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

The effects of stretching of the skin on its collagen content and thickness have been studied in a group of subjects with chronic obesity. Despite the increase in skin surface a normal skin thickness, collagen content, and density were maintained. It is concluded that the skin stretching induced by prolonged obesity led to hypertrophy of collagen and that this had maintained both skin thickness and collagen content. It is not known whether this is due to enhanced synthesis or decreased degradation.
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PMID:Skin collagen and thickness in simple obesity. 511 17

Hypophysectomy in young male Wistar rats aged 70 days, like food restriction begun at the same age, retarded the life-long rate of collagen aging in tail tendon fibres and inhibited the development of age-associated proteinuria and renal histopathology. Hypothalamic lesions which increased the food intake of hypophysectomized rats from 7 g to 15 g/day and produced obesity did not alter the rate of either collagen aging or proteinuria development, nor reduce life expectancy, but increased the incidence of abnormal glomeruli. In the intact rats elevation of food intake from 7 g to 15 g/day increased the rate of proteinuria development, but did not affect the rate of collagen aging. Hypophysectomy was found to have a greater anti-collagen aging effect than food restriction, when food intakes were the same in both groups. These studies suggest a pituitary-hormonal effect on collagen aging and a food-pituitary-hormone-mediated effect on the development of age-associated proteinuria.
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PMID:The anti-aging action of hypophysectomy in hypothalamic obese rats: effects on collagen aging, age-associated proteinuria development and renal histopathology. 663 96

Hypercortisolism alters the distribution of body fat, causing truncal obesity, moon facies, buffalo hump, and other localized fatty deposits. In a patient with a mixed collagen vascular disease (overlap syndrome), who received high systemic doses of prednisone, prominent painless bitemporal masses developed in association with moon facies. Punch biopsy specimens of the lesion disclosed normal adipose tisue. This unappreciated feature of hypercortisolism is described, and other clinical manifestations of glucocorticoid excess involving fat tissue are reviewed briefly.
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PMID:Temporal fat pad sign during corticosteroid treatment. 743 47

The degree of bone mineralization, estimated as the bone phosphorus/hydroxyproline ratio (P/Hypro), was studied in 33 patients who had undergone jejunoileal bypass surgery for massive obesity. Low values of bone P/Hypro are expected in osteomalacia. We found an elevated mean bone P/Hypro (p < 0.001) with the highest values in patients with the longest postoperative periods (rS = 0.65, p < 0.001). The study indicates that bypass surgery, in spite of vitamin D deficiency, is associated with an increased average degree of bone mineralization or a defect in bone collagen synthesis.
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PMID:Elevated bone phosphorus/hydroxyproline ratio following jejunoileal bypass surgery. 744 10

Type I and type II diabetes is associated with increased cardiovascular complications, the most common of which are ischaemic cardiomyopathy and left ventricular dysfunction. The existence of an independent disease, diabetic cardiomyopathy, was suggested by initial anatomic studies, experimental models, and, more recently, by epidemiological studies. The exact cause of this ventricular dysfunction is not known: several mechanisms have been proposed, such as metabolic abnormalities of glucose transport, cellular overload in fatty acid metabolites, alteration of calcium uptake by the sarcoplasmic reticulum leading to cellular calcium overload, coronary microangiopathy, structural collagen abnormalities, interstitial and perivascular fibrosis or the presence of an autonomic neuropathy. The condition is characterised by abnormal left ventricular filling suggesting poor compliance or prolongation of left ventricular relaxation. Left ventricular systolic function is usually normal at rest but abnormally decreased on effort. The value of strict metabolic control and the place of drug therapy, especially calcium antagonists which oppose cellular calcium overload, has yet to be established. The natural history of diabetic cardiomyopathy should be defined by clinical studies taking care to differentiate it from the cardiovascular consequences of hypertension or obesity which aggravate or stimulate this condition.
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PMID:[Diabetic cardiomyopathy]. 764 66

We report a case of sudden death in a 19-year-old adolescent male who had been receiving hospital treatment because of a persistent right calf pain which had started about 18 days previously. The pain had not been relieved by analgesics, and had extended to the right thigh. The post-mortem examination revealed that the cause of death was pulmonary embolism by thrombi which had arisen in the right calf veins. The bilateral pulmonary arteries were packed with thrombi, and many pulmonary branches were occluded with fresh thrombi. The right calf veins contained thrombi of differing ages. In old thrombi, massive collagen formation and hemosiderin granules were present but elastic fibers had not yet formed. Therefore, it was considered that the old thrombi had formed at the time of the patient's first visit to the hospital. The right calf pain for which the deceased had sought medical advice was considered to have been caused by the vein thrombosis. Although various risk factors for the formation of thrombi are known, in the present case no precedent causes other than obesity were identified.
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PMID:Sudden and unexpected death due to undiagnosed pulmonary thromboembolism in an adolescent male without previous history of trauma. 780 16

Elevated liver enzymes are a frequent clinical problem of varying significance. In otherwise healthy individuals the most frequent causes of elevated liver enzymes are toxins such as alcohol and drugs. In this situation, further studies are usually not needed; it is sufficient to control the relevant parameters after abstinence from alcohol or withdrawal of the drug(s). In patients with known, suspected or unknown nonhepatic diseases, elevated liver enzymes can be caused by cardiovascular diseases, obesity, endocrinopathies, infectious diseases, malignancies, collagen disorders, sarcoidosis and other diseases. In this situation, sonography or liver histology frequently will be diagnostic, revealing the cause of the underlying disease as well as of the elevated liver enzymes.
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PMID:[Elevated liver enzymes of unknown etiology]. 793 57

The objective of this study was to investigate food restriction-related changes in several indices of immune competence in young (11 wk old) and adult (33 wk old) female lean (+/?) and obese (ob/ob) C57BL/6J mice. Body weight accumulation, tail length accretion and organ weights were more severely curtailed by food restriction in obese mice than in lean mice. Tail collagen denaturation time increased with age, although the magnitude was greater in obese mice, and this change was minimized by food restriction. Splenocyte mitogen responses were generally not altered with age in lean or obese mice, whereas food restriction augmented these responses in lean mice while having no effect or reducing them in obese mice. The concanavalin A and phytohemagglutinin responses of splenocytes from young and adult obese mice were greater than those for lean mice, whereas the bacterial lipopolysaccharide response was elevated only in adult obese vs. lean mice. Flow cytometric analysis of splenocytes revealed an increase in Thy-1+ cells with food restriction vs. freely fed obese and lean mice, with a proportional decrease in Ig+ cells. Percentages of CD4+ and CD8+ cells increased with food restriction in both lean and obese mice. These results suggest that genetic obesity largely eliminates the immunopotentiating effects of food restriction, although the rate of "aging" may be reduced by food restriction.
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PMID:Obesity minimizes the immunopotentiation of food restriction in ob/ob mice. 808 31

We report herein a case of a 30 year old male patient who consulted for a long standing obesity since childhood. Clinical examination reveals the presence of hypogonadism and gynecomastia without galactorrhea. Endocrine assessment showed an hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism with a moderate insufficiency of the adrenocortical axis. Neuro-ophthalmological examination disclosed an inferior bitemporal quadranopsia. MRI showed an extra-axial suprasellar mass, lightly hypointense in T1 and hyperintense in T2. After craniotomy and conservative biopsy, pathological examination of the tumor showed regular cells surrounded with collagen and reticulin marked with immunoperoxidase against S100 protein and GFAP (glial fibrinolytic acidic protein) strongly suggesting the diagnosis of juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma.
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PMID:[Hypothalamic astrocytoma presenting as obesity with hypogonadism]. 836 17

The available evidence suggests that genetic factors have a major role in osteoarthritis. It has been believed for over 50 years that a strong genetic component to certain forms of osteoarthritis is present. This genetic influence has now been estimated to be up to 65% in a recent twin study. The nature of the genetic influence in osteoarthritis is speculative and may involve either a structural defect (that is, collagen), alterations in cartilage or bone metabolism, or alternatively a genetic influence on a known risk factor for osteoarthritis such as obesity. Exciting work has showed that mutations in the collagen type 2 are important in some rare, familial forms of osteoarthritis. Further work is needed on isolating the gene or genes involved in the pathogenesis of this common, disabling condition.
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PMID:Genetics of osteoarthritis. 888 45


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