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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The curve of blood insulin levels recorded during the oral provoked hypoglycaemia test (OPHG) was studied in 67 proven coronary patients. None of the curves obtained was normal. The abnormalities found in this way are of two types: either a hypoinsulinaemic response, with a high non-retarded peak (type 1) or a high retarded peak (type 2), or else a hypoinsulinaemic response, with a flat curve (type 3) or a very small late peak (type 4). The possible role of these abnormalities of insulin secretion in the pathogenesis of atheroma is discussed. The correlations between age, sex,
obesity
, hypertriglyceridaemia, and the OPHG curve are investigated. The preliminary results of a test in which insulin levels are monitored after intravenous provoked hypoglycaemia, followed by
tolbutamide
, are reported.
...
PMID:[Abnormalities of insulin secretion in coronary patients. Apropos of 67 cases]. 41 93
The metabolic and hormonal changes during a standard physical exercise were studied in healthy subjects and in insulin-dependent diabetics well matched for body weight, and therefore submitted to a similar work load in a physiologic range, and in obese subjects that, owing to their weight, faced a significant heavier work in the same environmental conditions. Moderate work load did not lead to significant changes in metabolic and hormonal blood parameters (blood glucose, FFA and glycerol; insulin, glucagon, growth hormone and cortisol) in healthy subjects. A similar substrate homeostatis was seen in insulin-dependent diabetics, that however showed marked hormonal alterations. In these subjects, indeed, higher levels of plasma glucagon and GH were reached during work and in the recovery phase.
Obese
subjects, submitted to a heavier work load, presented a marked increase in blood glucose and glycerol which agrees with high GH and cortisol levels, and a subsequent increment of IRI which corresponds to a normalization of blood glucose and glycerol.
Obese
subjects, therefore, show a normal sensitivity to work load. Considerations about the work load in everyday life are discussed.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Metabolic and hormonal changes during exercise in healthy, diabetic and obese subjects. 45 17
We have studied the interrelationship of total body fat mass, carbohydrate tolerance and IRI response in 17 non-obese and obese subjects, who were suspected of having early diabetes. We carried out an i.v. glucose infusion test consisting of a priming injection of 0.33 g/kg followed by constant glucose infusion of 12 mg/kg/min in all persons. Total body fat mass was estimated by the tritium dilution method. There was a positive correlation of body fat mass, fasting glucose concentration and blood glucose concentration at 150 min as well as a strong correlation between body fat mass and BG area 60--120 min as parameters of carbohydrate tolerance in all subjects, i.e. the degree of carbohyrate intolerance was directly related to the quantity of total body fat mass. A similar correlation was found when the non-obese and obese groups were analyzed separately. In neither group did total body fat mass correlate with parameters of IRI response. In obese subjects with pathological carbohydrate tolerance, however, a positive correlation of basal IRI concentration and total body fat mass was found. Furthermore, a close relation between basal IRI level and parameters of carbohydrate tolerance could be demonstrated in obese subjects. The present study failed to demonstrate any correlation of parameters of carbohydrate tolerance and glucose-induced IRI response in either group. Thus, the significant relationship between body fat mass and degree of carbohydrate intolerance indicates that body fat mass plays an important role in the disturbance of blood glucose homeostasis in early diabetes with and without
obesity
.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Relationship between body fat mass, carbohydrate tolerance and IRI response during glucose infusion in subjects with early diabetes. 45 21
The authors have based this critical evaluation on the methods at present adopted for mass screening for symptomatic diabetes in a group of 39,405 subjects, in full working activity. The results obtained from these tests confirm the social importance of this illness in the active population. However, the authors suggest that the glycosuria test be abandoned as the primary discriminating criterium and suggest that blood glucose assay in specimens drawn two hours after a standard glucose and load (50 g as proposed by WHO) and the singling out of potential diabetic individuals by reason of their family and physiological background be adopted for this purpose. The relationship between diabetes,
obesity
, dysmetabolism and cardiovascular alterations lead us to stress once more the importance of primary prevention, aimed at correcting the eating habits and life style of patients with a potential predisposition to the illness.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Critical evaluation of several years' activity aimed at the diagnosis of asymptomatic diabetes in the Province of Florence. Revision of method. 59
The effect of short-term treatment with diphenylhydantoin (DPH) on the insulin secretion patterns during OGTT and on the daily insulin profile was studied in obese patients. DPH treatment for 3 days with a dose of 300 mg/die (100 mg, 3 times daily) significantly decreased the insulin release after glucose ingestion, but did not alter the basal insulin level. No effect on the fasting glucose concentration as well as on the glucose profiles during OGTT was observed after short-term DPH treatment. A smaller decrease of plasma free fatty acid concentration during OGTT performed after DPH administration confirmed the inhibitory effect of the drug on insulin release. Short-term DPH treatment was also shown to decrease markedly the postpradial insulin release in obese patients. No difference was noted between plasma 11-OHCS and serum HGH concentrations during OGTT before and after DPH treatment. The possible therapeutic role of DPH in
obesity
is discussed.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Effect of diphenylhydantoin on patterns of insulin secretion in obese subjects. 59 1
The insulin response to oral glucose and to i.v
tolbutamide
was stuied in a group of hyperuricemic subjects and in a group of weight-matched controls. Glucose tolerance was impaired only in obese hyperuricemic subjects. Insulin response to oral glucose was enhanced in hyperuricemic subjects.
Tolbutamide
gave rise to a sharp increase in IRI levels already 2 min after the injection and this rise was significantly higher in hyperuricemic subjects than in controls. The same result was observed also after i.v. fructose. The interpretation of these data is not easy. Uric acid plasma level and
obesity
do not seem to be directly involved because an abnormal IRI response has been observed also after a rapid fall in uric acid plasma level after allopurinol treatment and is evident also in lean subjects. In our opinion the problem is more complex and must be considered from the point of view of a change involving carbohydrate as well as purine metabolism.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Insulin release in hyperuricemic patients. 59 3
The behavior of HGH in basal conditions and after L-Dopa infusion was studied in a group of patients with diabetic retinopathy, in 9 obese and 8 control subjects. In both diabetics and obese subjects, increases found in HGH plasma levels after administration of the drug were slighter than in the controls. On the basis of these results it can be concluded that in diabetics the availability of energetic substrates may modify the HGH response to the L-Dopa stimulus. In
obesity
, the possibility is considered of a reversible response to the L-Dopa stimulus. In
obesity
, the possibility is considered of a reversible defect in the sensitivity of the dopaminergic receptors, induced by metabolic and endocrine factors.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Dopaminergic stimulation of HGH in diabetes mellitus and in obesity. 60 44
Epidemiologic data on the frequency of diabetes in the urban Greek population were lacking in Greece. Postpranadial urine samples of 21,410 inhabitants of a subturb of Athens were examined for glycosuria by two different enzymatic methods. It was found that 569 persons, i.e. 3.20% of the whole population aged 10 or more, presented postprandial glycosuria (cases of previously known diabetes were excluded); 417 persons out of these were submitted to an OGTT (50 g) and 135 new cases of diabetes were discovered. Glycosuria was associated with diabetes mostly in the age-groups above 40.
Obesity
was frequent among the newly discovered diabetes. Two thirds had abnormal blood sugar levels already in the fasting condition. The prevalence of non-diabetic glycosuria was 2.70% in males and 1.60% in females. The frequency of a family history positive for diabetes was found to be approximately twice as high in diabetics compared to subjects without glycosuria.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Prevalence of diabetes among glycosuric individuals in an urban area of Greece. 61 86
The early response of plasma insulin (IRI) to successive intravenous doses of 50, 100 and 200 mg of
tolbutamide
was studied in nondiabetic obese subjects, in acromegalic patients, and in healthy controls. The smallest dose raised the plasma IRI level within two minutes in all subjects. The insulin response was correlated with the basal IRI in controls and in obese subjects but not in acromegalic patients. At each
tolbutamide
dose level the mean IRI response of obese subjects was about three times greater than in controls. In acromegalic subjects an increased response was observed only after the 200 mg dose of
tolbutamide
. The results suggest that in
obesity
the stimulus-secretion coupling of insulin output is normal but the number of secretory units is increased. In acromegaly the insulin release pattern is compatible with an increased number of secretory units which, however, are relatively insensitive to
tolbutamide
, probably due to an elevated serum growth hormone level.
...
PMID:Response of plasma insulin to small doses of tolbutamide in obesity and acromegaly. 61 12
Two 5 g glucose loads at 1-h interval were given to healthy controls and obese subjects with slightly altered or normal OGTT in order to explore the capacity of restoration of the "rapid insulin response" to i.v. glucose. In the normal subjects, the two successive loads gave rise to identical responses as far as maximum increase (delta max), average increase at 2-5 min (delta 2-5 min), area of increase 0-15 min (delta 0-15 min) for both glucose and IRI, were concerned.
Obese
subjects could be divided on the basis of their insulin response to the first load into normal responders (group I) and high-responders (group II). In group I obese subjects, the responses to the second load were identical to those to the first. In group II obese subjects delta max, delta 2-5 min and delta 0-15 min of the insulin response to the second load were reduced as compared to the first.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Exploration of the early insulin response by two small successive loads of I.V. glucose in normal and obese subjects. 71 70
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