glucose (GTT) in a group of young obese subjects (n = 21) with hypertension and normal glucose tolerance and in normotensive subjects (n = 36) with normal glucose tolerance, matched for age and body mass index. Leisure time physical activity was evaluated by a questionnaire outlining three levels of physical activities during leisure time. Subjects with hypertension had higher fasting serum insulin (19 +/- 2 v 13 +/- 1 microU/mL, P < .01) and lower fasting glucose/insulin ratio (5.3 +/- 0.2 v 7.1 +/- 0.5 mg/dL/microU/mL, P < .01) than normotensive subjects. Subjects with hypertension had higher peak serum insulin and lower plasma glucose area/insulin area ratio in response to glucose (1.8 +/- 0.2 v 2.4 +/- 0.2 mg/dL/microU/mL, P < .05) than normotensive subjects. Serum total cholesterol, low-density cholesterol, and triglycerides were higher in the obese hypertensive subjects than in obese normotensive ones. Blood pressure correlated with either fasting serum insulin, fasting glucose/insulin ratio, or glucose area/insulin area ratio during GTT. The level of leisure time physical activities was lower in obese hypertensive subjects than in obese normotensive ones. There were significant correlations between the levels of physical activity and the fasting plasma glucose/insulin ratio (r = 0.371, P < .01) or the fasting serum insulin concentration (r = -0.282, P < .05). The study provided evidence that a low level of leisure time physical activity is associated with insulin resistance and resultant hyperinsulinemia, which are the key metabolic abnormalities that link hypertension, obesity, and hyperlipidemia in young subjects.
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PMID:Leisure time physical activity and insulin resistance in young obese students with hypertension. 128 41

To investigate the alterations in insulin secretion induced by aging, 2-month-old, 12-month-old, and 12-month old lean rats (submitted to a caloric restriction during the last month that causes a weight loss of approximately 20%) were studied. As expected, glucose intolerance and increased insulin response were observed during IV-GTT in 12-month-old rats. These effects were, however, reversed by weight loss. Insulin secretion was investigated in isolated islets both during static incubation and perifusion. In 12-month-old rats insulin secretion and 45Ca2+ efflux were lower only in the second phase of the hormonal secretion, suggesting an involvement of voltage-sensitive calcium channels in these phenomena. Considering that in vivo and in vitro alterations were reversed after weight loss, it is possible to conclude that obesity is probably a major cause of impaired insulin secretion in 12-month-old albino rats. Since 14C-glucose metabolism was not changed in islets from aged rats, the effect of obesity on insulin secretion is not due to altered glucose metabolism in pancreatic B-cells.
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PMID:Obesity is the major cause of alterations in insulin secretion and calcium fluxes by isolated islets from aged rats. 132 24

We analyzed O-GTT obtained from 375 children (group A; 7-11 years old) and adolescents (group B; 12-16 years old), including 96 normal non-obese cases, 266 simple obese cases (172 with normal O-GTT, 79 with border line type O-GTT and 15 with diabetic type O-GTT), 8 obese NIDDM cases and 5 non-obese NIDDM cases. The results were as follows; 1) The levels of epsilon CPR (in terms of total sum of the values measured at 0, 30, 60, 120 and 180 minutes on O-GTT) in the obese children and adolescents were only 1.5 and 1.2 times as high as in the control group. The levels of epsilon CPR/epsilon IRI molar ratio in the control group were 2.0 and 2.3 times as high as in the obese children and adolescents. These data suggest that hyperinsulinemia in the obese children and adolescents is caused mainly by decreased hepatic insulin extraction rather than by increased insulin secretion. 2) In the non-obese NIDDM adolescents, the levels of epsilon CPR decreased to about 3/4 of those in the control group; in contrast, the epsilon CPR/epsilon IRI molar ratio increased. Therefore, it seems that there is increased hepatic insulin extraction as well as decreased insulin secretion in the non-obese NIDDM adolescents. 3) In the obese NIDDM adolescents, the levels of epsilon CPR were nearly the same as in the control group and the epsilon CPR/epsilon IRI molar ratios were slightly lower as the disease state of NIDDM counterbalanced obesity.
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PMID:[Studies on insulin secretion and clearance in obese and diabetic children (7-11 years old) and adolescents (12-16 years old) investigation by oral glucose tolerance tests (O-GTT)]. 154 73

During the period from 1974 through 1988, we annually examined approximately 225,000 to 386,400 school children residing in Tokyo for glycosuria to detect juvenile diabetes. If the first test was positive for glucose, glycosuria was confirmed by a second test. In children who gave a positive result in both the first and second tests 0-GTT were performed. All 124 patients were diagnosed as NIDDM according to the criteria of the WHO Report on Diabetes of 1985. The incidence of NIDDM in children in Japan has increased in recent years and from 1984 to 1986 was approximately 3.8 per 100,000 per year. The frequency of NIDDM increases with age up to 14 years. In about 84% of cases, the body weight at diagnosis is more than 20% above the ideal weight and the height is often above average. There is a high frequency in families with a history of diabetes. Diet and exercise therapy in newly diagnosed patients irrespective of the presence or absence of obesity may result in remission, but some cases may require insulin therapy or oral administration of a hypoglycemic drug to obtain a better glycemic control. Children with NIDDM are more likely to be complicated by incipient retinopathy within two years after diagnosis than those with IDDM. Therefore, it is important to keep strict glycemic control to prevent diabetic complications in NIDDM children just as in juvenile onset IDDM.
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PMID:Descriptive epidemiology of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus detected by urine glucose screening in school children in Japan. 208 75

The epidemiological study in low socioeconomic area of Bangkok, Klong Toey slum residents (n = 976) and apartment house residents (n = 906) of both sexes revealed the prevalence rates of overweight of 25.5% and 30.5%, obesity 10% and 11.1%; hypertension 17.3%; and 14%; diabetes 4.5% and 5.9%; IGT 6.1% and 4.4%; total abnormal GTT 10.6% and 10.3%; hypercholesterolemia 14.1% and 12%; hypertriglyceridemia 24.8% and 22.7%; low HDL-C 3.1% and 1.8%; hyperuricemia 7.7% and 10.4% respectively. The prevalence rates of the related diseases and conditions were increased when BMI was over 25 in both populations except for those with abnormal GTT and hyperuricemia in the slum residents. Concerning risk factors, discriminant analysis disclosed diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and atherogenic index as the first two factors significantly associated with overweight and obesity (BMI greater than 25) in both populations. Restructuring of the health service delivery system and care-taker re-educating together with production of meaningful mass communication media are needed for promotion of health care, prevention of these non-communicable diseases and their sequelae by non-pharmacological approach.
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PMID:The prevalence of obesity, risk factors and associated diseases in Klong Toey slum and Klong Toey government apartment houses. 228 56

Hyperglycemia and other metabolic derangements resulting from absolute or functional deficiency of insulin are accompanied by typical signs and symptoms of diabetes. The clinical signs and the findings of hyperglycemia over 200 mg/dl should establish a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus. An oral glucose tolerance test (O-GTT) is rarely necessary for diagnosis of diabetes in a child. A small proportion of children, however, present less severe symptoms, and may require an O-GTT. Approximately 14% of IDDM children were in coma at diagnosis in Tokyo, and 11 onset deaths (0.94%) were observed among the 1172 newly diagnosed IDDM cases in Japan. A significant decline in the onset mortality, however, has been observed in the past 20 years in Japan in association with the improvement of early management of childhood diabetes. The clinical distinction of IDDM from NIDDM is often difficult in diabetic children of Oriental origin without obesity. Japanese IDDM can be divided into two forms, abrupt and slow onset forms, but they may be essentially the same disease. There was no difference in the frequency of being tested positive for circulating ICA between the two groups of the patients. But a difference in the frequency of HLA DR4 and DRW9 was noticed between the two groups. Clinical features of 107 children with NIDDM were studied and about 75% of these cases were obese. All of them can be detected by routine urinalysis for glucose. Diet and exercise therapy in most of the newly diagnosed patients resulted in remission but some of them may require insulin or an oral hypoglycemic agent to get better glycemic control.
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PMID:Initial signs and diagnosis of diabetes--special considerations of Oriental patients. 263 91

The paper is concerned with the results of investigation of 26 donors and 85 patients with diabetes mellitus, type II, with normal body mass and obesity during GTT and a test breakfast to reveal correlation of IRI and IRG levels with the level of gastrin. Comparative analysis of indices during OGTT and food intake has shown that an increase in the levels of gastrin in patients with diabetes mellitus, type II, does not correlate with body mass and the total level of insulin, but it may correlate with a metabolically active form of insulin. During food intake the levels of gastrin rise and do not change during GTT. A rise of the level of gastrin in patients with diabetes mellitus, type II, during a test breakfast is accompanied by change in the level of insulin, its peak being lower than that during GTT. Attention was focused on a group of patients with a history of obesity in whom by the time of investigation body mass returned to normal and the level of glucose was decreased. However, gastrin and insulin levels were still high, and metabolic regulation was disturbed. Therefore, body mass normalization did not eliminate causative and pathogenetic factors of diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:[The role of gastrin in regulating insulin and glucagon secretion in patients with diabetes mellitus]. 305 84

The distribution of obese patients without diabetes based on the results of the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) made it possible to define 2 groups of patients: with normal (the 1st group) and disturbed (the 2nd group) OGTT. A moderate increase in the levels of insulin and C-peptide after GTT and almost unchanged sensitivity to insulin were observed in the 1st group. A considerable increase in the levels of insulin and C-peptide after glucose intake and a considerable decrease in the sensitivity to insulin were observed in the 2nd group. In obese patients with diabetes mellitus the levels of insulin and C-peptide after the GTT were significantly lower than those in the 1st and 2nd groups. A conclusion has been made that whereas certain stages of pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus in obesity are associated with hyperinsulinemia and GTT disorder, obvious diabetes mellitus is characterized by a decrease in secretory potentialities of the insular apparatus in parallel with glucose intolerance.
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PMID:[Pathogenetic relationship between insulin resistance, insulin secretion and impaired glucose tolerance in patients with obesity]. 329 29

The paper is concerned with an analysis of examination of 414 relatives of the 1st-3rd degree of relationship in 230 families of probands with diabetes mellitus of different types. The frequency of detection of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) among relatives of the 1st degree of relationship in the families of IDDM probands was 1.0 +/- 5.8%. Patients with noninsulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) were not detected in these families. The frequency of NIDDM detectability among relatives of the 1st-3rd degree of relationship in the families of NIDDM probands was 38.2-2.5%. IIDM was most common in relatives of the 1st degree of relationship, particularly in women aged 50 to 60 suffering from obesity. A follow-up of relatives with disturbed GTT in the families of NIDDM probands revealed NIDDM in 30% and regression up to normal GTT in 50%.
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PMID:[Detection of hereditary forms of diabetes mellitus based on catamnestic data gathered over a period of many years]. 342 41

We studied the oral glucose tolerance test (O-GTT) of 13 kidney transplant recipients and compared the results with the insulin binding characteristics of their own erythrocytes. They had mild renal insufficiency with significant increase of serum creatinine concentrations. Body weights were slightly but significantly elevated compared to the controls. All were receiving small doses of prednisone (0.2-0.3 mg/kg/day). Ten of the 13 patients had normal O-GTT and normal binding of 125I-insulin, while the remaining 3 patients showed abnormal O-GTT and significantly reduced maximum binding of 125I-insulin to erythrocytes. Basal insulin concentration and response to O-GTT were significantly elevated in the patients, regardless of O-GTT being normal or abnormal. It is concluded that transplant recipients have an impaired insulin action due to a post-receptor stage abnormality in glucose metabolism which is due perhaps to mild renal insufficiency, mild obesity and prolonged administration of the small dosage of prednisone.
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PMID:Glucose metabolism in pediatric renal transplant recipients: relation to insulin receptors of erythrocytes. 390 93


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