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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
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Differences in plasma thiobarbituric acid (TBA) levels were studied by sex and age in 1,178 adults (471 males and 707 females) participating in a mass health examination conducted in a town of Kumamoto Prefecture in 1989. The relationships between plasma TBA levels and obesity, the consumption of cigarettes, alcohol, and fish, and various indices for health status derived from the data of physiological examinations were analyzed in age-groups 40-59 and 60-79 for both sexes. The prevalence of abnormal physiological findings by plasma TBA levels were further investigated. The results were as follows; 1. The highest plasma TBA levels for males were observed in the group aged 40-49, with levels gradually decreasing with age thereafter. The plasma TBA levels for females increased with age and the highest levels were obtained at age 60-69. The plasma TBA levels for males were significantly higher than for females at aged 40-49. 2. Plasma TBA levels for both sexes increased with obesity and the amount of fish consumed. 3. Plasma TBA levels in all examined groups had significant and strong positive correlations with serum total cholesterol levels and atherogenic indices, and had significant positive correlations with serum calcium and gamma-GTP levels. 4. A stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that plasma TBA levels for males were associated with serum total cholesterol, gamma-GTP, fish consumption and serum HDL-cholesterol in that order. The levels for female were associated with serum total cholesterol, body mass index, serum HDL-cholesterol and serum calcium in that order. The relationship with serum HDL-cholesterol was a negative correlation. 5. Prevalence of abnormal values of serum total cholesterol, atherogenic index and body mass index were significantly higher in the high-plasma TBA level group than in the group with median-plasma TBA level. These results suggest that plasma TBA levels may be useful as an index of undesirable lipid metabolism. Further studies should be performed to establish the significance of the relation of plasma TBA levels to fish consumption.
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PMID:[A cross-sectional study of lipid peroxide levels (plasma TBA levels) in a mass health examination]. 150 34

This study evaluates the correlation between long-term weight history and health risks. One thousand three hundred and sixteen male subjects of normal weight (-5%(-)+5% by Broca's obesity index) at age twenty, were studied. The average age of the subjects was 43.7 +/- 6.5 (M. +/- S.D.) years old. According to their long-term weight history, the subjects were classified into four groups: weight lost (N = 35), weight stable (N = 502), mild weight gain (N = 187), severe weight gain (N = 592). Odds ratios for systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, glutamic pyruvic transaminase, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, uric acid, fasting blood sugar, total cholesterol, triglyceride, shortness of breath, hyperperspiration, angina pectoris, and hypertension were significantly higher in the severe weight gain group than in the stable weight group. Stepwise logistic regression analysis was performed by choosing weight history, obesity index, age, and smoking and drinking habits as the independent variables. Weight history was shown to be a significant variable in systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, glutamic pyruvic transaminase, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, fasting blood sugar, total cholesterol, triglyceride, shortness of breath, chronic hepatitis and liver cirrhosis. Odds ratios for factors suspected of promoting atherosclerosis were significantly higher in the severe weight gain group. Results of this study indicate that a weight gain of over 7 kilograms appears to be the critical level that is associated with health risks.
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PMID:[Health risk assessment of long-term weight history]. 213 52

The purpose of this study is to evaluate waist size as an indicator of health risk among subjects considered to have normal body construction based on height-weight obesity indices. For estimating standard waist sizes based on height, a regression equation was formulated from 46 male subjects who had no abnormal findings in their health checkups. The regression equation was as follows: Standard waist size (cm) = 0.8 X height (cm)-57.7. The ratio of measured waist size to standard waist size was defined as the "waist ratio". The correlation coefficient between the waist ratio and the modified Broca's obesity index was 0.898 (N = 207, p less than 0.01). To clarify the meaning of the waist ratio, 95 male subjects were divided into three groups on the basis of the difference between their waist ratio and their obesity index. The group whose waist ratios were larger than their obesity indices had significantly worse findings than the group whose waist ratios were not in the following medical categories: systolic blood pressure, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase levels, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase levels, uric acid levels, total bilirubin, electrocardiogram readings and optic funduscopic observation. Accordingly, the waist ratio derived from waist size might be useful for assessing obesity-related health risks even for subjects judged to be normal from the height-weight obesity index.
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PMID:[Evaluation of waist size as a health risk indicator for obesity]. 221 94

In 1214 adult persons, the relationship between alcohol consumption, the "liver enzymes" and other metabolic parameters, including the serum lipids, were investigated. In 798 of the persons, glucose tolerance tests with measurement of plasma insulin were performed (young and old male and female adults, either volunteers or patients without liver-related diseases). There was a high correlation of the three transferases GOT, GPT and GGT not only with the reported alcohol consumption but also with the plasma insulin. Most of the insulin increase, however, occurred in that range of the three transferases which, so far, has erroneously been considered to be the normal one. The C-peptide showed the same behaviour. Plasma insulin was also raised in relation to overweight, but only in persons with the sum of the three transferases over 30 U/l, not in persons who did not drink alcohol and who had really normal transferases (sum of the three transferases below 30 U/l measured at 25 degrees C). The quotient of plasma insulin divided by the relative body weight (Broca Index) was constantly low in the range of really normal transferases (up to 30 U/l), thereafter rising significantly, but only in the range of the transferases so far erroneously considered to be the normal one (GOT to 17, GPT to 22, GGT to 28 U/l, thus sum up to 67). Serum glucose in the tolerance test also rose with the transferases but much less than the plasma insulin. The correlation between both GGT and the sum of the three transferases with the plasma insulin was significantly positive and independent of the relative body weight. It is concluded that overweight (which is generally believed to be the main risk factor for non-insulin-dependent diabetes), and insulin resistance (which leads to hyperinsulinaemia), are largely caused by the toxic effects of "normal" daily alcohol, more in the human male than in the female. Hyperinsulinaemia (which blocks lipolysis) is caused by a toxic effect of ethanol and its metabolites, independent of caloric input and overweight. Hyperinsulinaemia is at least in the human male at present, probably the most important cause of obesity. In obesity, caused by "normal" alcohol consumption, a vicious circle occurs: the enhancement of the triglycerides and, consequently, the free fatty acids leads to a further decrease of glucose utilization by the muscle. A continuously high glucose level has toxic effects: eventually the beta cells of the pancreas are exhausted.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[The main cause of diabetes (type II): "normal" alcohol drinking]. 227 72

Previous work showed that obesity in the average human male is not due to increased caloric intake. To test the hypothesis that 'social' ethanol consumption causes obesity by a hepatotoxic mechanism, the relationships between alcohol intake, cigarette smoking, serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) and body build were investigated in 816 adult patients, 491 males and 325 females. A large part of the Broca index variance could be explained by hepatic damage as reflected by the GGT level. The higher the GGT, the more overweight were the subjects. Hyperinsulinemia may be the pathogenetic link; insulin is the strongest known blocker of lipolysis. Almost the total variation of obesity with GGT, however, occurred in the range of GGT up to 25 U/l, which is usually, but nevertheless erroneously, considered to be the normal range. This effect was independent of sex and age. Normal GGT is below 10 U/l, which is found on average in females aged less than 20 years. Females tolerate less alcohol than males. Although GGT is as high in females as in males around age 30, males drink about three times as much ethanol. For the same GGT the Broca index is significantly higher in females than in males. GGT generally increases with age; maximum GGT is reached in females in the age group 21-40 years (due to the change in drinking habits around 1968), declining thereafter; in males at age 50. Obesity per se is not correlated with a high GGT. In the females there are hormonal factors influencing obesity. Although in the females GGT decreases on average after age 40, obesity increases (due to the decrease in estrogens). After age 50 ethanol tolerance in males decreases: they reduce their alcohol consumption, and yet the GGT remains high. -Cigarette smoking is a factor which independently influences obesity. Although people who smoke tend also to drink more alcohol, smokers are significantly leaner than nonsmokers. On average males smoke about twice as heavily as females; this contributes to the fact that on average males are leaner than females despite their higher alcohol consumption. Due to lower consumption the influence of ethanol and smoking on body build is smaller in females than in males.
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PMID:Alcohol, smoking and body build: obesity as a result of the toxic effect of 'social' alcohol consumption. 257 71

Increased levels of serum triglycerides in shift workers have been reported in two population-based studies. In order to examine this relationship and to take some common confounding factors into account this cross-sectional study of 562 shift and day workers was carried out. The shift workers had significantly higher levels of serum triglycerides. gamma-glutamyltransferase and total cholesterol, and Body Mass Index did not differ between the groups. The cause of increased serum concentrations of triglycerides is unclear. The present study provides no evidence to support the assumption that alcohol drinking or obesity accounts for increased levels of serum triglycerides in shift workers.
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PMID:Relationships between serum triglycerides and gamma-glutamyltransferase among shift and day workers. 257 67

The associations among alcohol consumption, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) activity in serum and blood pressure (BP) were analysed in a cross-sectional study of 1,156 healthy male workers 35 to 59 years of age, consisting of 349 non-drinkers, 682 light-daily drinkers (consuming less than 58 ml of alcohol per day) and 125 heavy-daily drinkers consuming more. No marked elevation of BP with high alcohol consumption was seen in the present subjects. On the other hand, a linear elevation of BP together with an increase in serum gamma-GTP activity was found in subjects above 40 years of age. The BP levels corresponding to the three different drinking habits, non-drinkers, light drinkers and heavy drinkers, were similar to each other regarding gamma-GTP levels. The relationship between gamma-GTP and BP was shown, by multiple regression analysis, to be independent of age, obesity and the dose of alcohol consumed. The contribution to the rise in BP of the dose of alcohol consumed, in comparison with that of gamma-GTP, was negligible. Serum gamma-GTP activity is a useful indicator of the susceptibility to the pressor effect of alcohol.
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PMID:Relationship between serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity, blood pressure and alcohol consumption. 257 73

In a cross-sectional health screening 636 persons with negative urine glucose, a 75-g-oral glucose tolerance test was performed. We report the clinical features of the subjects with impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes mellitus. In 96 subjects with impaired glucose tolerance, the frequencies of alcohol dependency, fatty liver, and of increased levels of serum uric acid, cholesterol, triglycerides, total serum protein and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase were significantly higher than in normal subjects. In 37 subjects with diabetes mellitus, the frequencies of fatty liver, hypertension and of increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate, triglycerides and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase were significantly higher than in normal subjects. In addition, significant increases in serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, triglycerides, serum total cholesterol and body mass index, and a significant decrease in high density lipoprotein cholesterol were also observed in subjects with impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes mellitus. These results suggest that alcohol dependency, fatty liver, obesity and hyperlipidemia are important concomitants of impaired glucose tolerance.
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PMID:Study on background factors associated with impaired glucose tolerance and/or diabetes mellitus. 278 10

A pilot study to improve unhealthy life habits of thirty middle-aged male clerical workers (45 +/- 3.58 yr.) with mild health disorders such as hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus and fatty liver was carried out. Under prohibition of smoking and alcohol intake, they spent five nights and six days at a hot spring resort, taking part in planned health training programs which included aerobic training, hiking in forests, hot spring baths, cooking practice and lectures about healthy life, controlled by medical, dietary and physical training staffs. To evaluate the short-term effects of these activities, body weight, blood pressure, serum lipid (total cholesterol, high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, triglyceride, total free fatty acid and phospholipid), blood sugar, uric acid, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) and glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT) were examined early in the morning of the second (before) and the fifth (after) days, and then their impressions of these recreation activities were monitored by questionnaires on the sixth day. By t-tests of all before-and-after data, it was shown that mean values of body weight, systolic blood pressure, high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, triglyceride, phospholipid and gamma-GTP were improved, but fasting blood sugar, uric acid and GOT were not improved. In comparison of blood pressure levels, the hypertensive group (n = 9) showed lowering in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure, though the normal group (n = 10) had slight elevation. In addition, in the hypercholesterolemic group (n = 11, greater than or equal to 220 mg/dl) mean total cholesterol values decreased, conversely in the hypocholesterolemic group (n = 6, less than 180 mg/dl) they increased. Moreover, the obese group (n = 15, obesity index greater than or equal to 120%) showed greater decreases of body weight, triglyceride and phospholipid than the non-obese group. From questionnaires, it was confirmed that through these recreation activities most participants found mental and spiritual satisfaction, in spite of heavy physical loads. The short-term recreation activities under a stressless environment seemed to maintain the function of homeostasis in the body, but further investigation is needed to examine the relation between the contents of diets and physical activities, and to follow the long-term effects on the participants.
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PMID:[A study on the physical effects of short-time recreation activities at a hot spring resort on unhealthy middle-aged workers]. 281 Aug 61

Health examinations of 108 workers exposed to vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) at a Japanese chemical plant were carried out in 1979. The polymerization of vinyl chloride was started at the plant in 1949. In this study, the highest concentration of VCM in autoclaves was determined to be 250 ppm in 1961. However, the workers at the plant had been exposed to higher concentrations of VCM several times before 1960. More recent VCM exposure was considered negligible. Examinations assessed data on age, height, weight, obesity index, sake consumption, VCM exposure concentration, latent period, cumulative exposure, ICG (indocyano green test), serum bilirubin, GOT (glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase), GPT (glutamic pyruvic transaminase), A1-P (alkaline phosphatase), GGT(gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase), ZTT (zinc turbidity test), LDH (lactate dehydrogenase), cholesterol, TTT (thymol turbidity test), A/G (albumin globulin ratio), and thrombocytes. Variation in VCM exposure did not affect tests of pigment excretion from the liver, such as ICG; thrombocytes; and enzyme activity (such as GPT); nor bilirubin or flocculation reaction in serum.
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PMID:Early detection and signs of hepatoangiosarcoma among vinyl chloride workers. 302 84


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