Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To gain insight into cellular events associated with the progression of obesity to diabetes, we have studied glucose metabolism and insulin responses in adipocytes from monkeys with spontaneous obesity. Over a 3- period, we studied animals which (A) remained relatively lean; (B) became obese (over 30 percent body fat) with normal glucose tolerance; (C) were obese and developed hyperinsulinemia (over 100 microU/ml); and (D) were obese and subsequently developed noninsulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) (fasting plasma glucose above 140 mg/dl and abnormal glucose tolerance test). Adipocyte glucose utilization, evaluated by conversion of 14-C-glucose to CO2 and lipids, was measured in the absence and presence of varying concentrations of insulin, using cells prepared from biopsy samples of subcutaneous abdominal fat. The major change in adipocyte metabolism was a decrease in basal and insulin-stimulated glucose utilization in NIDDM, relative to the enhanced responses observed in cells from the obese-hyperinsulinemic monkeys. Longitudinal studies of individual monkeys over 2-3 years led to the following additional observations regarding adipocyte glucose metabolism. Basal and insulin-stimulated glucose utilization dropped markedly as hyperinsulinemia progressed into diabetes. As impairments in glucose tolerance worsened in diabetes, adipocytes showed only a modest or negligible additional impairment in basal and insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation. Insulin binding was reduced in adipocytes from monkeys with obesity as compared to lean controls, and was similar in cells from monkeys with obesity and NIDDM. In the monkeys, obesity was initially associated with enhanced adipocyte metabolism. With the spontaneous development of NIDDM, glucose metabolism in adipocytes was depressed. The progression of metabolic events from hyperinsulinemia to NIDDM in monkeys includes cellular changes in insulin responses at the level of the adipocyte.
...
PMID:Changes in insulin responses and binding in adipocytes from monkeys with obesity progressing to diabetes. 306 66

To assess the relative contributions of age, gender, obesity, pulmonary function, and the severity of sleep-induced respiratory abnormalities to the development of alveolar hypoventilation in patients with occlusive sleep apnea syndrome, prospective data from III patients with occlusive sleep apnea were analyzed by stepwise logistic and multiple regression techniques. The significant variables in a logistic regression model predicting the presence of hypercapnia were daytime arterial oxygen pressure (PaO2; p less than 0.0001) and gender (p less than 0.04), the latter reflecting the higher number of hypercapnic women in our patient population. Multiple regression analysis performed in the hypercapnic group to study the determinants of the severity of elevation of arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) revealed significant contribution from the PaO2, the apnea-plus-hypopnea index (AHI), and the percent predicted forced vital capacity (r2 = 0.56; p less than 0.0001), whereas in the normocapnic patients, PaCO2 related to PaO2 only. These results suggest that daytime hypoxemia, mechanical impairment of the respiratory system due to obesity or obstructive airway disease (or both), and the severity of sleep-induced respiratory abnormalities as assessed by AHI contribute to the severity of carbon dioxide retention in patients with occlusive sleep apnea in a multifactorial fashion.
...
PMID:Determinants of hypercapnia in occlusive sleep apnea syndrome. 311 99

The effects of isocapnic hyperventilation (A) and normoventilation (B) on PaCO2, PaO2 and A-aDO2 were compared in 102 patients undergoing elective surgery, randomized into two comparable groups A and B. Cases for thoracic, high abdominal and intracranial surgery were excluded, as well as patients with clinically evident pulmonary pathology. A volumetric ventilator was used in association with three different breathing systems (A: Bain system and circle system without CO2 absorption; B: circle system with CO2 absorption). The groups were comparable, except for percentage of overweight: 75% in group A and 56% in group B. Overweight was defined as weight above the mean ideal weight of 100%, and obesity as a weight above 120% the mean ideal weight. Blood gases were sampled 1) preoperatively, 2) 15 min and 3) 60 min after the beginning of mechanical ventilation, 4) postoperatively, 90 min after extubation, without supplemental oxygen. The preoperative mean PaO2 values were 79 +/- 11.4 mmHg (A) and 82.5 +/- 13.2 mmHg (B); the PaCO2 were 37.2 +/- 3.7 mmHg (A) and 37.2 +/- 3.8 mmHg (B). During surgery, PaO2 was distinctly higher (p less than 0.01) in group A than in group B (on average 15-20 mmHg higher), indicating the favourable effect of great tidal volumes on gas exchange. Correspondingly, the A-aDO2 was less increased in group A than in group B (p less than 0.01). At 15 min, 33% of the patients were hypocapnic (PaCO2 less than 35 mmHg): one case in group A and three in group B could be classed as severe hypocapnia (PaCO2 = 25-30 mmHg).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Per- and post-operative gas exchange: isocapnic hyperventilation versus normoventilation]. 312 83

The doubly labeled water method is a form of indirect calorimetry that has been developed only recently to the stage of application to human studies. The method measures integral CO2 production for up to 3 wk from the difference in elimination rates of deuterium and 18O from labeled body water. Validations against near-continuous respiratory gas exchange have demonstrated that the method is accurate and has a precision of 2-8% depending on the isotope dose and the length of the elimination period. Although the method has been validated, there is still some debate on refinements of the kinetic model that may lead to improved accuracy and precision. Because the method only requires periodic sampling of body fluids, it is non-restrictive and ideally suited to use in free-living subjects. Recent applications of the method have included obesity research, determination of energy requirements in both developing and developed countries and studies of human growth.
...
PMID:Measurement of energy expenditure in free-living humans by using doubly labeled water. 314 75

Morbid obesity is not infrequently associated with severe respiratory impairment. In our experience approximately 10 per cent of morbidly obese patients who underwent gastric surgery had severe respiratory impairment. Respiratory insufficiency of obesity can be divided into two primary breathing disorders: the obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) and the obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS). In its most severe form, when both SAS and OHS are present, it is called the Pickwickian syndrome. In our series 59 morbidly obese patients with respiratory insufficiency secondary to obesity underwent gastric surgery for weight reduction. Fourteen had OHS, 19 had SAS and 26 had both. Of these, two patients died of postoperative complications and one died at five weeks with an inconclusive autopsy, totalling an operative mortality rate of 3.4 per cent and a total mortality of 5.1 per cent. In our overall experience morbidly obese patients lost 67 per cent of excess weight after gastric procedures. In conclusion, surgically induced weight loss will markedly improve or correct respiratory insufficiency secondary to obesity. It will improve arterial oxygenation, minimize CO2 retention, expand lung volumes, correct polycythemia, and reduce apnea frequency. The magnitude of changes in these variables is clinically significant. Therefore, respiratory insufficiency of obesity should be considered a major indication for an aggressive approach to weight reduction. The jejunoileal bypass and unbanded gastroplasty operations have an unacceptable incidence of complications or failure, respectively. There is a high degree of recidivism following dietary programs. Sweets eaters will not do well with a gastroplasty procedure. Gastric bypass for individuals addicted to sweets or the vertical banded gastroplasty for "gorgers" are currently our procedures of choice and are associated with the average loss of two thirds of excess weight and correction of breathing problems associated with morbid obesity.
...
PMID:Pulmonary function in morbid obesity. 331 3

The risk of ischemic heart disease (IHD) has been studied in relation to working conditions encountered in a primary aluminum smelter employing over 6,000 men. During the period 1975-1983, 306 new cases of IHD were identified which were matched with 575 referents. A logistic regression analysis was performed to adjust for differences in smoking habits, high blood pressure, hyperglycemia, hypercholesterolemia, and obesity. Results from this showed that white collar workers had a significantly lower risk of IHD (odds ratio 0.47, 95% confidence interval 0.31-0.70). Among blue collar workers, a significantly higher risk was observed for workers in the reduction division of the plant (OR 1.72, CI 1.09-2.97) including, in particular, Soderberg (OR 1.71, CI 1.07-2.72) and prebake (OR 2.26, CI. 1.27-4.02) potroom workers. The risk of IHD did not increase with the length of time worked in these occupations. The search for associations (among blue collar workers) of risk with nine specific contaminants (benzene soluble material, fluoride, total dust, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, thermal stress, noise, physical load, and mental load) proved inconclusive, with no association reaching statistical significance.
...
PMID:Risk of ischemic heart disease among primary aluminum production workers. 338 61

The purpose of this study was to determine if the metabolic response to obesity and to pair feeding of obese Zucker rats to lean Zucker rats was similar across skeletal muscles. Oxidation of glucose, palmitate and isoleucine was studied in muscle strips in vitro using appropriate 14- carbon substrates as tracers. The plantaris muscle was subjected to histochemical analyses using an alkaline actomyosin ATPase, NADH-tetrazolium reductase and an oil red 0 stain. Soleus muscles from both ad libitum and pair fed obese rats oxidized less glucose to CO2, but released similar amounts of lactate when compared to the soleus muscles of lean rats. Oxidation of glucose was similar in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle of ad libitum fed obese rats, but lower when pair fed to the intake of lean rats. No differences were apparent in palmitate oxidation to CO2 or in incorporation into lipid (both soleus and EDL muscles), except in the EDL muscle of pair-fed obese rats which exhibited a higher rate for palmitate metabolism when compared with lean rats. Isoleucine oxidation to CO2 was higher in the EDL and plantaris muscles, but similar in the soleus muscle of ad libitum-fed obese rats when compared with lean rats. The magnitude of the difference in isoleucine oxidation was similar when the obese rats were pair fed. No differences in the percentage of plantaris muscle fibers sensitive to alkaline ATPase staining were observed. The plantaris muscle of obese rats, contained a higher proportion of oxidative fibers. These results indicate the great risk in generalizing about metabolic activity of the whole skeletal muscle mass based on observations made on one, or even two, distinct muscles in this animal model. Also, pair feeding of obese to lean Zucker rats did not result in uniform changes in metabolism between muscles of the obese rats.
...
PMID:Metabolic characteristics of skeletal muscle from lean and obese Zucker rats. 345 May 49

A boy referred at the age of 4 years because of obesity and under observation for 16 years, was found to be suffering from a hypothalamic syndrome of unknown origin characterized by progressive obesity, polyphagia, deficiency of growth and thyroid hormone, hyperprolactinemia, hypodipsia, hypernatremia and hyperosmolality without diabetes insipidus. At ages 11 and 16 there were 3 day episodes of spontaneous muscular weakness, hypersomnolence and hypothermia associated with central sleep apnea and severe bradycardia. Subsequently, decreased ventilatory responsiveness to carbon dioxide (CO2) was found as a consequence of blunted neural drive. Therapy with clomipramine HCl (Anafranil Ciba-Geigy) for 6 months led to a normalization of serum sodium levels, pulse rate, ventilatory response to dioxide with no recurrence of the central apnea within 4 following years.
...
PMID:Recurrent hypothermia, hypersomnolence, central sleep apnea, hypodipsia, hypernatremia, hypothyroidism, hyperprolactinemia and growth hormone deficiency in a boy--treatment with clomipramine. 346 79

The effects of long-term moderate food restriction were assessed in lean and obese male Zucker rats. A 30% reduction in food intake from 5 to 68 wk of age resulted in parallel lowering of body weight in both lean and obese rats compared to their respective ad libitum-fed control groups. In lean rats, epididymal and retroperitoneal fat pad weights and cell size were lowered by food restriction. In obese rats there was an effect of food restriction on growth of the epididymal pad but not the retroperitoneal pad. Hyperinsulinemia, hyperlipidemia and elevated serum albumin levels, as well as higher activity of lipogenic enzymes, were also not affected by food restriction in the obese rat. In a second experiment, long-term food restriction resulted in greater glucose conversion to CO2 in response to insulin in adipocytes from lean rats but not obese rats compared to their respective control groups. These results indicate that food restriction throughout the first year of life in the obese Zucker rat does not alter the development of hyperplastic obesity and insulin resistance.
...
PMID:Effects of long-term moderate food restriction on growth, serum factors, lipogenic enzymes and adipocyte glucose metabolism in lean and obese Zucker rats. 355 7

A 52-year-old man with myxedema was evaluated for anterior chest pain that was considered to be compatible with myocardial ischemia. The night after admission he developed extreme bradycardia, hypotension, and apneic episodes lasting up to 25 s. Continuous positive airway pressure and administration of medroxyprogesterone acetate prevented further episodes and relieved much of the somnolence and lethargy that had contributed to the evidence for myxedema. Alveolar hypoventilation caused by decreased sensitivity to carbon dioxide, inadequate central neural drive, peripheral muscle force, and obesity all may have contributed to the apnea. Chest pain has not recurred, and results of electrocardiography have remained normal following full thyroid hormone replacement. The early recognition of myxedema causing sleep apnea will allow specific treatment to avoid the cardiovascular risks related to prolonged apnea and will help avoid confusion with other etiologies of cardiovascular abnormalities.
...
PMID:Extreme bradycardia during sleep apnea caused by myxedema. 363 55


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>