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

Late diabetic effects are the sequelae of for a long time super elevated blood sugar levels. The diabetic nephropathy is the cause of the secondary arterial hypertension. The investigation seeks for the connections between the diabetes mellitus and the essential, that is primary hypertension. The two diseases frequently appear and clearly increase in the second half of life. Moreover, they are above average frequently associated with each other. Among brothers and sisters of diabetic hypertensives in comparison to normal cohorts clearly increased high blood pressure prevalences were found. The insulin resistance which could be proved in a great number of hypertensive and which has been known since more than two decades might be the connecting link between hypertension and diabetes mellitus. Like the obesity the essential hypertension can be associated with all degrees of an insulin hyposensitiveness. The sodium-retaining effect of the insulin might explain the increased sodium content of the body in hypertensives. The differential diagnostics of the essential hypertension should therefore seek for conditions of an insulin resistance. The type II diabetic lacks a release of bradykinin during muscle work. Thus the glucose uptake into the cell is unfavourable influenced and demands an increased insulin excretion. This genetically (?) fixed defect is found also in essential hypertensives. It could be the connecting link between the two diseases. ACE-inhibitors have via a kininase II inhibition an effect also on the bradykinin decomposition and can favourable influence the glucose uptake into the muscle. An improved insulin effect among the ACE-inhibitors was described. Therefore, they should be preferred in the treatment of hypertensive diabetics.
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PMID:[Diabetes mellitus and arterial hypertension. In search of the connecting link]. 177 26

The most common cause of death in hypertensive patients is myocardial infarction (MI), being three times more common than stroke. Lowering raised BP results in 40% fewer strokes, but only 14% fewer MIs. This may be because other coronary risk factors that often accompany hypertension (e.g. obesity, lipid and thrombotic disturbances, insulin insensitivity, increased plasma renin activity and increased sympathetic activity) are either unaffected or exacerbated by some of the traditional antihypertensive agents. Some of these risk factors show a diurnal rhythm peaking at 07.00-10.00 hours, thus this time constitutes a 'vulnerable period' for sudden death or death from MI. beta-blockers and diuretics have been effective in preventing stroke, but diuretics (at least potassium-losing diuretics) might actually increase the incidence of sudden death and MI in young to middle-aged hypertensive subjects (though elderly patients may benefit). Quality of life can be impaired by some beta-blockers, and diuretics can cause metabolic upset and male impotence. Thus, antihypertensive agents that are not only effective and well tolerated but are beneficial to the broader coronary risk profile are desirable. ACE inhibitors should prove particularly useful in terms of: good quality of life; non-exacerbation or improvement of coronary risk factors; treating patients with impaired left ventricular function; reversing left ventricular hypertrophy and vascular wall hypertrophy, thus improving coronary flow reserve; atheroma regression; renal protection, particularly in diabetes; and prevention or regression of LV dilatation (remodelling) following MI.
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PMID:What does the future hold for ACE inhibitors? 179 18

Precanceroses and early screening of endometrial carcinomas are reviewed. Measures are evaluated on how to prevent this malignancy with administration of gestagens in hyperplastical endometrial changes in climacteric conditions and manifestations of endometrial estrogenization in postmenopause. On the basis of clinical, laboratory and histological investigations, the total of 31 female subjects with dysfunctional bleeding was given medroxyprogesterone acetate (Provera Upjohn tbl.) in 10 mg daily doses for up to 10-13 days cyclically prior to the onset of menopause. Under the mentioned treatment any of them experienced the rebleed, and no endometrial carcinoma had been diagnosed with control vacuum curettage within one year of observation. In a total of 196 women operated on to endometrial carcinoma, the occurrence of risk-factors for the development of mentioned tumour (obesity, late menopause, i.e. menopause after 50 years of age, sterility and dysfunctional bleeding backed with anovulation, long-term estrogen administration, feminizing ovarian tumours, liver diseases, glycide metabolic disorders and hypertension) was evaluated. The present work was aimed on the screening of asymptomatic group of women. Two important signs (obesity and late menopause) were invariably determined with the addition of any other risk factor. Mentioned women are supposed to undergo regular yearly histological investigation of endometrium. Of most benefit the vacuum curettage is believed by authors as a result of comparing the validation of cytological and histological methods in order of early evidence.
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PMID:[Precanceroses and endometrial carcinoma]. 184 15

Overweight and obesity may develop in individuals with genetically determined low resting energy expenditure. Drugs are among the recognised precipitating factors. The obesity promoting impact of beta-blockers is, however, less well known. Resting energy expenditure, and thermogenesis induced by stimuli such as meals, cold and heat exposure, stress and anxiety, have a facultative component mediated by the sympathoadrenal system through catecholamines working on beta-adrenoceptors. Treatment with beta-blockers reduces the facultative thermogenesis by 50-100 kcal/d, which corresponds to the weight gain of 2-5 kg/year reported in clinical trials. Treatment with beta-blockers also results in insulin resistance, which may aggravate existing diabetes and elicit diabetes in predisposed patients. Overweight and obesity are frequently complicated with hypertension and angina pectoris, which are often treated with beta-blockers. Obesity is associated with a defective sympathetic activity, and treatment with beta-blockers may further reduce facultative thermogenesis and promote weight gain. The consequence may be aggravation of hypertension, insulin resistance and other atherogenic factors. The causal therapy of android overweight and obesity complicated with diabetes or hypertension is a sufficient weight loss. If pharmacological treatment is inevitable, combined treatment with diuretics and ACE-inhibitors are most appropriate.
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PMID:[Obesity and diabetes as side-effects of beta-blockers]. 197 28

We report the fasting and post-challenge plasma insulin and glucose levels in 469 nondiabetic postmenopausal women from the Rancho Bernardo cohort according to the current use of estrogen replacement therapy. In these older women, the use of noncontraceptive estrogen was not associated with impaired glucose tolerance. Estrogen-treated women had lower levels of insulin than women who were not taking estrogen; these differences were not explained by age, obesity, or differential hormone use by women with known glucose intolerance. There were no significant differences in glucose and insulin levels in those taking conjugated equine estrogen (Premarin) alone compared to those taking it with medroxyprogesterone acetate (Provera).
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PMID:Ischemic heart disease risk in postmenopausal women. Effects of estrogen use on glucose and insulin levels. 216 81

Adrenalectomy arrests the development of obesity in ob/ob mice fed a high-starch diet and housed at a normal room temperature (20-25 degrees C) partly by stimulating the low thermogenic activity of brown adipose tissue (BAT). The present study was undertaken to determine if adrenalectomy would also lower energy retention and stimulate BAT metabolism in ob/ob mice housed in a warm environment (35 degrees C) where BAT thermoregulatory heat production is not needed. Adrenalectomy prevented hyperphagia and hyperinsulinemia and lowered the efficiency of energy retention in ob/ob mice housed at 35 degrees C, which is comparable to results obtained at 20-25 degrees C. Sympathetic nervous system stimulation of BAT (interscapular and subscapular depots) assessed by norepinephrine turnover was increased in adrenalectomized ob/ob mice. Thermogenic activity of BAT in adrenalectomized ob/ob mice (as assessed by GDP binding to isolated BAT mitochondria, GDP-inhibitable acetate-induced BAT mitochondrial swelling, and Mg2(/)-activated GDP binding to BAT mitochondria) was not elevated when results were expressed per milligram of mitochondrial protein but was elevated approximately 65% when expressed per interscapular and subscapular depots because adrenalectomy increased BAT mitochondrial mass. Adrenalectomy lowers the efficiency of energy retention and stimulates BAT metabolism even when ob/ob mice are housed in a warm environment.
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PMID:Adrenalectomy increases brown adipose tissue metabolism in ob/ob mice housed at 35 degrees C. 216

Joint studies of the ALIMDA and Society of Actuaries, notably those of 1935, 1959 and 1979, established that there is a progressive rise in cardiovascular mortality with successive increments in blood pressure. This has provided the basis of underwriting. The converse is not true, or at least has not been true until very recently. Drugs that effectively reduce blood pressure have been available for several decades, but reduction and maintenance of blood pressure is still accomplished in only a minority of hypertensives. Long-term trials employing a combination of drugs, i.e., diuretics, vasodilators and reserpine and subsequently beta-blockers, almost without fail have not shown that treatment with these agents significantly reduces heart disease mortality and sudden death. This has been attributed, perhaps without basis, to an unfavorable countering effect of increased lipid levels, aggravating this risk factor, and other undesirable metabolic effect of diuretics, such as hypokalemia and depletion of body magnesium, increasing the propensity to ventricular arrhythmias, hyperglycemia, worsening diabetes, and hyperuricemia. A survey of 674 persons with hypertension seen personally during the period 1985-89, who were under the care of approximately that many physicians, reveals striking changes in drug prescription and use during this brief period that portend a major change in the outlook of hypertension. Two classes of drugs have increased rapidly in popularity: these are the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE inhibitors) and the calcium blockers. Both classes of drugs effectively lower blood pressure and have minimal side effects with good compliance. They act not only to reduce peripheral vascular resistance, but also locally in the heart muscle to directly cause left ventricular hypertrophy to regress, an effect of great consequence. The drugs used in former trials such as the vasodilators and diuretics have no effect on left ventricular hypertrophy, unlike the ACE inhibitors and calcium antagonists. Left ventricular hypertrophy is the key lesion in hypertension and is only in part due to increased work load imposed by elevated pressure. It is associated with elevated blood pressure, but not closely and occurs independently; ventricular myocytes as well as myocytes of the vasculature being stimulated to growth by angiotensin and calcium, potentiating the effect of norepinephrine. Left ventricular hypertrophy greatly increases the propensity to ventricular arrhythmias and sudden death, and is a prime cause of cardiac mortality and sudden death not only in hypertension, but also in obesity, aging and diabetes, in which conditions left ventricular hypertrophy also is very common.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Major new developments affecting treatment and prognosis in hypertension. 235 5

A total of 111 patients with essential hypertension (the II stage) and obesity (the II degree) were investigated for providing with vitamin B6. The functional methods used for the vitamin assay (ACT activity of red blood cells and pyrodoxale-5-phosphate effect) have revealed significant vitamin B6 deficiency in 81.1% of the patients. Vitamin B6 deficiency was intensified in the course of the dietotherapy. Correction of vitamin B6 deficiency with a therapeutic dose of pyridoxine (20 mg/day) during 20-22 days, in the presence of the diet, has promoted optimization of providing with vitamin B6: normalization of pyrodoxale-5-phosphate effect. The hypotensive effect and decrease of excessive body mass in patients who received dietotherapy and pyridoxine (20 mg/day) were more pronounced than in those who received the same diet and the multivitamin "Undevitum".
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PMID:[The vitamin B6 allowance of hypertension patients and the effect of dietotherapy]. 239 75

Tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), tissue plasminogen activator inhibitor, (PAI), and von Willebrand factor (vWF) were measured in 30 diabetics and 17 control subjects. These studies were performed to clarify the role of obesity in causing abnormalities of the fibrinolytic system in diabetics. The t-PA antigen response measured after the infusion of desmopressin acetate (DDAVP) was similar in all groups. Peak responses to DDAVP for controls, type I diabetics, and type II diabetics were 21.2 +/- 9.5 ng/mL, 27.5 +/- 9.0 ng/mL, and 28.8 +/- 11.0 ng/mL (NS), respectively. These responses did not correlate with the body mass index (BMI) or any other of the indices examined. A significant decrease of t-PA activity as contrasted with t-PA antigen following DDAVP occurred in type II diabetics only. The decrease of t-PA activity strongly correlated with greater basal levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor in these same subjects. The plasma level of plasminogen activator inhibitor correlated with BMI but with no other index examined. In contrast to t-PA activity and PAI, vWF responses to DDAVP inversely correlated to basal vWF concentration in all groups. Basal concentrations of vWF were increased in both type I and II diabetics and showed no relationship to degree of obesity. In summary, these results suggest that type II diabetic subjects have decreased t-PA activity, which is best explained by increased levels of PAI. The increased PAI appears related to obesity and not diabetes per se.
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PMID:Fibrinolytic capacity following stimulation with desmopressin acetate in patients with diabetes mellitus. 250 17

We have compared three treatments of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) for their effect on physical development. Thirteen girls and two boys with CAH due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency were treated with three different treatments, hydrocortisone (HC), dexamethasone (DXM) and cyproterone acetate (CA). The results showed that height growth was better with HC and CA than DXM, and bone excessive maturation was more suppressed with DXM and CA than HC. A dose-dependent relationship was revealed between body weight and dose of HC. Iatrogenic obesity was found in 42.9% and 38.1% of the patients treated with DXM and HC, but none of the patients treated with CA did became obese. Physical growth was better with CA treatment than HC or DXM treatment, but CA may have a suppressive effect on the pituitary-adrenal axis observed carefully, especially on prepubertal and pubertal cases.
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PMID:[A clinical study of congenital adrenal hyperplasia]. 255 16


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