Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The metabolic mechanism for increased circulating free fatty acids in post-menopausal women with metastatic breast cancer was investigated. Hormone and metabolic response to glucose and growth hormone were compared to cancer patients and control subjects; thyroid, adrenal and pituitary function were evaluated. The results of these studies indicated that breast cancer patients had glucose intolerance and delayed and prolonged insulin secretion, increased basal growth hormone levels and insensitivity of adipose tissue to growth hormone. Cortisol and protein-bound iodine levels were normal and there was no lipolytic factor in the sera of breast cancer patients. The changes observed in breast cancer patients were not attributable to age, obesity, inanition or stress. These metabolic abnormalities may characterize host susceptibility to breast cancer or be effects of tumor.
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PMID:Metabolic parameters in women with metastatic breast cancer. 4 95

The Obese strain (OS) of chickens spontaneously develops autoimmune thyroiditis. Since a defect or abnormality of the thyroid gland may be involved in this disease experiments were performed to compare the iodine uptake of OS with normal thyroid glands. To minimize the interaction of the OS immune system with the thyroid gland during these studies, thyroids were removed from 16-day-old embryos and transferred to the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) of 9-day-old normal White Leghorn (NWL) embryos. NWL thyroid glands were transferred to the same CAM. Six days later the 20-hr 131I uptake of the transplants was determined. Twenty OS thyroid lobes had a mean 131I uptake of 2960 +/- 740 cpm, whereas the NWL thyroids incorporated significantly less iodine (890 +/- 160 cpm; p less than 0.025). These results, along with a previous report suggest that an abnormality of the thyroid gland might be an important factor in the development of autoimmune thyroiditis.
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PMID:Increased iodine uptake by obese strain thyroid glands transplanted to normal chick embryos. 94 10

Zucker obese rats (fa/fa), aged 8 to 10 weeks, were treated orally by benfluorex (2 x 25 mg.kg-1, day-1) for 2 weeks and were compared with a control group of the same age treated with placebo. Benfluorex induced a break in the weight curve, a significant fall in serum triglycerides, blood glucose and plasma insulin and in the insulin content of the pancreas. Following intrajugular injection of iodine 123 labelled insulin, the liver of the treated animals bound 25 percent more insulin than the liver of control animals. Conversely, the renal clearance of insulin of the treated animals was reduced in comparison to the placebo group. These studies confirm that, in an animal model of obesity associated with insulin resistance, benfluorex exerts a marked hypolipidemic effect and improves insulin resistance. They also demonstrate an increased targeting of insulin towards hepatic receptors either due to an increase in the hepatic blood flow or to an increase in the number of hepatic receptors or to an increase in the affinity of these receptors. However, speculative considerations make this last mechanistic hypothesis somewhat improbable.
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PMID:[Effects of chronic administration of benfluorex on the pharmacokinetics of iodine 123 labelled insulin in Zucker obese rats (fa/fa)]. 143 3

The postphlebitic syndrome is a significant management problem that affects a large number of patients. Primary prophylaxis of deep-vein thrombophlebitis would reduce the risk of developing the postphlebitic syndrome and should be considered in high-risk patients. Patients who have had a phlebitis should be monitored with noninvasive tests of the deep venous circulation for the development of venous valve incompetence. Patients with venous hypertension should be placed in compression stockings to prevent the postphlebitic syndrome. In patients who progress to venous ulceration, several aggressive measures must be undertaken. Systemic treatment includes management of obesity, edema, immobility, poor nutrition, and comorbid illnesses. Some patients may require a short hospitalization of bed rest, lower limb elevation, and daily dressings and wound care. Outpatient therapy requires sustained compression of 35 to 40 mmHg at the ankle for many months to allow the ulcer to heal. The standard bandage material is Unna's boots, which is applied every one to two weeks by a trained nurse. Cadexomer iodide is an effective local treatment that helps debride the ulcer and accelerate healing. Finally, pentoxifylline therapy has also been shown to significantly improve the healing of venous ulcers.
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PMID:Contemporary treatment of venous lower limb ulcers. 147 73

Adrenocortical scintigraphy with iodine 131-19-iodocholesterol or selenium 75-6-selenomethylcholesterol was performed in 94 patients with proven or suspected adrenal disease. According to the final diagnosis, 36 patients suffered from primary aldosteronism, 33 from Cushing's syndrome, 8 from low renin hypertension, 6 from nonfunctioning adrenal tumour, 4 from simple obesity, 3 from adrenal metastases, 1 from congenital adrenal hyperplasia, 1 from virilizing adrenal adenoma, 1 from extraadrenal phaeochromocytoma, 1 from ganglioneuroma. Surgical confirmation of the diagnosis was obtained in most cases. With a few exceptions, the scintigraphy results were consistent with the final diagnosis. The two tracers were equally effective adrenal scanning agents. Tracer concentration was measured in a number of surgical specimens, mostly from patients given selenocholesterol. This measurement in surgical samples has not been reported in previous studies with this agent. The results provided a direct validation of uptake measurements in vivo. The data, collected over a 17-year period, demonstrate that despite the advent of new imaging techniques, adrenal scintigraphy that gives both functional and morphologic information still has an important role in the diagnosis of adrenal disease.
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PMID:Clinical experience with the adrenal scanning agents iodine 131-19-iodocholesterol and selenium 75-6-selenomethylcholesterol. 174 5

Psittacines are often classified as seed eaters despite studies that have established great diversity in food habits in the wild. While seeds are consumed, so are flowers, buds, leaves, fruits and cambium. Some psittacines consume part of greater than 80 species of grasses, forbs, shrubs and trees. In addition, insects may be important. Although there are few controlled studies of the requirements of psittacines, it is probable that most nutrient needs are comparable to those of domesticated precocial birds that have been thoroughly studied. Commercial seed mixes for psittacines commonly contain corn, sunflower, safflower, pumpkin and squash seeds, wheat, peanuts, millet, oat groats and buckwheat, although other seeds may be present. Because hulls/shells comprise 18-69% of these seeds and they are removed before swallowing, a significant proportion of typical seed mixtures is waste. Some of the seeds also are very high in fat and promote obesity. Common nutrient deficiencies of decorticated seeds include lysine, calcium, available phosphorus, sodium, manganese, zinc, iron, iodine, selenium, vitamins A, D, E and K, riboflavin, pantothenic acid, available niacin, vitamin B-12 and choline. Attempts to correct these deficiencies by incorporating pellets into seed mixes are usually thwarted by rejection of the pellets and disproportionate consumption of items that are more highly favored. An extruded diet formulated to meet the projected nutrient needs of psittacines was fed with fruits and vegetables to eight species of psittacines for 1 y. Fledging percentage was increased to 90% from the 66% observed during the previous 2 y when these psittacines were fed seeds, fruits and vegetables. Although this extruded diet was well accepted in a mixture of fruits and vegetables and met nutrient needs, analyses have shown that not all commercial formulated diets are of equal merit.
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PMID:Formulated diets versus seed mixtures for psittacines. 194 Dec 26

A population-based case-control interview study was designed to test the hypothesis that dietary iodine or the consumption of goitrogenic vegetables increases the risk of thyroid cancer. A total of 191 histologically confirmed cases (64 percent female) and 441 matched controls from five ethnic groups in Hawaii were available for analysis. Among women, intake of seafood (especially shellfish), harm ha (a fermented fish sauce), and dietary iodine were associated with an increased risk of cancer, whereas consumption of goitrogenic (primarily cruciferous) vegetables was associated with a decreased risk. Non-dietary risk factors included miscarriage (especially at first pregnancy), use of fertility drugs, family history of thyroid disease, obesity, and work as a farm laborer. The odds ratio for the combined effect of a high iodine intake and a first-pregnancy miscarriage was 4.8 (95 percent confidence interval [CI] = 1.2-19.2); and for high iodine intake and use of fertility drugs 7.3 (95 percent CI = 1.5-34.5). Among men, positive associations were found for obesity, work as a farm laborer, and a past history of benign thyroid disease. Although this study identified several dietary and non-dietary risk factors for thyroid cancer, it could not fully explain the exceptionally high incidence rates among Filipino women in Hawaii.
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PMID:An epidemiologic study of thyroid cancer in Hawaii. 210 95

For many decades there has been adequate information for the elimination of acute dietary deficiency diseases. Scurvy, beri-beri, and pellagra, once serious scourges, are now seen only rarely. The severe forms of protein-energy malnutrition, kwashiorkor and marasmus, have also decreased greatly. Nonetheless, mild to moderate forms of protein-energy deficiency, exacerbated by infection, continue to impair growth and development in a majority of the low-income pre-school age populations of most developing countries. Deficiencies of iron, iodine, and vitamin A are still widespread in developing countries. Fortunately, the success of the WHO/UNICEF "Child Survival and Development Revolution" in persuading most developing countries to introduce expanded programs of immunization, growth monitoring, and appropriate feeding of young children, control of diarrheal disease, and specific campaigns against avitaminosis A, iodine deficiency disorders, and the functional consequences of iron deficiency, will accelerate the decline of acute deficiency diseases in the developing world. Diets are changing among the more affluent in these countries, however, and it is time for them to stress dietary goals for the health of rich and poor alike. For the first time there is enough information regarding dietary risk factors for chronic disease to provide an opportunity in the 1990s to accelerate the dietary changes that have already brought significant health benefits to some populations in North America and Europe. The changes, which include a lower dietary intake of fat, particularly saturated fat, less salt, and more green and yellow vegetable and whole grain cereals, can be expected to influence favorably morbidity from cardiovascular diseases and some kinds of cancer. For maximum benefit, these measures need to be combined with the avoidance of obesity, reasonable physical activity, abstention from, or moderate use of, alcohol, and avoidance of tobacco in any form. Since there is already considerable momentum toward these changes in North America and some European countries, the 1990s are likely to see substantial further progress in the reduction of chronic diseases known to be influenced by diet.
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PMID:Nutrition: prospects for the 1990s. 219 71

Dietary iodine has been shown to be important in the induction of thyroiditis in susceptible chicken strains although the underlying mechanism remains unknown. Iodine may exert its effects through the formation of reactive oxidative radicals which would cause thyroidal injury and initiate infiltration. We have tested this hypothesis by examining the ability of butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), ethoxyquin, and other antioxidants to prevent thyroiditis in Obese strain (OS) chickens, a strain that develops severe disease by 4 weeks of age. BHA, when administered from hatching until death at 5 weeks of age, reduced thyroidal infiltration and serum levels of antibodies binding thyroglobulin, T3, T4. Similar effects were observed with the antioxidant ethoxyquin. Weaker antioxidants such as vitamins C and E and beta-carotene had only slight or negligible effects on these parameters. BHA reduced thyroiditis in OS chicks killed at 3 and 5 weeks of age, but not at 8 weeks. When BHA treatment was initiated after the development of severe disease, it did not reduce thyroglobulin antibody levels. To determine the mechanism by which BHA reduces thyroiditis, studies were performed to assess the effect of BHA on thyroid function and on the immune responses to exogenous antigens. BHA had no effect on thyroid function in normal strain chickens since thyroidal radioiodine uptake and organification and serum T3 and T4 levels were unaffected. BHA did not alter immune responses to exogenous antigens such as sheep red blood cells or Brucella abortus in OS chickens. In summary, potent antioxidant drugs delayed the onset of thyroiditis when treatment was initiated before the onset of disease, suggesting that reactive oxygen intermediates are involved in the early stages of pathogenesis. However, the site of action remains unknown since they had no detectable effects on thyroid function or general immune responses.
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PMID:Antioxidants delay the onset of thyroiditis in obese strain chickens. 240 Dec 27

A variety of immunological, endocrinological, and virological abnormalities have been implicated in the etiopathogenesis of spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis (SAT) of Obese strain (OS) chickens, e.g., a general T cell hyperreactivity, an increased uptake of iodine into the thyroid gland, a diminution of the glucocorticoid tonus, and an OS-specific endogenous virus. In crosses of the close-bred OS B15/B15 subline with the inbred normal CB B12/B12 strain we have studied the mode of inheritance of these aberrations and their putative association with SAT. The results indicate that none of these OS-specific characteristics alone is an absolute prerequisite for the development of thyroid infiltration, which appears to be governed by one autosomal recessive gene.
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PMID:Immunogenetic analysis of spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis of obese strain chickens. 278 82


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