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

The clinical and biochemical features of eleven patients with Type V hyperlipoproteinaemia have been reviewed. All patients were male, and there was a high incidence in the group of obesity, vascular disease, acute abdominal pain, gout, diabetes mellitus and alcoholism. Plasma cholesterol concentrations ranged from 212 to 1512 mg/100ml and triglycerides from 708 to 7670 mg/100 ml. Lipaemia was associated with significant hyponatraemia, and also interfered with the determination of plasma glucose and serum amylase. Chylomicronaemia and hyperprebetalipoproteinaemia were accompanied by reduction in the pools of beta and alpha lipoproteins. All lipoprotein classes were relatively depleted of cholesterol compared to triglyceride. There was a variable pattern of treatment response. In some patients alcohol withdrawal produced a rapid improvement in plasma lipids. In diabetes mellitus there were two types of response: a rapid one in chronic insulin deficiency, and secondly, a more gradual one in mild diabetes associated with hyperinsulinaemia. In other patients there was a rapid response to carbohydrate-calorie restriction but the respective contributions of each of the steps remained unclear.
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PMID:Type V hyperlipoproteinaemia re-visted: findings in a sydney population. 16 79

Insulin receptor concentrations in liver plasma membranes of New Zealand Obese (NZO) mice have been studied. When NZO mice were implanted with normal islets of Langerhans their blood glucose and plasma insulin declined. When the implanted islets were removed these changes were reversed and the mice reverted to their insulin resistant state. Changes were observed in the binding of 125I-insulin to liver plasma membranes of implanted NZO mice. Binding increased when the plasma insulin was decreased and conversely insulin binding decreased when the plasma insulin levels became elevated. The increased insulin binding was not accompanied by any changes in the affinity of NZO liver receptors for insulin.
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PMID:The control of insulin receptors in the New Zealand obese mouse. 17 9

Lipid mobilizing substances (LMS) are present in the hypothalamus and pituitary of mammals and probably are involved in the central neural control of obesity. Most of these have direct lipolytic effects, like lipid mobilizing factor (LMF) and LH-RH from the hypothalamus as well as lipotropin (LPH), melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH), corticotropin (ACTH), and growth hormone (GH) from the pituitary gland. Some of the substances, like GH-release inhibiting hormone (GH-RIH), affect lipolysis by secondary actions on pancreatic hormones such as insulin and glucagon. Other hypothalamic hormones, like GH-releasing hormone (GH-RH) may influence lipolysis secondarily through the pituitary hormones (e.g. GH) whose release they control. Regardless of how lipid mobilization is affected, investigations into the problem of obesity should take these LMS into consideration.
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PMID:Lipid mobilizing hormones of the hypothalamus and pituitary. 17 3

Our review focuses on low density lipoprotein (LD lipoprotein) and very low density lipoprotein (VLD lipoprotein) in their roles as transporters of cholesterol and triglyceride and as factors contributing to premature arteriovascular disease. We describe the clinical manifestations of the common, primary hyperlipoproteinemias--that is, hyper-beta-lipoproteinemia, combined hyperlipoproteinemia, hyper-pre-beta-lipoproteinemia, and sporadic hyperlipoproteinemia--and discuss the variations in lipoprotein structure and metabolism that occur in these diseases. Based on an understanding of the physiologic control of lipoprotein metabolism, it is possible for the physician to alter the concentrations of LD lipoprotein and VLD lipoprotein by selecting a course of therapy appropriate to the specific disease. We describe the effects of obesity, diet, insulin, ethanol, estrogens, and the drugs clofibrate, nicotinic acid, and cholestyramine.
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PMID:The common hyperlipoproteinemias: an understanding of disease mechanisms and their control. 18 30

Using [125I]insulin at 172 pmol/1 (1 ng/ml) the binding of insulin to mononuclear leucocytes isolated from peripheral blood was studied. Our present study comprised 21 healthy subjects (22-33 years old, 90-110% of ideal weight) and a comparable group of 22 obese subjects (20-37 years old, minimum 150% of ideal weight). A significant difference in insulin binding was found between the two groups, the mean specific insulin binding fraction in normals being 1.92 +/- 0.58 (s) X 10(-2) and that for the obese 1.19 +/- 0.41 (s) X 10(-2) (P less than 0.01). No correlation was found between body weight and the number of insulin receptors in the obese subjects. However, the number of insulin receptors was negatively correlated to fat cell size (P less than 0.05). Insulin receptors in subjects were also negatively correlated to fasting plasma insulin (P less than 0.05). Insulin receptors were studied in 11 obese subjects before and after 10 days of fasting. A significant increase in the number of insulin receptors was observed with a simultaneous decrease in plasma insulin to normal values. The results indicate that obesity complicated by hyperinsulinism is associated with a decrease in the number of insulin receptors compared with the normal. This finding may in part explain the decreased insulin sensitivity of the hyperinsulinaemic obese.
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PMID:The insulin receptor in normal and obese persons. 18 73

The occurrence of insulin-degrading activity in the liver of the obese hyperglycemic mouse (ob/ob) and its litter mate has been studied. The trichloroacetic acid-soluble product formed from insulin upon incubation with liver homogenate was identified as the A chain of insulin. In Ouchterlony double-diffusion experiments with antibody to purified rat liver glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase, mouse liver homogenate and the microsomal fraction each gave a single precipitation band of identity with the purified rat liver enzyme. These results indicate that the insulin-degrading activity present in the mouse liver is, in fact, glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase. Subcellular distribution studies of glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase and marker enzymes indicate that the transhydrogenase is located primarily in the microsomal fraction of mouse liver homogenate. The ob/ob mouse, which is a genetic mutant characterized by obesity, hyperinsulinism and resistance to the hypoglycemic action of insulin, contains hepatic glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase activity (per mg microsomal protein) markedly higher (40--60%) than its lean litter mates. However, a major portion of the increased hepatic enzyme in the ob/ob mouse occurs in a latent state; the increased amount of enzyme either is unavailable or is nonfunctional, although the ob/ob mouse still contains more of the functional form than the lean mouse. Thus, the results are consistent with the suggestion that the hepatic glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase is probably under a feedback control by circulating insulin.
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PMID:Insulin degradation. XVIII. On the regulation of glutathione-insulin transhydrogenase in the hyperglycemic obese (ob/ob) mouse. 18 26

The first step in the action of polypeptide hormones and many neurotransmitters is binding to receptor sites on the plasma membrane of the cell. These receptors are usually complex, high molecular weight proteins. Using a variety of receptor preparations and radioactively labeled hormones, radioreceptor assays for several hormones have been developed. These have allowed for assay of hormones for which no immunoassay exists. Such assays have shown increased levels of NSILA-s (an insulin-like peptide) in patients with nonpancreatic tumors and hypoglycemia. In disease states, the number or affinity of hormone receptors may be altered, leading to hormone resistant states such as the insulin resistance of obesity. A major factor regulating receptor concentration is the hormone itself. Several hormones seem to accelerate inactivation of their own receptors. Antibodies to membrane receptors are produced in at least three diseases and cause hormone resistance or mimic states of hormone excess.
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PMID:Receptors for peptide hormones. New insights into the pathophysiology of disease states in man. 18 59

To determine if an effective method existed for distinguishing the physiologic hypoglycemia of fasting from pathologic hypoglycemia, 72-hour fasts were conducted in 60 women and 20 men of normal weight, in 16 obese subjects, and in six of 11 patient with insulinomas. Only the pattern of change of the immunoreactive-insulin-to-glucose ratio (the I/G ratio), calculated at major time intervals of the fast, provided a clear-cut distinction between these groups; plasma glucose values alone could not make this distinction. The mean fasting I/G ratio was calculated for each subject from that subject's I/G ratios at 12-hour intervals during the fasting period. In no single case did the mean I/G ratio during fasting for an individual of normal weight equal or exceed the control I/G. I/G ratios increased dramatically during fasting in each patient with an insulinomas. Normal obese patients (15% greater than ideal body weight) did not provide a diagnostic problem, since, regardless of sex, glucose values of less than 55 mg/dl. did not occur. Although the pattern of change of the I/G ratio was extremely useful, the basal I/G ratio alone was potentially misleading; this was due to overlap of basal I/G ratios between subjects with simple obesity and patients with insulinomas. In addition, absolute values for the I/G ratio varied with the technique employed for measuring glucose and insulin. Change of the I/G ratio, however, was independent of the techniques used for measuring glucose and insulin. DIABETES 26:161-65, March, 1977.
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PMID:Hypoglycemia in man pathologic and physiologic variants. 19 73

When insulin or any peptide hormone binds to its receptor on the surface of a target cell, it initiates a series of biochemical steps that ultimately lead to the characteristic action of the hormone. The strength of the signal generated by the hormone depends equally on the hormone concentration, the receptor concentration, and the receptor affinity. Not only do hormone concentrations change rapidly and widely in vivo but so do receptor concentration and affinity. In hormone resistant states, any step in the biochemical pathway of hormone action at the target cell may be involved. Studies of insulin receptors in people indicate that the insulin receptor is altered in many common disorders such as obesity and diabetes, as well as in rare disorders such as extreme insulin resistance due to circulating antibodies directed at the insulin receptor itself. By responding to both intracellular and extracellular events, the insulin receptor is, therefore, a major site for the regulation of target cell responsiveness in vivo.
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PMID:Insulin receptor status in disease states of man. 19 62

The diagnosis of florid Cushing's syndrome is usually made without difficulty but diagnostic problems may arise. Five such cases are described. Difficulties may occur when the features of the syndrome are incomplete. Three such cases were encountered. In each only one clinical feature was present; these respectively were hypertension, osteoporosis and obesity. The diagnosis was confirmed, however, biochemically and eventually histologically and there was a good response to surgery in each case. Another diagnostic problem, both clinically and biochemically is the obese, hirsute, hypertensive female. Two such cases are described, in whom Cushing's syndrome was diagnosed clinically and biochemically but in whom there was no response to adrenalectomy. Retrospectively the validity of the original diagnosis is questioned. It is concluded that Cushing's syndrome may present in a very incomplete form and should be considered in the differential diagnosis, even if only one feature is present. It is stressed that obesity, hirsutism, hypertension and depression are commonly found in association with normal adrenal function. Urinary free cortisol and cortisol response to insulin induced hypoglycaemia may be of value in distinguishing these cases from those with endocrine disease.
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PMID:Problems in the diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome. 19 80


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