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

Aging, a wearing-out process which affects everything inanimate and animate, is accelerated by abuse of decelerated by care. The psychologic reaction of aging persons vary considerably. The concept of growing older is much more satisfactory and pleasant than the concept of being old, since the former is applicable to everyone regardless of age whereas the latter carries a finite significance as deterioration progresses. Chronologic age is much less important than biologic age. The desideratum is not longevity but rather a long, useful and meaningful life. Although heredity is of importance in longevity, it is a factor over which at present we have no control. However, we can influence the aging process according to whether we care for or abuse the body. The principal factors in accelerated aging, in order of importance, are: 1) tobacco use (particularly cigarette smoking), 2) lack of exercise, and 3) obesity. Conversely, abstinence from tobacco, exercise within tolerance, and avoidance of obesity not only decelerate aging but result in a better quality of life.
J Am Geriatr Soc 1976 Sep
PMID:Aging. 95 84

The influence of several diseases and conditions upon the prevalence of pulmonary embolism in autopsies performed over the July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1974 period at the University of Michigan Medical Center (Ann Arbor, Michigan) were analyzed. The prevalence of pulmonary was 12.3% in the 4600 necropsies in this sample. Patients with pulmonary fat emboli or tumor emboli and patients thought to have thrombosis of the pulmonary artery were not designated as having pulmonary thromboembolism. The patients were categorized with regard to heart disease on the basis of both clinical and necropsy findings. The major factors contributing to an increase in risk of development of pulmonary embolism include heart disease, certain types of cancer, obesity, acute paraplegia and accidental and operative trauma. Other risk factors which could not be assessed in this study include a prior history of venous thromboembolism, pregnancy and the puerperium, use of oral contraceptives, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Age plays a major role in the prevalence of pulmonary embolism. A portion of the effect of age is related to the age distribution of other diseases contributing to an increased risk, yet advanced age alone may have an independent influence. The risk factors defined should be used in a selective program designed to increase the rate of detection of deep venous thrombosis before pulmonary embolism occurs. Alternatively, patients at increased risk should be treated with prophylactic low dosage heparin during hospitalization.
Surg Gynecol Obstet 1976 Sep
PMID:Risk factors in pulmonary embolism. 95 58

To evaluate the role of insulin in familial hypertriglyceridemia, 34 relatives of the pedigrees of 3 index cases of endogenous hypertriglyceridemia and hepatic steatosis as well as 9 spouses were examined for plasma lipids and responses of blood glucose and plasma insulin during oral glucose tolerance tests. The combined disorders of hypertriglyceridemia and hyperinsulinemia plus glucose intolerance--insulin resistance--were most commonly found among the relatives, which were often accompanied by an impaired liver function. Some relatives showed hyperinsulinemia without hypertriglyceridemia. Obesity was frequent, but its incidence was similar to the controls. Thus, the observed form of familial hypertriglyceridemia was apparently coupled with insulin resistance; and hyperinsulinemia, or insulin resistance by itself, might be a basic genetical trait in this form of lipid disorder.
Tohoku J Exp Med 1976 Sep
PMID:Evidence for a familial form of hypertriglyceridemia as disorders coupled with insulin resistance. 96 Jan 7

1. The esterification of exogenous palmitate to diglyceride and triglyceride in adipocytes was studied in obese and diabetic patients with and without hypertriglyceridaemia. The rate of esterification correlated significantly with the triglyceride content of adipocytes. 2. In diabetic patients with hypertriglyceridaemia, the rate of esterification to triglyceride was significantly greater than in diabetic patients with normotriglyceridaemia. This difference could not be attributed to differences in glucose tolerance or to the degree of obesity. 3. Fasting plasma insulin levels were greater in the hypertriglyceridaemic group than in the normotriglyceridaemic group. The difference in esterification rates could have been due to differences in adipocyte size. 4. The esterification of fatty acid in adipose tissue of diabetic patients was lower than in non-diabetic subjects and this difference could not be accounted for by differences in adipocyte size or differences in the intracellular pools of fatty acid in adipose tissue. 5. The role of esterification of exogenous fatty acids in adipose tissue as a possible determinant of the uptake of glyceride fatty acids from plasma is discussed.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1976 Sep
PMID:The esterification of exogenous fatty acids by adipose tissue of hypertriglyceridaemic subjects with or without diabetes mellitus. 96 55

The objective of this paper is to characterize the fat cow syndrome. This condition refers to a combination of metabolic, digestive, infectious, and reproductive conditions which affects the obese periparturient cow. The condition develops primarily due to faulty feed management which permits excessive consumption of unbalanced diets. The syndrome is frequently a herd problem characterized by a high morbidity and mortality due to an increase in disease in periparturient cows. Clinical signs include depression, anorexia, ketonuria, marked decrease in production, progressive debilitation, weakness, nervous signs, and an elevation in temperature due to infectious disease. The obesity is generalized throughout the body with extensive fatty metamorphosis in the liver. Histological changes are primarily in the liver and kidney. Treatment of the condition consists of feeding a balanced diet, symptomatic treatment, and good supportive care. The condition can be prevented by feeding a balanced diet according to nutrient requirements of the National Research Council.
J Dairy Sci 1976 Sep
PMID:Fat cow syndrome. 96 40

The relationship between blood pressure, ponderal index, sex, blood glucose, haemoglobin, serum uric acid, calcium cholesterol and creatinine, and albumin has been examined in 698 subjects aged between 44 and 49 years from the register of a group general practice. Sixty per cent of the variation in systolic pressure could be explained by statistically significant associations with diastolic pressure, sex, blood glucose, serum calcium, and cholesterol. The diastolic blood pressure (not corrected for systolic pressure) was significantly related only to ponderal index, haemoglobin in men, and cholesterol in women. Pulse pressure was also positively related to the risk factors blood glucose, serum cholesterol, and calcium. The possibility is discussed that one or more of these variables reduce aortic compliance and that the serum calcium contributes to this end. Diastolic, but not systolic pressure, had a prime association with relative weight, obesity being only basically associated with an increase in diastolic pressure.
Br J Prev Soc Med 1976 Sep
PMID:The relationship between blood pressure and biochemical risk factors in a general population. 97 35

Intestinal adaptation was studied in six patients with massive obesity treated by jejuno-ileal bypass operation. Glucose absorption in the jejunum was measured by a perfusion technique. The morphometric and enzymatic measurements were carried out on biopsies from the proximal jejunum and the distal ileum. Results obtained before and six months after the operation were compared. The glucose absorption per unit length of jejunum was unchanged at a glucose concentration of 66 mmol/l in the perfusate but increased significantly at a glucose concentration of 133 mmol/l (p less 0.025). The mean sucrase activity did not change, whereas the lactase activity increased significantly in the jejunum and ileum. The mean villus height increased significantly, while the epithelial cell height and cell width were unchanged both in the jejunum and the ileum, suggesting that the operation resulted in epithelial cell hyperplasia. The glucose absorption in the jejunum was positively correlated with the villus height (r = 0.76), which suggests that the increased glucose absorption was related to an increased number of epithelial cells.
Eur J Clin Invest 1976 Sep 10
PMID:Intestinal adaptation after jejuno-ileal bypass operation for massive obesity. 97 97

Skeletal muscle growth in two genetic lines of pigs that differed in total muscle content was studied at live weights of 23, 45, 68, 91, 104, 118 kg. Total physically separable muscle and cross-sectional area of the longissimus dorsi muscle were greater in the muscular than in the obese genetic lines. Above 45 kg, animals in the muscular genetic line had less total separable fat than animals in the obese line, but the two lines did not differ in total physically separable fat at 23 and 45 kg live weight. Hence, these two genetic lines may differ in weight at which maturity is reached as much as in inherent propensity for obesity. Longissimus muscle form the muscular line had more water, less protein, and less lipid than longissimus from the obese line. DNA and RNA concentration, total DNA and RNA content, and RNA/DNA ratio of the pituitary and liver did not differ between the two genetic lines. Above 68 kg, longissimus from the muscular line had higher DNA and RNA concentrations than longissimus from the obese line; this difference did not exist between 23 and 68 kg. RNA/DNA ratio of the longissimus muscle was greater and protein-to-DNA and protein-to-RNA ratios in longissimus were lower in the muscular than in the obese line. Total DNA content of physically separable muscle increased 2.0 (obese) to 2.7 (muscular)-fold between 23 and 118 kg; hence, number of muscle nuclei increases during growth. Total DNA content of physically separable muscle was greater in the muscular than in the obese line and was the measurement most highly related to total muscle content.
Growth 1976 Sep
PMID:Muscle growth in two genetically different lines of swine. 97 69

Effects of a 24 hour fast were studied in 21 obese children aged 7 to 14 and in 8 controls. Mean blood glucose (BG) during fast dropped more in controls (0.88 to 0.54 g/l) than in obese (0.90 to 0.63 g/l) Plasma cortisol changes were similar in the 2 groups, FFA increased (p less than 0.01) in the 2 groups, but the 24 hour mean level was higher in controls (4.0 mEq/l) than in obese (2.06 mEq/l). At the end of the fast, a ketonuria was present in all obese children except 2. Serum alanine dropped similarly in obese (28 to 24 muM p. cent ml) and in controls (30 to 22 muM p. cent ml). All obese exhibited at the end of the fast a significant rise (p less than 0.01) of branched chain aminoacids, not observed in controls. Responses to glucagon (0.03 mg/kg I.M.) were studied before and after fast. At time 0, BG response was higher and more prolonged in obese in spite of hyperinsulinism. At time 24 hours, BG raised from 0.50 to 0.74 g/1 and insulin from 8 to 35 muU/ml in controls, while in obese BG raised from 0.63 to 1.06 g/l and insulin from 25 to 88 muU/ml. Concomitant hyperinsulinsim and biological criteria of hypoinsulinism demonstrated in obese children the peripheral resistance to insulin. The contrast between a normal degree of protein gluconeogenesis and a reduced rate of fat mobilization during fast may be a major biological feature of obesity in childhood.
Biomedicine 1976 Sep 30
PMID:Effect of 24 hour fast in obese children. 100 33

Fifty-eight patients less than 30 years old but who are more than 300 pounds in weight were considered for investigation of jejunoileal bypass. Thirty patients had operations, and the functioning bypass included 40 centimeters of jejunum and 10 centimeters of ileum. In 14 patients, intestinal continuity was restored by either end-to-end or end-to-side anastomosis according to random choice, and in 16 patients, end-to-end anastomoses were used. At present, the follow-up period is one to four years, and the weight loss, so far, has not been significantly related to the type of reconstruction used. Weight loss correlated possitively with the preoperative weights up to one year after operation. Also, weight loss correlated positively with the total measured length of the small intestine during the first six postoperative months, but this correlation currently is showing a trend toward negativity. Food intake decreased by 2,682+/-690 calories per day at six months after operation as a result of the bypass. Chronic acidosis was common. Results of an endocrine evaluation revealed an unexpected significant decrease in parathormone levels within the normal range. A new complication, colonic pseudo-obstruction, has occurred one year or more after operation in five patients or 17 per cent of our group. This complication is related to the intestinal anaerobic flora in proximity of the defunctionalized limb; its symptoms and signs can be alleviated by giving antibiotics or Lactobacillus to change the intestinal flora. Although 90 per cent of our patients are pleased with their progress and the results of routine evaluation corroborate their satisfaction, detailed analysis of the research data available to us revealed that only 43 per cent have had beneficial effects from a jejunoileal bypass without any of the serious sequelae. We consider jejunoileal bypass for obesity justified when carried out by interdisciplinary groups dedicated to the long term follow-up study of the patient and periodic reporting of the results. The long term future for the operation is, as yet, not completely understood, and when the conditions we have recommended are not present, we cannot currently endorse the operation.
Surg Gynecol Obstet 1976 Sep
PMID:Experience with jejunoileal bypass for obesity. 108 95


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