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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the past half-century the prevalence of
obesity
in developed countries has increased greatly. Such short-term changes in prevalence must be environmentally determined, but genes can mediate response to environmental change, for example, through variable gene penetrance and expression.
Obesity
differences between bith cohorts complicate the interpretation of phenotypic comparisons between generations that span periods of change. Genetic segregation analyses of the body mass index in 618
Pima
Indian nuclear families (2 generations) identified recessive major gene inheritance, which is the same pattern of transmission that has been found in several other populations. However, within-birth-cohort analyses of siblings (one generation) uniformly supported codominant major gene inheritance with no polygenic heritability. For untransformed data transmission probabilities were Mendelian in the later-born cohort and in the combined sample of siblings. After transformation to remove skewness, transmission probabilities were Mendelian only in the earlier-born cohort (i.e., those siblings born before a period of marked temporal increase following World War II). A higher penetrance of codominant
obesity
susceptibility genes in the younger generation would result in some genetically obese individuals who have no affected parents, thus simulating recessive inheritance. Taken together, the results of these analyses suggest that the recessive pattern we identified in the
Pima
Indian nuclear families could be accounted for by temporal changes in penetrance of codominant
obesity
-predisposing genes. By implication, more modest temporal increases in white and black populations could in part account for the recessive pattern of inheritance described by several investigators.
...
PMID:Obesity in Pima Indians: genetic segregation analyses of body mass index complicated by temporal increases in obesity. 819 46
Carbohydrate intake stimulates sympathetic nervous system activity in lean subjects, whereas in obese subjects, the results have been inconsistent. The aim of this study was to directly measure sympathetic neural outflow to skeletal muscle in response to a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in 15
Pima
Indian and 16 Caucasian men, matched for body fat and age, but covering a large range of body weight (57-113 kg) and body fat (4-41%). Fasting muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) correlated positively with body fat (r = 0.73; P = 0.001) in Caucasians but not in
Pima
Indians, whereas the increase in MSNA during the OGTT correlated negatively with the percentage of body fat (r = -0.38, P = 0.03) independently of race. In each subject, the increase in MSNA over time correlated positively with the increase in plasma insulin levels, but the slopes of these relationships were inversely related to the percentage of body fat (r = -0.52, P = 0.003) independently of race. In conclusion,
obesity
is associated with a higher fasting sympathetic neural outflow to muscle but a blunted increase in response to an oral glucose load despite a larger increase in plasma insulin levels. This blunted response may represent another feature of the
obesity
/insulin resistance syndrome.
...
PMID:Muscle sympathetic nerve activity in response to glucose ingestion. Impact of plasma insulin and body fat. 828 42
Several studies have shown secular increases in
obesity
during the past 35 years, and others have reported increases in dietary fat consumption during the same period. Here we report a dramatic increase in
obesity
among
Pima
Indians born after World War II that appears to be associated with increased exposure to Western customs and diet following 1945. We examined the body mass index (BMI = weight in kilograms/height2 in meters) of 1,128 male and 1,372 female
Pima
Indians aged 15-65 years who were born between 1901 and 1964 and were examined between 1965 and 1990. We found large increases in BMI among
Pima
Indian men and women in post-World War II birth cohorts (1945 and later). The parallel changes in body mass index, dietary fat, and exposure to Western culture following World War II suggest that culturally mediated changes in diet and level of physical activity associated with modern industrialized society may have led to the large increases in
obesity
in the
Pima
Indians and to smaller parallel changes observed worldwide in westernized countries.
...
PMID:Obesity in Pima Indians: large increases among post-World War II birth cohorts. 829 76
A low ratio of whole-body 24-h fat/carbohydrate (CHO) oxidation has been shown to be a predictor of subsequent body weight gain. We tested the hypothesis that the variability of this ratio may be related to differences in skeletal muscle metabolism. Since lipoprotein lipase (LPL) plays a pivotal role in partitioning lipoprotein-borne triglycerides to adipose (storage) and skeletal muscle (mostly oxidation), we postulated that a low ratio of fat/CHO oxidation was associated with a low skeletal muscle LPL (SMLPL) activity. As an index of substrate oxidation, 24-h RQ was measured under sedentary and eucaloric conditions in 16 healthy nondiabetic
Pima
males. During a 6-h euglycemic, hyperinsulinemic clamp, muscle biopsies were obtained at baseline, 3, and 6 h. Heparin-elutable SMLPL activity was 2.92 +/- 0.56 nmol free fatty acids/g.min (mean +/- SD) at baseline, was unchanged (2.91 +/- 0.51) at the third hour, and increased significantly (P < 0.05) to 3.13 +/- 0.57 at the sixth hour of the clamp. The mean (of baseline and 3-h) SMLPL activity correlated inversely with 24-h RQ (r = 0.57, P < 0.03) but not with body size, body composition, or insulin-mediated glucose uptake. Since SMLPL activity is related to the ratio of whole body fat/CHO oxidation rate, a decreased muscle LPL activity may, therefore, predispose to
obesity
.
...
PMID:Relationship between skeletal muscle lipoprotein lipase activity and 24-hour macronutrient oxidation. 832 10
A low metabolic rate for a given body size and body composition may be a risk factor for body weight gain. Because the prevalence of
obesity
exceeds 75% in the
Pima
Indian population, we investigated whether
Pima
Indian children have a low resting metabolic rate (RMR) when compared with Caucasian children. Body composition (bioelectrical resistance) and RMR were measured in 43
Pima
Indian children (22 male/21 female, means +/- SD = 9.9 +/- 1.1 year) and 42 Caucasian children (21 male/21 female, 9.7 +/- 1.2 year).
Pima
Indian children were taller (p < 0.001), heavier (p < 0.001), and fatter (p < 0.0001) than Caucasian children. Absolute values of RMR were higher in the Pimas than in the Caucasians (p < 0.001), but were similar when adjusted for differences in body size, body composition, and sex. In
Pima
Indian girls before puberty (< 10 years; n = 8), adjusted values of RMR were negatively correlated with the mean body mass index (BMI) of the parents (r = -0.88; p < 0.005). Inasmuch as resting metabolic rate was not low in
Pima
children, the data suggest that the major factors in the weight gain of 10-year-old
Pima
children may be reduced physical activity and/or excess energy intake. However, this study does not exclude the possibility that a low metabolic rate may be a predisposing factor at an earlier age.
...
PMID:Metabolic rate and body composition of Pima Indian and Caucasian children. 835 98
The relationships between physical activity,
obesity
, fat distribution and glucose tolerance were examined in the
Pima
Indians who have the highest documented incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Fasting and 2-h post-load plasma glucose concentrations, body mass index, and waist-to-thigh circumference ratios were determined in 1054 subjects aged 15-59 years. Current (during the most recent calendar year) and historical (over a lifetime) leisure and occupational physical activity were determined by questionnaire. Current physical activity was inversely correlated with fasting and 2-h plasma glucose concentrations, body mass index and waist-to-thigh ratios for most sex-age groups even when diabetic subjects were excluded. Controlled for age,
obesity
and fat distribution, activity remained significantly associated with 2-h plasma glucose concentrations in males. In subjects aged 37-59 years, individuals with diabetes compared to those without reported significantly less leisure physical activity during the teenage years (median hours per week of activity, 9.1 vs 13.2 for men; 1.0 vs 2.2 for women). Controlled for body mass index, sex, age and waist-to-thigh ratio, subjects who reported low levels of historical leisure physical activity had a higher rate of diabetes than those who were more active. In conclusion, current physical activity was inversely related to glucose intolerance,
obesity
and central distribution of fat, particularly in males. Subjects with diabetes were currently less active and reported less historical physical activity than non-diabetic subjects. These findings suggest that activity may protect against the development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes both directly and through an influence on
obesity
and fat distribution.
...
PMID:The association of physical activity with obesity, fat distribution and glucose intolerance in Pima Indians. 840 59
The sympathetic nervous system is recognized to play a role in the etiology of animal and possibly human
obesity
through its impact on energy expenditure and/or food intake. We, therefore, measured fasting muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in the peroneal nerve and its relationship with energy expenditure and body composition in 25 relatively lean
Pima
Indian males (means +/- SD; 26 +/- 6 yr, 82 +/- 19 kg, 28 +/- 10% body fat) and 19 Caucasian males (29 +/- 5 yr, 81 +/- 13 kg, 24 +/- 9% body fat). 24-h energy expenditure, sleeping metabolic rate, and resting metabolic rate were measured in a respiratory chamber, whereas body composition was estimated by hydrodensitometry.
Pima
Indians had lower MSNA than Caucasians (23 +/- 6 vs 33 +/- 10 bursts/min, P = 0.0007). MSNA was significantly related to percent body fat in Caucasians (r = 0.55, P = 0.01) but not in Pimas. MSNA also correlated with energy expenditure adjusted for fat-free mass, fat mass, and age in Caucasians (r = 0.51, P = 0.03; r = 0.54, P = 0.02; and r = 0.53, P = 0.02 for adjusted 24-h energy expenditure, sleeping metabolic rate, and resting metabolic rate, respectively) but not in
Pima
Indians. In conclusion, the activity of the sympathetic nervous system is a determinant of energy expenditure in Caucasians. Individuals with low resting MSNA may be at risk for body weight gain resulting from a lower metabolic rate. A low resting MSNA and the lack of impact of MSNA on metabolic rate might play a role in the etiology of
obesity
in
Pima
Indians.
...
PMID:Reduced sympathetic nervous activity. A potential mechanism predisposing to body weight gain. 840 25
NIDDM in
Pima
Indians is characterized by
obesity
, abnormal insulin secretion, insulin resistance, and excess hepatic glucose output. Cross-sectional studies, and, as yet incomplete longitudinal studies of nondiabetic and diabetic
Pima
Indians suggest that the natural history of the disease begins with insulin resistance and, subsequently, when insulin secretion fails, increasing hepatic glucose output occurs, resulting in increasing fasting hyperglycemia. The insulin resistance that precedes the development of fasting hyperglycemia is not due solely to
obesity
. Insulin resistance aggregates in families and the trimodel frequency distribution of insulin action in vivo suggests it may have genetic determinants.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance in the pathogenesis of NIDDM in Pima Indians. 842 80
Insulin action in vivo varies widely in nondiabetic
Pima
Indians. Not all of this variance is attributable to individual differences in
obesity
, physical fitness, sex, or age, and after correcting for these co-variates, measures of insulin action aggregate in families. Insulin action at maximally stimulating insulin concentrations has a trimodal frequency distribution, particularly among obese individuals. This is consistent with the hypothesis that a codominantly inherited autosomal gene, unrelated to
obesity
, determines MaxM in the population. Preliminary sib-pair linkage analyses indicated the possibility of linkage between MaxM and the GYPA/B locus (encoding the MNSs red cell surface antigens) on chromosome 4q. To confirm and extend these findings, 10 additional loci on 4q were typed in 123 siblings and many of their parents from 46 nuclear families. The results indicate significant (P < 0.001) linkage of the FABP2 and ANX5 loci on 4q with MaxM, and of FABP2 with fasting insulin concentration. No linkage was found between the 4q markers and
obesity
. Our findings indicate that a gene on 4q, near the FABP2 and ANX5 loci, contributes to in vivo insulin action in
Pima
Indians.
...
PMID:Linkage of chromosomal markers on 4q with a putative gene determining maximal insulin action in Pima Indians. 845 1
Recent reports suggest that the white blood cell (WBC) count is related to plasma insulin concentrations and insulin resistance in healthy individuals. The present study examines whether these relations are independent of
obesity
and the pattern of body fat distribution and tests whether race and gender affect these relations. WBC counts, insulin responses to a 75 gram oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and glucose disposal during a two-step hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp were measured in 300 men and women (149
Pima
Indians, 100 whites, and 51 blacks) with a wide range of
obesity
. WBC counts were lower in blacks than
Pima
Indians or whites and tended to be higher in women than men. The subgroups were comparable in age and body weight, but percent body fat and plasma insulin concentrations were higher and glucose disposal during the glucose clamp was lower in
Pima
Indians than in blacks or whites. In the group as a whole, the WBC count correlated with
obesity
(body mass index and percent body fat), the waist to thigh ratio (an index of the pattern of body fat distribution), and plasma insulin concentrations and was negatively related to age and glucose disposal during the clamp. In multiple regression analyses, only age, race and
obesity
were significantly associated with the WBC count. When the analyses were restricted to
Pima
men, in whom correlations between the WBC count and the metabolic variables appeared the strongest, the WBC count remained significantly associated with plasma insulin concentrations, but not glucose disposal, after controlling for age and
obesity
. The results of this study indicate that age, race, and
obesity
are significantly associated with the WBC count in healthy individuals. Plasma insulin concentrations, but not insulin resistance per se, may also be weakly associated with the WBC count, but this may be population specific.
...
PMID:Relation of the white blood cell count to obesity and insulin resistance: effect of race and gender. 865 33
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