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

To plan prospective studies of obesity and hypertension, we measured skinfold thickness, weight, blood pressure, and protein fractions in 920 children who were divided according to age, sex, and race. Correlations between measurements were calculated within each of these groups. Children aged 10, 11, and 12 years had direct correlations between diastolic blood pressure and serum albumin level, but inverse correlations between diastolic blood pressure and alpha-globulin level as well as inverse correlations with alpha-globulin level. These correlations did not occur in similar children aged 8, 9, and 10. Although diastolic blood pressure correlated with skinfold thickness in all groups, there was no correlation between skinfold thickness and serum protein levels.
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PMID:Correlation of blood pressure with skinfold thickness and protein levels. 5 84

Among the population of the Ukrainian SSR 22 per cent of persons suffering from adiposity were revealed. Their nutritional pattern is characterized by an elevated caloritic value, a higher consumption of sugar, animal fats, as well as non-optimal structure of proteinic products. Of interest was elaboration and scientific substantiation of a dietetic nutrition in alimenary adiposity with due regard for the particularities specific for the alimentary pattern prevalent among the residents of the Ukrainian SSR. Under observation were kept 150 patients with alimentary obesity. The patients were kept on a low-calories diet (1450-1600 kcal) with restricted ingestion of carbohydrates (80--120 g), with physiological content of fat and protein. The 1st group of patients received meat and fish as a source of protein, the patients of the 2nd group were given a diet enriched with 100 g of the "Ocean" paste and those of the 3d group received a diet enriched with 150 g of egg whites. The greatest weight reduction was recorded in patients of the 3d group (10.96 +/- 0.48 kg), while in patients of the second (9.4 +/- 0.17 kg) and the first (8.5 +/- 0.34 kg) the reduction proved less marked. A diet enriched with egg white produced most beneficial effect also on the hormonal-metabolic disorders, viz. it helped to more significantly improve the adrenal function, that of the insular system, the blood serum protein metabolism rates, as well as those of the blood serum fat metabolism. The above investigations justify enrichment of the reducing diet with egg white and with the "Okean" paste.
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PMID:[Effect of qualitatively different proteins in the diet of patients with alimentary obesity on the course of the disease]. 96 70

1. Verofylline, a lipophilic polysubstituted methylxanthine, was utilized to examine how severely altered body composition in obesity affects drug disposition; the role of fat-free mass, fat mass and protein binding in determining the volume of distribution (Vss) was investigated. Obesity was induced by feeding Sprague-Dawley rats for 8 months with a calorie-dense diet; the obese rats showed increases of 50% in total body mass and 150% in body fat. 2. Both the absolute Vss and the clearance (Cl) in the obese rats increased 2-fold over control. Since Cl and Vss increased similarly, the half-life of verofylline in obese rats did not change. 3. The increase of Cl in obese rats can be accounted for by metabolic function related to fat-free mass and decreased serum binding. Similarly, an increase in fraction unbound and in total body mass accounted for the increase in Vss. 4. Based on in vitro measurements of muscle and fat tissue uptake of verofylline, and the assumed body space (from tritium dilution method), the predicted values for Vss closely approximated those of observed values. The semi-physiological model proposed here appears adequate to relate changes of body composition and serum protein binding in obesity to Vss.
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PMID:Verofylline pharmacokinetics in dietary-induced obese rats: role of fat mass and protein binding in determining volume of distribution. 176 16

Conflicting information concerning the acute effect of hyperinsulinemia on circulating adrenal androgens, specifically DHEAS, is available. The effect of PCOD or obesity on this response is unclear. We prospectively examined the acute response of circulating DHEAS to the physiological rise in serum insulin after an OGTT in 10 women with PCOD (5 obese and 5 normal weight) and 10 ovulatory euandrogenic women (5 obese and 5 normal-weight). All underwent a standard 75-g 2-hour OGTT. Insulin and DHEAS were measured before and after OGTT. To control for the potential dilutional effects induced by hyperinsulinemia or hyperglycemia on intravascular tonicity, DHEAS levels were correlated to serum protein. As expected, the 2-hour insulin levels were significantly greater than baseline. No significant changes in circulating DHEAS or in the DHEAS to protein ratio was observed in any patient group 2 hours after glucose-induced hyperinsulinemia. The power of this study was greater than 89% for an alpha error of 0.05 and an expected change in DHEAS of 25%. In summary, it appears unlikely that acute increases in insulin within the physiological range are important in the regulation of circulating DHEAS in either PCOD or euandrogenic women, independent of obesity.
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PMID:No acute effect of physiological insulin increase on dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate in women with obesity and/or polycystic ovarian disease. 183 37

The effect of obesity in diabetic and nondiabetic states on serum fructosamine levels, as measured by the nitro blue tetrazolium reduction method, was investigated. In 26 nondiabetic obese subjects, the mean (SD) fructosamine (1.78 +/- 0.16 mmol/L) and protein corrected fructosamine concentrations (25.7 +/- 2.5 mumol/g) were significantly lower than in nondiabetic lean control subjects (2.06 +/- 0.18 mmol/L and 30.5 +/- 2.5 mumol/g, respectively; p less than 0.01). Hemoglobin A1C, blood glucose and serum protein concentrations were normal in obese subjects. Interference from hypertriglyceridemia, hemolysis, or drugs was excluded. In diabetic subjects, fructosamine correlated with hemoglobin A1C, but the least-squares regression lines were different in 16 nonobese and in 19 obese patients, so that for the same hemoglobin A1C value, fructosamine level was 16% lower in obese compared to nonobese diabetic subjects. In vitro studies showed a significant decrease in 14C-glucose incorporation in serum proteins of obese nondiabetic subjects compared to control subjects. Similarly, the rate of formation of fructosamine in sera of obese nondiabetic subjects incubated with 12 mmol/L and 30 mmol/L glucose concentrations was slower than in sera of control subjects. In conclusion, fructosamine is underestimated in obesity, both in diabetic and nondiabetic patients, and its validity as an index of glycemic control may be impaired in obese subjects. This decrease is due to an alteration in the glycation process itself.
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PMID:Evaluation of the fructosamine test in obesity: consequences for the assessment of past glycemic control in diabetes. 204 93

Small but significant variations in clinical biochemical indices may be of great biological significance. Earlier studies conducted on small, chronically ill, hospitalized, anemic, and/or malnourished population samples suggested associations between body size and composition and indices of iron metabolism, serum protein, and plasma cholesterol. We studied a large, nonhospitalized probability sample of women and men in the First US Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I) to characterize these associations. Greater weight, stature, body mass index (BMI), skinfold thickness, and lean body mass (LBM) are associated with higher hemoglobin, hematocrit, and total iron-binding capacity. LBM and body fat are weakly related to serum albumin concentrations in men and to serum total protein concentrations in women. Total cholesterol concentrations are directly associated with weight, body fat, and LBM and are more strongly associated with central than peripheral obesity. Constitutional factors may be important for clinical assessment and for interpretation of epidemiologic studies.
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PMID:Relation of body size and composition to clinical biochemical and hematologic indices in US men and women. 259 19

The effect of obesity on the serum protein binding of theophylline was investigated in man and rat along with other ancillary variables such as dialysis time, theophylline concentration, albumin concentration, and fatty acid type and concentration. The percent binding of theophylline first increased with dialysis time, reached equilibrium over 2 to 6 h, then diminished. This decrease was not due to instability of theophylline. Theophylline binding was linear over a concentration range of 15 to 150 micrograms ml-1. A similar degree of binding was found in normal humans (44.4 +/- 1.0%) and rats (41.5 +/- 0.5%). The binding ratio (bound/free) of theophylline was proportional to the albumin concentration (1 to 5%) and yielded a binding parameter (NK) of 1.47 x 10(-3) M-1. Over a normal physiological range, individual and mixed fatty acids had minimal effects on theophylline binding to albumin. However, binding significantly decreased as fatty acid (FFA) concentrations increased. The magnitude of the effect appeared to parallel the carbon chain number of the fatty acid. Theophylline binding in obese subjects decreased to a mean (SD) of 35.8 +/- 8.0 per cent compared to 43.0 +/- 6.1 per cent in normal subjects (p less than 0.05). Similar decreases were found in normal versus obese rats and in the saliva: serum ratio following theophylline administration to normal and obese human subjects. Obesity causes a moderate decrease in serum binding of theophylline which may be attributed to increased FFA rather than in vitro artifacts.
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PMID:Effects of obesity and ancillary variables (dialysis time, drug, albumin, and fatty acid concentrations) on theophylline serum protein binding. 261 56

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

The occurrence of hypertension and its precursors is examined in the Framingham Offspring Study of 2,027 men and 2,267 women ages 20-49 years followed for 8 years. The age-specific prevalence of hypertension was similar at both the first (1971-1975) and the second (1979-1983) examination for both men and women. Prevalence rates were higher among men than among women, and there was a higher rate of hypertension treatment at the second exam, particularly among women, 75% of whom reported being treated for hypertension. The incidence of hypertension in participants free from hypertension at the first examination increased threefold from the second to the fifth age decades in men and eight-fold in women. Under age 40, men were twice as likely as women to develop hypertension, but after age 40, 8-year incidence rates were similar in men (14.2%) and women (12.9%). Adiposity, relative weight, heart rate, alcohol intake, hematocrit, blood sugar, serum protein, triglyceride, and phosphorous were all related to hypertension occurrence in one or both sexes, controlling for age. In multivariate analysis, adiposity (P less than 0.01), heart rate (P less than 0.01), and triglyceride (P less than 0.05) were all significant independent predictors of hypertension in men. In women, adiposity (P less than 0.001), heart rate (P less than 0.01), hematocrit (P less than 0.05), and alcohol consumption (P less than 0.05) were independent contributors. When controlling for blood pressure measured at the first examination, the best single predictor of hypertension incidence, the multivariate assessment changed very little. Adiposity stands out as a major controllable contributor to hypertension. Changes in body fat over 8 years were related to changes in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Markedly obese women in their fourth decade were seven times more likely to develop hypertension than were lean women of the same age. Weight control deserves a high priority in efforts to prevent hypertension in the general population.
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PMID:Incidence and precursors of hypertension in young adults: the Framingham Offspring Study. 358 64

Theophylline tissue distribution was examined in normal and dietary-induced obese Sprague-Dawley rats following constant infusion to steady-state. Theophylline distribution was linear among all tissues and uniform throughout body water spaces. The apparent distribution coefficient, Kd,app (tissue: serum concentration) ranged from 0.55 to 0.69 for all lean tissues, but averaged 0.08 in fat. Obese rats had a consistently higher Kd,app in several tissues including muscle, heart, and liver caused by reduced (from 42 to 33 per cent) serum protein binding. Muscle slice uptake of theophylline from buffer was similar in normal and obese animals, confirming serum binding as the factor altering Kd,app. The conceptual and applied bases of calculating and measuring steady-state volume of distribution (VSS) by various methods were explored. The physiological perturbations of theophylline VSS by obesity can be accounted for by alterations in serum binding and expanded lean and fat tissue masses, rather than changes in tissue partitioning.
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PMID:Theophylline tissue partitioning and volume of distribution in normal and dietary-induced obese rats. 362 May 94


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