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

Sibutramine is a selective serotonin and noradrenaline re-uptake inhibitor approved for the long-term management of obesity. Its primary mechanism of action is increased satiety, although some evidence also suggests increased energy expenditure could play a role in sibutramine-induced weight loss. It has established general efficacy in long-term trials, with clinically-approved doses of 10 and 15 mg. Sibutramine has also been studied in a number of unique populations, including obese controlled hypertensives, diabetics and ethnic minorities, further establishing its effectiveness. However, it does have a consistent effect of increasing blood pressure and pulse. Thus, blood pressure and heart rate should be monitored in patients using sibutramine and it may not be applicable in obese patients with significant cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Sibutramine and the management of obesity. 1501 31

We related the effect of the satiety enhancing drug sibutramine (Meridia, Reductil) on food intake to Rorschach Comprehensive System (Exner, 1991, 1993) personality factors. A placebo-controlled crossover, within-subjects design (n = 36) was used. Food intake after 2 weeks in the sibutramine and placebo conditions was assessed with a test meal using the VIKTOR (Cabmek, Stockholm, Sweden) setup, a computerized eating monitor. Building on baseline VIKTOR measurements, we had earlier studied the microstructure of eating (Elfhag, Barkeling, Carlsson, & Rossner, 2003). In this study, a model including Afr, MOR, and Populars could explain the variance in the effect of sibutramine. Sibutramine may reduce food intake in single test meals for participants whose appetite is prompted by external stimuli including food cues, suggested by the Affective ratio. Distress related to the body in obesity seen in damaged self-imagery (MOR) and adjustment to social expectations (Populars) could also have a moderating effect on the participants' consumption of test meals in an experimental design. Bodily concern (An + Xy) was also related to sibutramine response in univariate analyses.
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PMID:Food intake with an antiobesity drug (sibutramine) versus placebo and rorschach data: a crossover within-subjects study. 1504 22

The aim of this study was to evaluate decrease in waist circumference in obese patients receiving different anti-obesity treatments. The study was designed as a short-term (12 weeks), open-label, and randomized trial. Eighty six patients (70 females, 81.4%; mean age 41.09+/-8.73 years, mean BMI 36.1+/-4.3 kg/m2) were randomized to four different therapy groups. The primary outcome parameters were waist circumference and body mass index (BMI). The therapy groups were a) diet+sibutramine 1 x 10 mg/d (n=22), b) diet+orlistat 3 x 120 mg/d (n=25), c) combination of diet+sibutramine+orlistat (n=20) and d) diet (n=19). Combination therapy was more effective than diet and orlistat mono-therapy (p<0.0001 for all), but not significantly superior to sibutramine mono-therapy (p=0.072) in decreasing BMI. Sibutramine mono-therapy was significantly more effective in inducing BMI decrease compared with orlistat mono-therapy (p=0.039). The association between change in BMI and change in waist circumference was strongest in the orlistat mono-therapy group (P interaction=0.003). This means that patients taking orlistat experienced more decrease in waist circumference (3.4 cm, R2=0.29) per unit decrease in BMI compared to patients under combination therapy (2.6 cm, R2=0.25, P interaction = 0.015) and patients taking sibutramine (1.8 cm, R2=0.19, P interaction=0.026). In the diet therapy group decline in waist circumference was independent of BMI (1.9 cm, R2=0.02, P interaction=0.076). Although combination therapy and sibutramine mono-therapy were more effective in decreasing BMI, reduction in waist circumference and BMI was most significantly associated with the orlistat mono-therapy group. This may hint at the possibility of orlistat inducing weight loss mainly in the abdominal area targeted to reduce cardiovascular risk.
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PMID:Orlistat, sibutramine, or combination therapy: which performs better on waist circumference in relation with body mass index in obese patients? 1506 43

In the normal population, the prevalence of obesity is almost 20%. It is a condition influenced by genetic factors, so that individual behavior cannot be regarded as its sole cause. The amount of food is essentially determined by the hormone leptin, the feedback regulation of which can be disturbed by a modification of the molecule or a mutation of the receptor. A further important determinant is energy consumption, which is subject to large individual variations, which partly result from thermogenesis. With regard to the fat distribution, it is concentrated on the trunk in the android form as compared to the hips in the gynecoid form. The android form is subject to a higher incidence of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The indirect determination of body fat by measuring the body mass index (weight [kg]/body weight [m(2)]) is hence less reliable than measuring the waist (women > 80 cm, men > 94 cm). The effects of generalized obesity on cardiovascular function are chiefly an increase of blood volume and an eccentric left ventricular hypertrophy. This first of all results in diastolic dysfunction, which can give rise to a disturbance of systolic function in left ventricular dilatation. Concentric hypertrophy develops in the presence of arterial hypertension. This is twice as frequent in obese patients than in the normal population, which is due to increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system and stimulation of the renin-angiotensin system. A disturbance of lipid metabolism is observed four to six times more frequently. The qualitative change in LDL fraction with a raised concentration of low density LDL particles appears to be of crucial importance. With increasing fat mass, the sensitivity to insulin is lowered, so that in obesity the risk of developing diabetes mellitus type 2 is tripled. Since there has been a dramatic increase in the numbers of overweight children and adolescents (from 10.5% to 15.5% within the past five years), prevention programs should be started in good time. A reduction in calorie intake and an altered dietary composition (55% complex carbohydrates, 30% fat and 15% to 20% protein) on the one hand, and increased physical activity on the other hand continue to be the central components. The latter is especially effective when it regularly gives rise to an increased turnover of fatty acids as a result of an increased energy metabolism at moderate intensity. This leads to adaptation, i. e. an increase in the activity of lipoprotein lipase. If prevention programs and/or changes in lifestyle do not give rise to the desired weight reduction, medication is indicated in some adults. Sibutramine (Reductil and orlistate (Xenical) lead to an additional weight loss of up to 10%. However, consistent treatment of any cardiovascular risk factors present is more important. Treatment of arterial hypertension is of greatest prognostic significance, especially in concomitant diabetes mellitus. In individual cases and after thorough discussion of indication surgical options should be considered.
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PMID:[Obesity and cardiovascular diseases-theoretical background and therapeutic consequences]. 1524 61

The pharmacological treatment of obesity should be considered when cannot be achieved a 10% weight loss with diet therapy and physical activity. The drugs effective in obesity treatment may act by different mechanisms such as reduction in food intake, inhibition of fat absorption, increase of thermogenesis and stimulation of adipocyte apoptosis. At present, we only have two marketed drugs for obesity treatment. Sibutramine is an inhibitor of norepinephrine, dopamine and serotonina reuptake which inhibits food intake and increases thermogenesis. Sibutramine administration for a year can induce a weight loss of 4-7%. Its main side effects are hypertension, headache, insomnia and constipation. Orlistat is an inhibitor of pancreatic lipase which is able to block the absorption of 30% of ingested fat. Its administration induces weight loss and reduction of ulterior weight regain. Also, this drug improves hypertension dyslipdaemia and helps to prevent diabetes in 52% of cases when administered over four years. The increase in frequency of stools and interference with vitamin absorption are its main side effects. Glucagon-like peptide 1, which increases insulin sensitivity and satiety, adiponectin and PPAR-gamma agonists which reduce insulin resistance and modulates adipocyte generation are the basis for future therapeutic approaches of obesity. Phosphatase inhibitors induce PPAR-gamma phosphorylation and UCP-1 expression leading to an increase in thermogenesis and reduction in appetite.
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PMID:[Pharmacological treatment of obesity]. 1538 15

The aim of the study was to study the role of initial eating behaviour for subsequent weight loss in treatment with sibutramine (Reductil, Meridia) an anti-obesity drug enhancing satiety, and also to assess changes in mood during the treatment. The participants were 36 obese patients with a mean BMI of 39 kg m(-2). Eating behaviour was assessed with the three factor eating questionnaire (TFEQ), and depressive features with the comprehensive psychopathological rating scale (CPRS). Sibutramine (15 mg) was administered daily. The TFEQ restraint scale was negatively related to 6 months weight loss. In particular, strategic dieting behaviour and a more controlled attitude towards self-regulation were negatively related to weight loss. A positive non-placebo controlled change in mood was found already after 2 months treatment. The changes in mood were not related to the weight loss. Patients with more unrestrained eating seem to have reduced their amount of food intake more radically with enhanced satiety, manifested by greater weight loss. Physiologically enhanced satiety could have the greatest weight loss effect for patients whose eating is more governed by hunger drives and appetite rather that by conscious efforts and cognitive control.
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PMID:Sibutramine treatment in obesity: initial eating behaviour in relation to weight loss results and changes in mood. 1562 62

Obesity is a chronic disease with a marked impact on health and the prevalence of obesity in Croatia is rapidly rising. Since obesity plays a significant role in the etiology of cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus type 2 and of some cancers, it is an obvious target of public health activities. Weight-reducing drugs, like sibutramine, in combination with diet, exercise and behavioral changes have a role in the management of obesity. Sibutramine acts centrally as a serotonergic and noradrenergic reuptake inhibitor. It reduces body weight by enhancing satiety and stimulating thermogenesis. The aim of this multicenter prospective study was to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability and safety profile of sibutramine in the treatment of overweight patients in Croatia. Patients received 10 mg of sibutramine daily for 12 weeks. The main outcome measures were changes in body weight, BMI, waist and hip circumferences, laboratory assessments (serum triglicerida, cholesterol, glucose, HbA1c), blood pressure and heart rate profile. Of 461 patients included (mean BMI = 35.81+/-6.48 kg/m2, mean age = 43.65+/-10.90 years), 392 completed the study. Three months of sibutramine treatment lead to a significant reduction in body weight, BMI, waist and hip circumferences and improvement in metabolic parameters. Loss of over 5% of their initial body weight was found in 359 patients (91.58%), while 179 patients (45.66%) achieved weight loss over 10%. A decrease of both systolic (-3.39%) and diastolic (-3.75%) blood pressure was noted, while the pulse rate rose slightly (+0.13%). Adverse events were reported by 124 (26.90%) patients, but they precipitated only 17 (3.69%) withdrawals. Results of our study confirmed that sibutramine is an effective and safe weight-reducing drug.
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PMID:Croatian experience with sibutramine in the treatment of obesity--multicenter prospective study. 1563 78

Sibutramine is an anti-obesity drug sold as a racemic mixture under the trademark Meridia or Reductil. With the aim of evaluating the stereoselectivity in phase I of sibutramine biotransformation, the formation of the main metabolites from R -sibutramine, S -sibutramine and rac-sibutramine was studied in rat microsomes and primary cultures of hepatocytes. A novel analytical method for the determination of sibutramine and its phase I metabolites in culture medium and microsomal incubates using isocratic reversed-phase liquid chromatography with UV detection was developed. Only two metabolites, mono-desmethylsibutramine (M1) and di-desmethylsibutramine (M2), were found in the rat microsomes incubated with sibutramine and NADPH. The kinetics of M1 and M2 formation slightly differed depending on the enantiomeric form of the sibutramine used. The stereoselectivity in sibutramine biotransformation was much more evident in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. While R-sibutramine incubation led to the formation of M1 and M2 metabolites only, the incubation of S-sibutramine or rac-sibutramine (to a lesser extent) resulted in four major metabolites (M1, M2, M3 and M4) and 2 or 3 minor metabolites. On the basis of our results, R-sibutramine might represent the more advantageous sibutramine enantiomer from the pharmacokinetic standpoint.
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PMID:The stereoselective biotransformation of the anti-obesity drug sibutramine in rat liver microsomes and in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. 1580 98

Sibutramine mesylate is a new anti-obesity drug. It is a crystalline salt of sibutramine developed to improve the solubility of sibutramine hydrochloride. Methanesulfonic acid was used as a salt-forming acid instead of hydrochloric acid, resulting in a greatly improved solubility of 1000 mg/mL in water. Sibutramine mesylate was administered orally to ICR mice, Sprague-Dawley rats, and beagle dogs at dose levels of 1.15, 3.45, and 11.50 mg/kg to measure its effects on the central nervous system (CNS), general behaviour, cardiovascular-respiratory system and the other organ systems. Following administration of sibutramine mesylate, spontaneous locomotor activity was significantly increased from 120 min to 24 hours at 3.45 mg/kg and from 30 min to 24 hours at 11.50 mg/kg. Furthermore, there were a decrease in hexobarbital-induced sleep time, an increase in respiratory rate at 120 min, increases in intestinal transport capacity and gastric pH at 11.50 mg/kg, and decreases in gastric volume and total acidity at 3.45 and 11.50 mg/kg. However sibutramine mesylate caused no effects on general behaviour, motor coordination, body temperature, analgesia, convulsion, blood pressure, heart rate, electrocardiogram, cardiac functions of the isolated rat heart, isolated smooth muscles and renal function. Based on the above results, it was concluded that sibutramine mesylate caused effects on the spontaneous locomotor activity, hexobarbital-induced sleep time, respiration, gastrointestinal transport, and gastric secretion at a dose level of 3.45 mg/kg or greater but caused no effects on other general pharmacological reactions.
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PMID:Safety pharmacology of sibutramine mesylate, an anti-obesity drug. 1590 Oct 50

Pharmacotherapy for the management of obesity is primarily aimed at weight loss, weight loss maintenance and risk reduction, and has included thyroid hormone, amphetamines, phentermine, amfepramone (diethylpropion), phenylpropanolamine, mazindol, fenfluramines and, more recently, sibutramine and orlistat. These agents decrease appetite, reduce absorption of fat or increase energy expenditure. Primary endpoints used to evaluate anti-obesity drugs most frequently include mean weight loss, percentage weight loss and proportion of patients losing >or=5% and >or=10% of initial bodyweight. Secondary endpoints may include reduction in body fat, risk factors for cardiovascular disease and the incidences of diseases such as diabetes mellitus. Most pharmacotherapies have demonstrated significantly greater weight loss in patients on active treatment than those receiving placebo in short-term (<or=1 year) randomised controlled trials of pharmacological treatment in conjunction with a calorie-controlled diet or lifestyle intervention. The evidence of long-term efficacy is limited to sibutramine (2 years) and orlistat (4 years). These are the only drugs currently approved for the long-term management of obesity in adults. Sibutramine recipients randomised following 6 months' treatment to either sibutramine or placebo demonstrated significantly better weight maintenance at 2 years than those taking placebo (p<0.001), with >or=10% loss of initial bodyweight in 46% of patients. For patients taking orlistat, weight loss was 2.2 kg greater than those on placebo at 4 years (p<0.001), with significantly more patients achieving >or=10% loss of initial bodyweight (26.2% and 15.6%, respectively; p<0.001). Other drugs that have been evaluated for weight loss include ephedrine, the antidepressants fluoxetine and bupropion, and the antiepileptics topiramate and zonisamide. Two clinical trials with fluoxetine both reported no significant difference in weight loss compared with placebo at 52 weeks. Clinical trials evaluating ephedrine, bupropion, topiramate and zonisamide have demonstrated significantly greater weight loss than placebo but have been limited to 16-26 weeks' treatment. A major obstacle to the evaluation of the clinical trials is the potential bias resulting from low study completion rates. Completion rates varied from 52.8% of phentermine recipients in a 9-month study, to 40% of fenfluramine recipients in a 24-week comparative study with phentermine and 18% of amfepramone recipients in a 24-week study. One-year completion rates range from 51% to 73% for sibutramine and from 66% to 85% for orlistat. Other potential sources of bias include run-in periods and subsequent patient selection based on compliance or initial weight loss. Several potential new therapies targeting weight loss and obesity through the CNS pathways or peripheral adiposity signals are in early phase clinical trials. Over the next decade the drug treatment of obesity is likely to change significantly because of the availability of new pharmacotherapies to regulate eating behaviours, nutrient partitioning and/or energy expenditure.
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PMID:Pharmacotherapy for obesity. 1597 70


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