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

A questionnaire survey was conducted on 5,523 taxi drivers in Osaka Prefecture to investigate their working conditions and daily life as well as characteristics of their health condition and various effects on health, especially on their cardiovascular system. The major results of this survey were as follows: 1) The rate of subjective symptoms, morbidity rate and rate of poor physical condition over the past year in the taxi drivers were higher than those of the control group. Among the subjective symptoms, the rate of gastrointestinal disorders, fatigue, musculoskeletal system disorders, sensory system disorders, hemorrhoids, etc. was especially high. 2) Work shift, density of work, years of experience in taxi-driving, frequency of fright while driving, pattern of taking meals, way of recuperation on rest days or holidays, obesity, smoking, and intake of coffee and alcohol were found to be factors affecting the health of taxi drivers. 3) Nearly half of the respondents said that they would like to quit or change their job with as much as 62% giving "condition of health" as reason. On the other hand, the rate of heart-related symptoms such as palpitation, and breathlessness did not differ from that of the control group. The possible reason for this deduced from the foregoing results, is that there were some who had changed or quit the job at an early stage for health reasons such as heart trouble and severe physical and mental burden resulting from taxi driving. 4) Many taxi driver are obese and the rate of those with heart-related symptoms was considerably high among those classified as obese. In addition, the results showed that those with longer driving experience tended to be obese.
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PMID:[A questionnaire study on health of taxi drivers--relations to work conditions and daily life]. 279 89

Napoleon would sleep very little. He frequently woke up during night and worked. Brief sleeping time in day repaired his fatigue. He had also a short and thick neck. In the last fourth of his life he progressively suffered from obesity, daily involuntary sleepiness and his intellectual capabilities undoubtedly decreased. Our experience of 48 cases of sleep apnea syndrome diagnosed by mean of polysomnography allow no to think that Napoleon suffered from this disease. Historical consequences of this pathology is discussed.
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PMID:[Did Napoleon suffer from sleep apnea syndrome?]. 304 29

Restrictive lung disease patients exhibit a wide range of breathing and oxygenation abnormalities during sleep. The combination of degree of restriction, whether it is intrapulmonary or extrapulmonary, and confounding factors, such as obesity, age, and sex, will ultimately determine the degree of disturbed nocturnal physiology. The sleep literature is still sparse in most restrictive diseases. For patients with interstitial lung disease, the role of nocturnal oxygen in chronic established fibrosis, and also in acute alveolitis (e.g., farmer's lung, bird fancier's lung, etc.), has not been addressed. As fibrotic lung disease progresses, the degree of nocturnal desaturation and breathing dysrhythmias will progress. Changes in sleep architecture are likely related to the progression of the disease, but this is not known with certainty. Long-term evaluation of sleep and breathing in interstitial lung disease will give further insight into whether or not sleep changes are primary or secondary events. For kyphoscoliosis patients, again, we need more information on sleep as the thoracic deformity changes. In addition, the use of drugs (acetazolomide, medroxyprogesterone, and almitrine) and/or nasal CPAP to treat nocturnal desaturation needs to be assessed in a controlled fashion. In neuromuscular disease, the dynamics of gas exchange and sleep structure need to be defined in a larger group of patients. Factors such as degree of muscle weakness, degree of underlying lung diseases, and medications must be taken into consideration. Nocturnal hypoxemia may cause muscle weakness and fatigue, which in time, could cause more nocturnal hypoventilation and further hypoxemia. Supplemental nocturnal oxygen should be evaluated in this population.
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PMID:Sleep in restrictive lung disease. 331 24

Whether caloric restriction can alter the efficiency of muscular work raises important questions regarding the control of energetic coupling processes and the efficacy of exercise as a treatment for obesity. To address these issues, oxygen uptake (VO2) was determined at rest and during incremental cycle ergometry in 13 moderately obese (133 +/- 3% ideal body weight, means +/- SEM) women during weight maintenance and after 3 wk of caloric restriction (800 kcal/d). Work efficiency was calculated from the linear portion of the VO2-work rate relationship. Caloric restriction decreased body weight 4.0 +/- 0.4 kg (p less than 0.05), VO2 at rest 32 +/- 3 mL/min (p less than 0.05), and VO2 during unloaded (0 W) cycling 47 +/- 14 mL/min (p less than 0.05). However, work efficiency was unchanged (ie, -0.3 +/- 1.2%, NS). We conclude that, despite metabolic adaptations resulting in decreased energy expenditure at rest and during zero Watt cycling, acute caloric restriction does not alter work efficiency.
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PMID:Effect of acute caloric restriction on work efficiency. 333 33

Described is a 67-year-old man whose initial symptoms evoked an obesity-hypoventilation syndrome. Polysomnography showed hypopneas associated with O2 desaturation episodes, and no apnea; maximal changes were noted during REM sleep. A few months later, in spite of marked weight loss, acute alveolar hypoventilation occurred and necessitated mechanical ventilatory support. Tracheostomy was performed. The patient appeared to be dependent on nocturnal ventilatory assistance. Diaphragmatic paralysis was noted in addition to clinical and electrodiagnostic evidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. While the patient was not ventilated, a nocturnal recording of SaO2 again revealed desaturation episodes partly corrected by O2 2 L/min administered through the tracheostomy tube. With volume-controlled ventilation, desaturations completely disappeared, although no oxygen enrichment of the air was provided. We speculate that sleep disorders with hypopneas and O2 desaturation episodes were the initial symptoms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. This leads us to suggest that nonspecific respiratory muscle fatigue frequently seen in COPD might be included in the hypothetic causes of nocturnal hypoxemia.
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PMID:Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis presenting with sleep hypopnea syndrome. 337 Nov 13

While deficient exercise performance of sick children results from hypoactivity and detraining, it can also be caused by specific pathophysiological factors. These can affect one or more components of physical fitness. A low maximal aerobic power will result from a low maximal stroke volume, as in aortic stenosis or cardiomyopathy; a low maximal heart rate, as in congenital complete heart block or intake of beta-blockers; a low O2 content of the arterial blood, as in anemia or advanced cystic fibrosis; and a high O2 content of mixed-venous blood, as in muscle atrophy or severe malnutrition. A high O2 cost of locomotion, as in advanced obesity or cerebral palsy, will cause the patient to exert at a high percentage of his maximal aerobic power and thus fatigue easily. A subnormal muscle strength, as in progressive muscular dystrophy or juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, is sometimes the primary factor that limits the walking ability or other daily functions. Recent data suggest that local muscle endurance, as assessed by the Wingate anaerobic test, is particularly deficient in some neuromuscular diseases. Examples are muscular dystrophies and spastic cerebral palsy. The ratio of peak anaerobic power to peak aerobic power seems lower in such patients than in able-bodied controls.
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PMID:Pathophysiological factors which limit the exercise capacity of the sick child. 372 7

The winter athlete has several potential tactics for sustaining body temperature in the face of severe cold. An increase in the intensity of physical activity may be counter-productive because of increased respiratory heat loss, increased air or water movement over the body surface, and a pumping of air or water beneath the clothing. Shivering can generate heat at a rate of 10 to 15 kJ/min, but it impairs skilled performance, while the resultant glycogen usage hastens the onset of fatigue and mental confusion. Non-shivering thermogenesis could arise in either brown adipose tissue or white fat. Brown adipose tissue generates heat by the action of free fatty acids in uncoupling mitochondrial electron transport, and by noradrenaline-induced membrane depolarisation and sodium pumping. The existence of brown adipose tissue in human adults is controversial, and although there are theoretical mechanisms of heat production in white fat, their contribution to the maintenance of body temperature is small. Acclimatisation to cold develops over the course of about 10 days, and in humans the primary change is an insulative, hypothermic type of response; this reflects the intermittent nature of most occupational and athletic exposures to cold. Nevertheless, with more sustained exposure to cold air or water, humans can apparently develop the humoral type of acclimatisation described in small mammals, with an increased output of noradrenaline and/or thyroxine. The associated mobilisation of free fatty acids suggests the possibility of using winter sport as a pleasant method of treating obesity. In men, a combination of moderate exercise and facial cooling induces a substantial fat loss over a 1- to 2-week period, with an associated ketonuria, proteinuria, and increase of body mass. Possible factors contributing to this fat loss include: (a) a small energy deficit; (b) the energy cost of synthesising new lean tissue; (c) energy loss through the storage and excretion of ketone bodies; (d) catecholamine-induced 'futile' metabolic cycles with increased resting metabolism; and (e) a specific reaction to cold dehydration. Current limitations for the clinical application of such treatment include uncertainty regarding optimal environmental conditions, concern over possible pathological reactions to cold, and suggestions of a less satisfactory fat mobilisation in female patients. Possible interactions between physical fitness and metabolic reactions to cold remain controversial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation to exercise in the cold. 388 60

The intake of nutrients, determined by 24 hr diet recall, and body measurements were obtained in 8250 free-living white study participants divided into 20 to 49 and 50 + age groups for males and female nonusers and users of gonadal hormones. They were classified into dyslipoproteinemia (DLP) phenotypes: hyperHDL, hypoHDL, IIA, hpypoLDL, IV, and normal. The dyslipoproteinemia DLP phenotypes, compared with the normal, had biologically meaningful differences in nutrient intake and indexes of obesity that were most marked for males aged 20 to 49 years as shown in the table (below). Those with the hyperHDL phenotype were thinner and ingested more energy and more alcohol and less carbohydrate as percent kilocalories (%kcal). Individuals classified as hypoHDL were fatter and tended to ingest less energy and less alcohol as %kcal. Persons with the type II phenotype were fatter and ingested less energy. Those with hypoLDL tended to be thinner and ingested more energy. Individuals with the type IV phenotype were fatter, ingested less energy and carbohydrate and more alcohol as %kcal. Similar trends were observed in female nonusers of hormones aged 20 to 49 and to a lesser extent in the 50 + age groups and in female users of hormones. Dietary protein, cholesterol, total fat, and polyunsaturated and saturated fatty acids had no consistent associations with DLP phenotype, and sucrose and starch had no association independent of total carbohydrate. This is the first evidence of an association of customary diet and DLP phenotypes in the free-living population. Equating energy intake with energy expenditure, persons with the high-risk phenotypes, IIA, IV, and hypoHDL, compared with the normal, had decreased energy expenditure and were fatter, whereas those with the low-risk phenotypes, hyperHDL and hypoLDL, had increased energy expenditure and were thinner.
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PMID:Customary diet, anthropometry, and dyslipoproteinemia in selected North American populations. The Lipid Research Clinics Program Prevalence Study. 394 Jun 86

The management of the extremely obese patient is best accomplished by a multidisciplinary approach which includes exercise training as an integral component. While diet alone is a potent factor in improving the metabolic complications associated with obesity, the combination of diet and exercise training can further improve these complications and greatly enhance cardiorespiratory function. Although the fitness of extremely obese people is low, individualized exercise programs can be used to safely and progressively train these patients, reduce fatigue, and greatly increase maximum work tolerance. Additional benefits derived from exercise training include improved insulin-mediated glucose utilization, lower serum lipid concentrations, and improved psychological distress scores and anxiety levels. Thus, exercise training can contribute to the success of a weight reducing program by improving metabolic, cardiorespiratory, and psychological factors. Additional important interventions in a multidisciplinary treatment of severe obesity include psychiatric, psychosocial, and vocational counseling.
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PMID:Exercise as a partial therapy for the extremely obese. 395 58

There is a close epidemiological association between obesity and elevated blood pressure for all age groups, although not every obese individual becomes hypertensive. In populations without age-related increases in body weight, an elevation of blood pressure with age is not seen. Mechanisms included in the development of hypertension in obesity are hyperinsulinemia, insulin induced sodium retention and increased sympathetic tone. Overnutrition with over intake of sodium and lack of physical exercise contribute to the metabolic syndrome of obesity. Thus, weight reduction by decreased energy uptake and increased physical exercise is recommended in the treatment of hypertension in obese patients. The resulting fall in insulin levels may lead to decreased sodium absorption in the kidney. Although treatment of obesity by weight loss decreases blood pressure substantially, a minority of patients do not respond to the weight loss. Blood pressure generally decreases before normal weight is achieved. Salt intake reduction does not appear to explain why weight reduction lowers blood pressure. Reduced levels of plasma renin activity, serum aldosterone levels, catecholamine levels and serum insulin levels may be involved in the blood pressure lowering associated with weight loss. Since the risk of cardiovascular disease in the hypertensive patient is not only determined by the blood pressure, an overall treatment which aims at reduction of other risk factors such as glucose intolerance and hyperlipoproteinemia is advocated. Thus, in any obese hypertensive patient normalization of excess body weight and increased physical activity appears to be the first and most important step of any rational therapeutic strategy.
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PMID:Obesity and hypertension: epidemiology, mechanisms, treatment. 636 45


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