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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:The relationship between blood pressure and biochemical risk factors in a general population. 97 35
Fasting serum triglyceride and cholesterol measurements, and lipoprotein characterization by ultracentrifugation, were performed in four groups of patients with chronic renal disease (uraemic, short- and long-term haemodialysis and renal transplant recipients) and the results compared with those obtained from age- and sex-matched control subjects. Basal insulin and growth hormone levels, and serum
creatinine
and albumin concentrations were measured in, and detailed dietary histories taken from patients in each group. The predominant lipid abnormalities were hypertriglyceridaemia and increased very low density lipoproteins (type IV hyperlipoproteinaemia) in both uraemic and haemodialysis patients. Following renal transplantation, a different pattern of hyperlipidaemia was found. Hypercholesterolaemia was more common and hypertriglyceridaemia less common than in the uraemic and haemodialysis group. The lipoprotein abnormalities were increased low density and/or very low density lipoproteins, with types IIa IIb and IV hyperlipoproteinaemia occurring equally frequently. In uraemic and haemodialysis patients, the proportion of carbohydrate in the diet was high, and may have played a role in the genesis of hypertriglyceridaemia. There was a positive correlation between relative body weight and serum triglyceride in the long-term dialysis group. In renal allograft recipients hypertriglyceridaemia could be attributed, at least in part, to
obesity
, prednisone dosage and the degree of impairment of graft function. The aetiology of hypercholesterolaemia in the transplant recipients was unclear. Neither basal insulin nor growth hormone levels were elevated in any patient group. Uraemic hypertriglyceridaemia is a clearly defined and well documented metabolic abnormality which is not corrected by dialysis. Post-transplantation hyperlipidaemia however, is a condition of variable presentation and multifactorial aetiology.
...
PMID:Studies on the nature and causes of hyperlipidaemia in uraemia, maintenance dialysis and renal transplantation. 110 47
Multifactor stress was studied, using obese men subjected to long-term (49 d) semistarvation in either a temperate or a not climate. The study was wide in scope, fiving information on endocrine-metabolic effects of a) uncomplicated
obesity
, b) ovesity in combination with climatic heat, c)
obesity
plus semistarvation, and d) ovesity combined with semistarvation plus climatic heat. The test subjects--groups of 12 to 13 obese men--remained on a diet which provided 335-400 kcal/d and contained at least 45 g protein, 14 g carbohydrate, and 11 g fat. Overnight urine specimens collected at 7-d intervals were analyzed for epinephrine, norepinephrine, 17-OHCS, ketones, urea, uric acid,
creatinine
, inorganic phosphate, sodium, and potassium. There was transitory hyperketonuria which related inversely to environmental thermal levels. Most of the physiologic response patterns in the triple-stressor circumstance (
obesity
plus climatic heat plus semistarvation) were unlike those in the double-stressor situation (
obesity
plus semistarvation). Thus, there was evidence of compounding of stressor effects. Evidence of diminished sensitivity to heat appeared when
obesity
was lessened.
...
PMID:Climatologic aspects of obesity and therapeutic semistarvation. 111 17
Two patients are described in whom hypercortisolism occurred prepubertally as a consequence of bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia. In contrast with the manifestations of Cushing's syndrome in adults, these children presented with
obesity
and reduced stature and no other symptoms. Both patients excreted amounts of urinary 17-OHCS before and during a conventional suppression test with dexamethasone (0.5 mg every six hours) which were within the usual normal range. However, when urinary 17-OHCS excretion was expressed per gram of urinary
creatinine
or per square meter of surface area, and when the dose of dexamethasone was tailored to body mass (20mug/kg/day) the results were clearly abnormal, as were plasma corticoids and (in one patient) cortisol secretion rate. Resumption of linear growth occurred after bilateral adrenalectomy in both patients and was associated, in the one patient so studied, by a return of hypoglycemia-stimulated increases in plasma growth hormone levels from previously suppressed values to the normal range, and by a slight increase in the fasting plasma somatomedin concentration. The observations suggest that pediatric patients with hypercortisolism are likely to be overlooked when conventional criteria for laboratory diagnosis are used, but can be recognized by the simple diagnostic modifications used in these studies.
...
PMID:Hypercortisolism in childhood: shortcomings of conventional diagnostic criteria. 119 38
Knowing the necessary minimum inhibitory or minimum effective concentration of a drug dose size and/or dosing interval for multiple dose therapy can be calculated under the assumption that the blood level-time curve of a drug can be described by an open one-compartment or an open two-compartment model, that the drug does not show dose dependent pharmacokinetics for the therapeutic dose range and that the distribution coefficient is applicable for a wide body weight range and age group, excluding severe edemas and
obesity
. The dose size and dosing interval equations are derived from the minimum blood-level concentration c'min equation in multiple dosing. Substituting c'min by MIC or MEC, cop by D - f/Vd and Vd by delta' - BW either the required dose size or dosing interval can be calculated. In the case of renal failure adjustment can be made by inclusion of a correction factor into the equations using either the observed
creatinine
clearance or the serum
creatinine
value.
...
PMID:Dose size and dosing interval determination. 124 70
We measured by RIA the serum and urinary digoxin-like immunoreactivity (EDLF) in 8 subjects with severe
obesity
and in 10 healthy, non-obese individuals (as a control group), to evidentiate whether circulating and urinary levels of EDLF are increased in
obesity
. For each individual, we measured the mean EDLF on two sera collected consecutively on two successive mornings, between 8-9 a.m. and the daily urinary EDLF excretion. Every subject collected his/her 24 hour urine in 5 different timed fractions. For each urine fraction, we measured the excretion of EDLF, electrolytes (Na and K), and
creatinine
. In obese people, the mean serum digoxin-like immunoreactivity (no. 8, 27.3 +/- 8.7 ng/L de) was significantly higher (unpaired t test, p = 0.0002) than in the controls (no. 10, 12.0 +/- 7.3 ng/L de), whereas control and obese subjects had superimposable 24 hour EDLF urinary excretion. Urinary excretion of EDLF significantly changed throughout the day in normals, but not in obese people. In a multiple stepwise regression analysis, urinary K+ and Na+ significantly (p less than 0.01) contributed to the regression with urinary EDLF (EDLF = 76.9 + 0.67 K+ - 0.24 Na+; R = 0.601, no. 40) in obese individuals. The in vivo kinetic and metabolic pathways of EDLF are conceivably different in obese and normal subjects. A difference in the production rate, binding to plasma proteins and/or removal mechanisms could explain the findings of higher circulating levels with normal EDLF urinary excretion in obese persons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Endogenous digitalis-like factors (EDLF) in obese individuals: preliminary results. 133 83
The association between urinary albumin:
creatinine
ratio and other cardiovascular risk factors such as age, blood pressure,
obesity
, glycemic indices, insulin and lipid profile was examined in a population in a Chinese community consisting of 795 men (mean age 35.8 +/- 8.8 yr) and 538 women (mean age 37.9 +/- 8.9 yr) with a normal glucose tolerance defined by WHO criteria. Men with a urinary albumin:
creatinine
ratio above the 90th percentile had higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures, fasting plasma glucose, 2-h glucose after a 75 g oral glucose load, and fasting serum insulin. Women with high urinary albumin:
creatinine
values had higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures, body mass index, waist-hip ratio, fasting insulin and triglycerides. Multivariate analysis showed that only systolic blood pressure and fasting glucose in men, and diastolic blood pressure and fasting insulin in women, independently contributed to urinary albumin:
creatinine
. When the effect of blood pressure was eliminated by excluding subjects with systolic blood pressure > 140 and diastolic > 90 mm Hg, only fasting insulin was associated with urinary albumin:
creatinine
in women. No associations were found for men. We conclude that microalbuminuria may be a marker for cardiovascular disease only because of its association with blood pressure in men, while in women, there is an additional independent association with fasting serum insulin.
...
PMID:Microalbuminuria and other cardiovascular risk factors in nondiabetic subjects. 146 18
Recently, it was suggested that the role of hyperinsulinemia on the hypertensive mechanism of essential hypertension might be related to renal sodium handling and sympathetic nerve activity, especially in obese hypertensive patients. However, the interrelationship between insulin,
obesity
, renal sodium metabolism and sympathetic nerve activity in normotensive subjects (NT) still remains unclear. The present study, therefore, was undertaken to clarify the role of insulin on renal sodium handling and sympatho-adrenal function in overweight NT. The study consisted of 24NT, who were divided into two groups of twelve non-obese (NNT) and twelve obese (ONT) subjects. NNT was categorized as a body mass index (BMI) less than, and ONT as a BMI equal to or more than 25kg/m2. In the early morning, after overnight fasting, all subjects remained in a supine state and were examined for renal clearance test. During the two-hour clearance period, mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), endogenous
creatinine
clearance(CCr), urinary excretion of sodium (UNaV), fractional excretion of sodium (FENa), plasma immunoreactive insulin (IRI), plasma norepinephrine concentration (pNE), and plasma epinephrine concentration (pE) were determined. Although no significant difference was found in age, MAP, HR, pE, CCr or UNaV between the two groups, a significantly higher IRI (p less than 0.05) and lower FENa (p less than 0.05) were observed in ONT than in NNT. There was no significant correlation between IRI and UNaV, FENa or pE in ONT or in NNT. In addition, no significant correlation was shown between FENa and pNE or pE in both groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The role of insulin on renal sodium handling and sympathetic nerve activity in overweight normotensive subjects]. 151 24
As a means of generating an hypothesis to explain genetic
obesity
of the C57BL/6J ob/ob mouse, we used gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to compare the urinary organic acid profiles of obese (ob/ob) and lean (+/?) mice on both a chow and a chemically simplified diet. More than 60 peaks were found and quantified; 45 peaks were identified. No acid was excreted in greater amounts by lean mice and none was excreted exclusively by either lean or obese mice. When normalized to body weight (obese mice being 40% heavier) and to
creatinine
excretion (30% greater in obese mice), however, only the daily excretion of malate, 2-hydroxyglutarate, aconitate, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutarate, oxalate, ethylmalonate, and 4-hydroxyphenylacetate were significantly greater in obese mice. When allowed to eat only an all-fat (Crisco) diet for 4 days, the excretion of adipate rose 10-fold in lean mice, but only threefold in obese mice. Adipate excretion by Zucker rats also increased on the Crisco diet, but was indistinguishable between lean and fatty rats, suggesting that omega-oxidation might be impaired in obese mice but not in fatty rats. This suggestion complements an earlier proposal that a comparative increase in ethylmalonate excretion, which was also characteristic of fatty Zucker rats, might be explained by an increased concentration of butyryl-CoA due to inadequate beta-oxidation. An impairment of omega-oxidation in the obese mouse may also explain why urinary 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutarate, which is derived from short chain products of beta-oxidation, is increased in obese mice but not in fatty rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Urinary organic acid profiles in obese (ob/ob) mice: indications for the impaired omega-oxidation of fatty acids. 164 Aug 73
Hypertension is quite common in the elderly population. Isolated systolic hypertension and diastolic hypertension are associated with cardiovascular complications. Like younger patients, the elderly may have labile hypertension. On the other hand, pseudohypertension, auscultatory gap, and postural hypotension are peculiar to the elderly.
Obesity
, atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis, baroreceptor insensitivity, decline in renal function, physical inactivity, and insomnia are factors that can lead to or aggravate hypertension in older patients. Secondary hypertension should be suspected if elevated blood pressure first appears late in life or becomes resistant to previously adequate treatment. Spontaneous hypokalemia can indicate primary aldosteronism. Elevation in the serum
creatinine
level of a patient taking an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor suggests bilateral renovascular hypertension. The goal of antihypertensive therapy is to prevent morbidity, disability, and death from complications and to maintain quality of life. Psychosocial factors may play an important role in controlling hypertension. Nonpharmacologic treatment, such as weight loss, salt restriction, and exercise, should always be tried prior to and in conjunction with medical therapy. Antihypertensive drugs often cause side effects and should be prescribed with caution. Always start with a low dose and gradually increase it if necessary. All drugs that reduce blood pressure in the younger individual also work in the elderly. ACE inhibitors and calcium blockers are particularly useful because of their low incidence of adverse effects.
...
PMID:Hypertension in elderly patients. The special concerns in this growing population. 154 24
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