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

Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy has been diagnosed in a 35-year-old woman who presented recurrent cutaneous ossifications of the auricular area. The patient exhibited other cutaneous ossifications, a short stature with obesity, round face, stocky hands and feet, radiological calcifications of the skull and of the hands, cataract, auditive impairment and dental abnormalities. Serum calcium, phosphorus and parathyroid hormone levels were normal. Urine excretion of phosphorus and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) markedly increased after intravenous injection of parathyroid hormone, referring to pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism. Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy is associated either with pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1a characterized by parathyroid hormone and other hormones resistance or with pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism without hormone resistance. This two conditions are considered variants of the same defect of the stimulatory G protein of adenylate cyclase which is necessary for the action of parathyroid hormone, and other hormones to use cAMP as an intracellular second messenger. But Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy may be associated with other biochemical abnormalities, such as defect of catalytic activity of adenylate cyclase in pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1c. There is an important variability of the clinical, biochemical and genetical expression of pseudohypoparathyroidism and today classification is provisional.
...
PMID:[Cutaneous osteoma and Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy]. 770 69

Caloric and fat intake may have important skeletal consequences. To evaluate this possibility, skeletal effects of adult-onset caloric restriction (CR) at differing fat intakes were assessed in male Lobund-Wistar rats. At age 17 months, two groups of animals received an anti-obesity diet, restricted approximately 35% from individual ad libitum baseline calorie consumption, and two groups received a diet approximately 50% restricted. Dietary fat concentrations were 5, 15, 15, and 25% by weight, respectively. At ages 20, 24, 28, 30, and 32 months, ex vivo femoral bone densitometry and serum biochemical analyses were performed. Body weight (BW) decreased with time on CR in each group (p < .005), declining faster at the more severe restriction (p = .001). Femoral bone mineral contents (BMC) were also reduced. After adjusting for bone area and BW differences among groups, the only significant difference was a reduction in distal femur BMC in the 25% fat group subjected to more severe CR (p = .02). No differences were observed in serum parathyroid hormone, calcium, phosphorus, or creatinine. Femoral bone loss occurred with CR. This was entirely accounted for by reduction in BW. Higher dietary fat content did not affect BW in CR animals, but did result in lower distal femur BMC.
...
PMID:Influence of fat intake and caloric restriction on bone in aging male rats. 900 54

An artificial skeleton was designed and placed inside a bottle manikin absorber phantom to provide a new reference standard for measurements of total body calcium by in vivo neutron activation analysis at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The composition of the epoxy-based calcium and phosphorus mixture used to construct the skeleton, the dimensions and weight of each bone are given for two phantoms representing an adult male and female. Also, the dimensions, composition, and weights of overlays designed to simulate the influence of obesity on in vivo neutron activation analysis are given for each.
...
PMID:A modified bottle manikin phantom for in vivo neutron activation analysis. 903 Aug 46

African teenagers with slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) not infrequently also have genu valgum (knock-knee). Because we had previously demonstrated metabolic bone disease attributable to dietary calcium deficiency in black teenagers with genu valgum, we examined 29 black teenagers (15 male, 14 female) with SCFE for metabolic bone disease. Each patient had an iliac crest bone biopsy taken (after double tetracycline labeling) for routine histomorphometry, and blood and urine samples for bone biochemistry. Spinal bone mineral density was measured in 13 patients. Compared to reported data, we found our patients to be sexually more immature, older, at least as obese, and to have more severe and more frequently bilateral hip disease. Eighty percent of the children took dairy products only once or twice a week or less frequently, and 37.9% had genu valgum. Compared with race- and age-matched South Africans, bone biopsies in our patients showed lower bone volume (BV/TV, p = 0.0003), wall thickness (p = 0.0002), and trabecular thickness (Tb.Th, p = 0.0002), and a tendency to greater trabecular spacing (Tb.Sp, p = 0.053). Lower osteoid volume (OV/BV, p = 0.0001), osteoid surface (OS/BS, p = 0.0001), osteoid thickness (O.Th, p = 0.0002), double labeled surface (dLS/BS, p = 0.029), and bone formation rate (BFR/BS, p = 0.037) suggested poorer bone forming capacity in our patients. No evidence of hyperparathyroid bone disease or osteomalacia was found. BV/TV was below the reference range (14.2%) in 65.5% of cases; these patients had lower values for Tb.Th (p = 0.037) and Tb.N (p = 0.0003), greater Tb.Sp (p = 0.0002), a tendency to lower adjusted apposition rate (Aj.AR, p = 0.057), and had had less frequent intake of dairy products than those with normal BV/TV (p = 0.024). Furthermore, months since menarche correlated with histomorphometric variables BV/TV (r = 0.667, p = 0.009), Tb.Th (r = 0.745, p = 0.002), Tb.Sp (r = -0.549, p = 0.042), O.Th (r = 0.784, p = 0.0009), and Aj.AR (r = 0.549, p = 0.042). The correlation between Tb.Th and spinal bone mineral content (r = 0.656, p = 0.015) suggests that the reduced trabecular thickness reflected a generalized bone condition. A greater than normal proportion of patients had spinal bone mineral density values below -1 standard deviation (SD) of the mean (osteopenia) (p = 0.001). Patients tested for parathyroid hormone and 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels were found to have normal values. Parathyroid hormone correlated with Aj.AR (r = 0.661, p = 0.038) and serum phosphorus (r = -0.764, p = 0.010). We conclude that sexual immaturity and possibly past dietary calcium deficiency contributed to osteopenia, and that this, together with obesity, led to the development of more severe and more frequently bilateral SCFE in our patients than in reported series of black and white children.
...
PMID:Bone disease in African children with slipped capital femoral epiphysis: histomorphometry of iliac crest biopsies. 951 18

The energy ration value and supply of the main nutrients were studied by 24-h reproduction before and after operations in 33 morbid obesity patients who had undergone vertical gastroplastic surgery. The surgery was accompanied by reducing of surplus mass of the body by 25-71.7% and at the same time by reducing caloric content of the ration from average 4726.9 kcal before the operation to 1087 kcal during the first three months after the operation followed by a rise to 1490.0 kcal in 12-24 months. The deficient quota of protein and stable reduction of consumption of vitamins E, PP, B2, B1, potassium, magnesium, phosphorus were stated in postoperative rations (to 40-50% from recommended rates). The diet recommended after restricting operations on the stomach for obese patients on principles of diets for obesity patients was designed. The need to use protein-vitamin-mineral additives with individually adjusted compositions and dosages is shown.
...
PMID:[The nutrition of patients who have undergone vertical gastroplasty for severe forms of obesity]. 1039 25

Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are required for the dephosphorylation of the insulin receptor (IR) and its initial cellular substrates, and it has recently been reported that PTP-1B may play a role in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM). We therefore determined the amount and activity of PTP-1B in abdominal adipose tissue obtained from lean nondiabetic subjects (lean control (LC)), obese nondiabetic subjects (obese control (OC)), and subjects with both type 2 DM (DM2) and obesity (obese diabetic (OD)). PTP-1B protein levels were 3-fold higher in OC than in LC (1444 +/- 195 U vs 500 +/- 146 U (mean +/- SEM), P < .015), while OD exhibited a 5.5-fold increase (2728 +/- 286 U, P < .01). PTP activity was assayed by measuring the dephosphorylating activity toward a phosphorus 32-labeled synthetic dodecapeptide. In contrast to the increased PTP-1B protein levels, PTP-1B activity per unit of PTP-1B protein was markedly reduced, by 71% and 88% in OC and OD, respectively. Non-PTP-1B tyrosine phosphatase activity was comparable in all three groups. Similar results were obtained when PTP-1B activity was measured against intact human IR. A significant correlation was found between body mass index (BMI) and PTP-1B level (r = 0.672, P < .02), whereas BMI and PTP-1B activity per unit of PTP-1B showed a strong inverse correlation (r = -0.801, P < .002). These data suggest that the insulin resistance of obesity and DM2 is characterized by the increased expression of a catalytically impaired PTP-1B in adipose tissue and that impaired PTP-1B activity may be pathogenic for insulin resistance in these conditions.
...
PMID:Marked impairment of protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B activity in adipose tissue of obese subjects with and without type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1044 21

Patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) are at increased risk for pathological calcifications because of increased serum calcium-phosphorus products. A minority, including those undergoing dialysis, develop a syndrome of deep skin ulcerations in association with calcification of subcutaneous arterioles. The body distribution of the skin lesions may be proximal (central), distal (peripheral), or both. Since 1968, this syndrome has been called "calciphylaxis" in the belief that it is the human analogue of Selye's experimental models of tissue calcification. Our review emphasizes that this syndrome comprises two separate processes not found in calciphylaxis: calcification of subcutaneous arterioles and infarctions of subcutaneous adipose tissue (panniculus adiposus) and skin. The infarctions are acute and clinically dramatic, whereas the calcific arteriolopathy is preexistent, having developed slowly, sometimes over years, and silently. Separating these two processes facilitates analyses of pathogenetic factors, such as those that target subcutaneous arterioles for calcification and those that interfere with blood flow through the calcified arterioles, sufficient in some patients to cause the infarctions, and of why obesity in CRF is a syndrome risk factor. This approach further helps to provide a much needed standardized definition of the syndrome, thereby facilitating comparisons of the results of such treatments as parathyroidectomy, anticoagulants, and phosphate binders. Finally, the separation shows why the application of such terms as calciphylaxis and calcifying panniculitis to this syndrome is inappropriate.
...
PMID:Calcified subcutaneous arterioles with infarcts of the subcutis and skin ("calciphylaxis") in chronic renal failure. 1073 77

Although vitamin D deficiency has been well-documented following gastric bypass surgery, there are few studies of vitamin D status in the non-operative morbidly obese patient. We examined 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) levels in 60 morbidly obese pre-operative females; 62% of them had 25-OHD levels below normal range (16-74 ng/ml) which were not associated with reductions in serum calcium or phosphorus, liver or kidney dysfunction, and were not significantly correlated to patients' age. However, 25-OHD levels were significantly (p < 0.0001) and negatively correlated to body mass (r = -0.49). These data suggest that low vitamin D may be associated with obesity per se. Hypovitaminosis D, when it is found in post-bariatric surgery patients, may not be caused by the surgery since it may have been present to some degree pre-operatively.
...
PMID:Vitamin D Deficiency in the Morbidly Obese. 1075 56

Total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) and time spent for activities of different intensities (heart rate monitoring method), as well as dietary and food habits (24-hour dietary recall) in two groups of 12-14 year-old boys, including 35 obese (weight 67.0 kg +/- 9.3, height 162 cm +/- 7.6) and 35 control group boys (weight 46.0 kg +/- 6.5, height 160 cm +/- 7.5) were estimated. Obese boys spent more time at rest and less time on physical activities than nonobese (p < 0.001). That resulted in differences of TDEE expressed per unit of body mass (p < 0.001). Time for sleeping and time in school was not statistically different in the two groups. The evaluation of nutritional habits indicated that the obese boys, when compared with controls, had higher energy intake and significantly higher percentage of fat energy in total energy intake, low intake of fruits and vegetables and irregular frequency of meals during the day. Diets of boys were not balanced with respect to calcium and phosphorus.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of total energy balance and food habits of obese children]. 1101 66

The amount of alcohol intake has been increasing in Japan. We investigated whether this might affect dietary habits in middle-aged men. In 1989, we conducted a health examination of 809 Japanese males aged 40-69. Food and nutrient intakes were estimated from 24-hour dietary recall. Mean values of total energy, protein, fat, and carbohydrate were evaluated according to alcohol intake. Consumption of total calories and proteins, especially animal proteins, increased and carbohydrate intake decreased proportionately with the amount of alcohol intake. Meat, fish, and soybean intake were increased in heavy drinker, along with niacin, sodium, and phosphorus intake. Despite their higher caloric intake, moderate and heavy drinkers were not more obese than non- or light-drinkers. Japanese heavy drinkers took more animal protein and sodium instead of carbohydrate compared to non- and light- drinkers. In our series, heavy drinking was not related to obesity.
...
PMID:[Effect of alcohol intake on dietary habits and obesity in Japanese middle-aged men]. 1114 57


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>