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

Nutritional and metabolic assessment using anthropometric, biochemical, immunological, and indirect calorimetric techniques was performed on 17 healthy paraplegic males with a mean age of 44.2 +/- 14.6 years and mean duration of injury of 17.8 +/- 12.3 years. Significant differences in energy expenditure were observed; only 29.4 percent were normometabolic [measured resting energy expenditure: (MREE) 90-110 percent of predicted resting energy expenditure (PREE)], 35.3 percent were hypermetabolic (MREE greater than 110 percent of PREE) and 35.3 percent were hypometabolic (MREE less than 90 percent of PREE). Obesity (weight greater than 110 percent ideal body weight) was maximum in hypometabolic patients (83.3 percent) due to the imbalance between caloric intake and energy expenditure (p less than 0.05). None of the patients had normal values for all four objective measurements of nutritional assessment (albumin, transferrin, total lymphocyte count, and cutaneous hypersensitivity). Mild malnutrition was evidenced in 47 percent of patients; 53 percent of patients demonstrated some index of moderate malnutrition. We conclude that nutritional therapy based on measurements of energy expenditure instead of predictive equations will benefit these patients. A larger long-term study is needed to determine the ideal predictive measurements of nutritional assessment with their optimal cutoff values applicable to the spinal cord-injured patient.
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PMID:Assessment of nutritional and metabolic status of paraplegics. 383 61

Lines of swine previously selected for either high backfat (obese) or low backfat (lean) were investigated to determine the effect of maternal obesity and the relationship between serum parameters and body composition. Fetal weight, percentage body protein, fat, fat-free organic matter and ash, and serum concentrations of albumin, growth hormone, triiodothyronine, and cortisol were compared in fetuses from straight line and reciprocal crosses at 110 days of gestation. Fetuses from the obese line weighed less but had a greater percentage body protein, fat, and fat-free organic matter than did fetuses from the lean line. Serum concentrations of albumin and triiodothyronine were less whereas those of growth hormone were greater in fetuses from the lean line compared to fetuses from the obese line. Values for these parameters in fetuses from the reciprocal crosses were generally intermediate to those of fetuses from the lean and obese lines. Comparisons of fetuses from the reciprocal and line crosses by linear contrast showed that the observed differences were mainly due to the average genetic effect of individual fetal genotypes and not due to maternal effects. Correlations computed from the residual variance showed a positive relationship between percentage body protein, serum albumin, and triiodothyronine while percentage body fat was not correlated with any of the other traits. Serum growth hormone was negatively correlated with fetal weight. We conclude that there is no apparent maternal effect of obesity or relationship of fetal fat content with any of the other variables measured in these lines of swine at the stage of fetal development at which these determinations were made.
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PMID:Blood parameters and body composition in fetuses from reciprocal crosses of genetically lean and obese swine. 403 28

The serum viscosity of diabetic patients has been found to be increased. The elevation averaged 8% above healthy subjects and 6% above nondiabetic patients. The serum viscosity elevation was greater when diabetic sequelae associated with microangiopathy were present. No relation of serum viscosity to age, sex, obesity, duration of disease, or type of treatment was demonstrated. Serum total protein and glucose levels were found to be correlated with serum viscosity, and increases in their serum concentrations were observed in diabetes. Analysis demonstrated that their elevation did not explain either the viscosity increase or the difference in viscosity between diabetics with and without sequelae.Intrinsic viscosity, abbreviated [eta], is a concentration-independent solute property related to molecular shape. [eta] was found to be 7% higher in diabetic than in normal serum. The [eta] difference accounted for at least half of the serum viscosity elevation. The rest of the increase was due to increased serum protein level and increased nonprotein solids, presumably glucose and lipid. Associated with increased [eta] was a decline in albumin: globulin ratio and elevation of the acute phase reactant proteins, alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein, alpha(1)-antitrypsin, haptoglobin, and ceruloplasmin. Studies comparing diabetic and normal serum fractionated by using 21.5% sodium sulfate showed that changes in [eta] were attributable to changes in serum protein composition rather than an inherent qualitative disturbance of protein present in one of the fractions. Since serum viscosity is elevated in early diabetes, it may be a part of the metabolic disturbance of diabetes and could play a role in the development of diabetic microangiopathy.
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PMID:Disturbance of serum viscosity in diabetes mellitus. 420 23

In order to test the hypothesis that serotonergic activity is abnormal in the brains of genetically obese Zucker rats, levels of serotonin (5-HT); its amino acid precursor, tryptophan (Trp), and its major metabolite, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) were measured in eight brain regions in groups of obese and non-obese male rats. Plasma albumin levels as well as levels of amino acids and related compounds in plasma and in a cortical sample were also determined in the same animals. While Trp was lower in several brain regions of the obese animals, the only region showing a depressed level of 5-HT in the obese group was the mesencephalon. Obese animals also had a lower amount of 5-HIAA in the diencephalon, but no other differences were significant. Both elevations and depressions were observed in cortical amino acid levels in obese animals. The level of plasma albumin was increased in the obese group. Free Trp was decreased in the plasma of obese rats while levels of other amino acids (methionine, leucine, isoleucine, valine and phenylalanine) which compete with Trp for transport across the blood-brain barrier were elevated. Thus the combination of lower plasma free Trp and increased levels of competitive amino acids appears to contribute to decreased levels of Trp in the brain of genetically obese rats.
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PMID:Brain serotonergic activity and plasma amino acid levels in genetically obese Zucker rats. 618 36

Serum binding capacity of sex-hormone binding globulin (SHBG-BC), steroid concentrations, and secretion patterns of LH and FSH were compared between groups of seven nonobese and seven obese patients with polycystic ovarian disease (PCOD). Obese patients with PCOD differed from those with normal weight in having very low SHBG-BC and elevated serum levels of free and albumin bound testosterone. Compared to healthy women in the follicular phase, both nonobese and obese patients with PCOD showed equally elevated serum levels of androstenedione, estrone, and albumin-bound and free estradiol. Pattern of gonadotropin secretion was studied from blood samples taken at 15 min intervals for 6 h. In 6 patients of both groups low pulses of FSH were found coincidently with pulses of LH. Serum level of LH showed a clear pulsatile pattern in all patients with PCOD, varying from 4.5 to 7.5 pulses per 6 h. The mean pulse rate in the groups of nonobese and obese patients with PCOD was similar, 5.9 pulses per 6 h. In the obese patients the mean LH levels were, however, less elevated and the pulse amplitudes were smaller than those in the nonobese patients. We suggest that this difference is due to high levels of biologically active testosterone in obese patients with PCOD.
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PMID:Obesity, serum steroid levels, and pulsatile gonadotropin secretion in polycystic ovarian disease. 622 11

Mechanisms by which alcohol consumption might cause hypertension were examined in 30 pairs of healthy drinking (greater than 275 g ethanol per week) and teetotal men closely matched for age and obesity. Both systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly higher in the drinkers. Plasma calcium levels correlated with diastolic blood pressures (r = 0.51, P = 0.004) in drinkers only. After adjusting for plasma albumin, diastolic pressures increased by 6.9 mmHg for each 0.1 mM increment of plasma calcium. It is proposed that regular alcohol consumption predisposes to hypertension by facilitating calcium accumulation in cells involved in blood pressure regulation. In the combined population of drinkers and teetotallers plasma cortisol correlated positively with diastolic pressure (r = 0.35, P = 0.012) and negatively with plasma potassium (r = -0.38, P = 0.006); this suggests a role for the pituitary/adrenal axis as a significant determinant of blood pressure differences between healthy subjects.
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PMID:Plasma calcium and cortisol as predisposing factors to alcohol related blood pressure elevation. 639 34

An albumin-deficient and fatty strain of rats (AFR) was established from crosses between albumin-deficient rats (NAR) and fatty Zucker rats. AFRs have double homozygous mutant genes (alb/alb, fa/fa). The AFRs are heavier than the fatty Zucker rats and they have enlarged livers and adrenal glands. In addition, AFRs show more severe hyperlipidemia than fatty Zucker rats. This strain of rats may serve as a model of human obesity and hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Establishment of an albumin-deficient and fatty strain of rats. 646 10

Obese and lean lines of pigs were developed previously by genetic selection for thick and thin backfat thickness, respectively. A greater proportion of these obese than lean pigs survive to weaning. A cross-fostering experiment was designed to study neonatal piglet growth and to attempt to decipher some of the causes of the increased survival rate. At about 24 h postpartum, lean and obese sows were paired, the litters standardized to six pigs and three pigs from each sow transferred to a dam of opposite genetic line. The smaller birthweight of obese than lean piglets and the lesser growth of either obese or lean pigs raised on obese compared to lean sows were both observations that might support greater survival of lean rather than obese piglets. Positive factors that might contribute toward the greater survival of obese than lean piglets were the greater lipid content of milk from obese than from lean sows during the first 2 wk postpartum and possibly greater physiological maturity of obese than lean pigs at birth as reflected in greater hemoglobin, hematocrit, plasma protein and plasma albumin.
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PMID:Factors affecting growth and survival of neonatal genetically obese and lean swine: cross fostering experiments. 646 54

Obesity is accompanied by altered secretion and disposition of sex and glucocorticoid hormones, including cortisol, and also confounds parameter normalization and drug dosage selection relative to body weight. Prednisolone disposition was assessed in eight obese and four normal male subjects after a dose of 33 mg iv. Steroid concentrations were determined by HPLC. Kinetics were related to ideal body weight (IBW) and total body weight (TBW). Uncorrected steady-state volume of distribution (Vss) of total prednisolone was 20% greater in obese subjects (36.7 and 44.1 l). This effect could be described by the relationship: Vss = 0.54 IBW + 0.09(TBW-IBW), with a distribution coefficient of 0.09 reflecting limited prednisolone uptake by fat. Protein binding parameters and albumin and transcortin concentrations were similar between groups. Uncorrected total and free prednisolone clearances (Cl) were increased in obesity (11.1 and 8.3 l/hr total; 65.4 and 46.5 l/hr free). Free prednisolone Cl correlated strongly (r = 0.80) with degree of obesity expressed as TBW/IBW. In the obese, endogenous cortisol concentrations were initially higher before exogenous steroid dosing, were suppressed at an identical rate, and returned to baseline more slowly than in normal subjects. The apparent hypersensitivity of the adrenal gland offsets the increased Cl of free prednisolone in obesity, indicating that weight-proportional dosage adjustments of this steroid in obesity should reflect TBW.
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PMID:Prednisolone disposition in obese men. 649 62

The nutritional status was assessed in 75 consecutive patients acutely admitted to a general medical ward. Weight-for-height, triceps skinfold thickness, arm muscle circumference, plasma albumin and serum transferrin were used as nutritional indicators. By combining abnormalities in two or more of these variables, we found obesity in 9% and undernutrition in 22% of the patients on admission. Energy deficiencies as well as acute and chronic protein undernutrition were observed. Age over 75 years, lack of own teeth and a reason for admission other than circulatory disorders or diabetes were tentatively identified as risk factors for undernutrition-some of them conceivably interdependent. Living conditions and regular medication seemed to be less important determinants in this group of patients. We conclude that undernutrition is prevalent among hospitalized medical patients in Sweden as in other industrialized countries. Patients with "hospital malnutrition" are partly recruited from a population of malnourished elderly people outside the hospital. Adequate nutritional support is an essential objective of hospital care in patients wih medical disorders.
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PMID:Nutritional status of medical patients on emergency admission to hospital. 681 16


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