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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In monkeys (Macaca mulatta) without hypothalamic lesions, food intake was found to increase with increasing age and body weight; however, food intake per kilogram body weight showed a decline over the same period of time. As the animals became older, the amount of food intake converted to body weight decreased dramatically (feeding efficiency).
Water
intake was shown to be closely coupled to food intake. Both daily food and
water
-intake data were highly reliable over a period of years. Monkeys with ventromedial hypothalamic lesions exhibited hyperphagia and increased feeding-efficiency ratios and eventual
obesity
. The obese animals developed symptoms of diabetes mellitus. Animals with lesions restricted primarily to the arcuate nucleus showed no hyperphagia but increased feeding efficiency. These animals exhibited decreased growth hormone release and a transitory elevation of serum insulin.
...
PMID:Feeding behavior in monkeys with and without lesions of the hypothalamus. 81 9
The following methods for determining the body composition of obese individuals were compared: hydrostatic weighing; determination of total body
water
(distribution of antipyrine and of tritium oxide); determination of the total potassium content of the body; determination of the amount of excreted creatinine. The values for body fat which derived from the body density, from the total potassium content and from the distribution of antipyrine differed only to a small extent. These differences were not significant. But the value based on tritium oxide distribution differed significantly. The study of the body composition of obese individuals has clearly shown that the increase in body weight is significantly correlated with the increase in the proportion of fat in the body (r=0.444), with the increase in the absolute fat content (r=+0.898) and also with the increase in the proportion of lean body mass (r=0.826). Not only the fat (61.2%) but also the lean body mass (38.8%) contributes to the weight increase of obese individuals. The quantitative determination of the fat content of the body and of the fat-free substance not only serves to specify the diagnosis of
obesity
(in particular, it permits to detect the so-called latent
obesity
) but is also the basis of the assessment of certain function, e.g., energy metabolism. The effectiveness of different methods for losing weight may be evaluated by repeated determinations of the fat content and for the lean body mass.
...
PMID:[Possibilities for determining body composition of man in relation to obesity]. 82 Sep 99
These studies were designed to determine whether genetically and experimentally induced hypertriglyceridemia were correlated with hyperlipogenesis, and whether inhibiting fatty acid synthesis would reduce serum triglyceride levels. Hypertrigylceridemia, resulting from genetic
obesity
in Zucker rats and fructose feeding or Triton administration to Charles River rats, was examined in relation to in vivo rates of heatic fatty acid synthesis, and the influence of (--)-hydroxycitrate (a potent competitive inhibitor of ATP citrate lyase) on serum triglyceride levels and lipogenesis was determined. Zucker obese rats demonstrated significantly increased rates of fatty acid synthesis and levels of serum triglycerides compared to their lean litter mates; lipogenic rates and circulating triglycerides were reduced markedly by the oral administration of (--)-hydroxycitrate. Fructose administered in the diet or drinking
water
induced a hypertriglyceridemia which was associated with a marked increase in hepatic lipogenesis, and (--)-hydroxycitrate reduced significantly both parameters. In contrast to the significant role that increased rates of lipogenesis apparently played in the development of hypertriglyceridemia in the Zucker rat and fructose-fed rat, Triton given intravenously produced a marked rise in serum triglycerides which could not be accounted for, to an appreciate extent, by increased rates of fatty acid synthesis. (--)-Hydroxycitrate reduced serum triglyceride levels and hepatic lipogenic rates equivalently in the Triton-treated and nontreated rats.
...
PMID:Metabolic regulation as a control for lipid disorders. II. Influence of (--)-hydroxycitrate on genetically and experimentally induced hypertriglyceridemia in the rat. 85 44
A simple method for the preparation of hepatocytes in good yield from obese rats is described. Lipogenesis from [U-14C]-lactate, [U-14C]-glucose and tritiated
water
has been investigated in hepatocytes prepared from both genetically obese 'fatty' rats and their lean littermates. Hepatocytes from obese rats demonstrate elevated rates of fatty acid and sterol synthesis in contrast to hepatocytes from lean animals. The rate of fatty acid synthesis is sensitive to the dietary status of the animal prior to preparation. The enhanced lipogenesis in hepatocytes from obese rate depends on lactate as a source of carbon rather than glucose. The role of the liver in genetic
obesity
is discussed with particular reference to the major precursor for hepatic lipogenesis.
...
PMID:Lipogenesis in hepatocytes of genetically obese rats. 89 95
Total starvation is effective for acute weight reduction in
obesity
. However, in 200 patients, most of whom also had internal diseases, 8% exhibited sometimes severe complications, i.e. reversible cerebral ischemia in 3 hypertensive patients when the blood pressure was lowered to the normal range by natriuresis of fasting; breakdown of
water
and electrolyte homeostasis with circulatory collapse, vomiting and vertigo; acute crises of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and porphyria respectively and increase of transaminases up to 200 mu/ml, or cardiac arrhythmias. Relative (?) contraindications for total fasting appear to be clinical sings of arteriosclerosis such as vascular bruits, angina pectoris and intermittent claudication. In case of doubt, the method should only be used in hospital.
...
PMID:[Complications in null-diet]. 91 86
Hyperphagia and
obesity
are produced both by parasagittal knife cuts through the medial hypothalamus and by coronal knife cuts through the posterior hypothalamus. The results of this study indicate that the two types of cuts produce their overeating effect by severing the same neural pathway. Experiment 1 demonstrated that unilateral parasagittal knife cuts combined with contralateral coronal cuts in either the posterior hypothalamus or the midbrain significantly increase food intake and body weight. Experiment 2 revealed that bilateral parasagittal cuts and bilateral coronal cuts in the hypothalamus produce qualitatively similar effects on food intake, diurnal ingestive pattern, finickiness, and amphetamine anorexia. The two types of cuts differentially altered
water
intake, however. In Experiment 3, coronal cuts in the posterior hypothalamus, like parasagittal cuts in the medial hypothalamus, were found to increase the food intake and body weight of rats previously given bilateral parasagittal transections through the lateral perifornical region. The neuroanatomy and neurochemistry of the longitudinal feeding inhibitory pathway suggested by these results are discussed.
...
PMID:Hyperphagia and obesity produced by parasagittal and coronal hypothalamic knife cuts: further evidence for a longitudinal feeding inhibitory pathway. 92 5
Body fat and the fat-free mass (FFM) were estimated in 36 men and 43 women deliberately chosen to represent a variety of physical types; these were 1) young sedentary, 2) "muscular," 3) younger obese, 4) older obese, and 5) older nonobese individuals of both sexes. The body fat and the FFM were estimated from measurements of body density (by total immersion in
water
, measurement being made of the residual volume of air present in the lungs at immersion) and from measurements of total body potassium (using a whole-body monitor to assess the natural 40K isotope present in the body). The muscular men and women and the younger obese men and women had a considerably greater FFM and thus had greater quantities of potassium than the corresponding sedentary groups. There were significantly different estimates of the FFM calculated from density and from total body K in three groups, the sedentary young men, the muscular, and the younger obese women. The density and the potassium content of the FFM appear to decline with
obesity
and aging. Muscular development is associated with a decrease in the density but an increase in the potassium content of the FFM.
...
PMID:Influence of muscular development, obesity, and age on the fat-free mass of adults. 95 5
It has been well known that the fasting therapy which was invented in Medical School of Tohoku University reveals an excellent effect upon various kinds of psychosomatic diseases, but its therapeutic mechanism and suitable indication are not yet explained completely. In order to corroborate these problems, this study was undertaken on 262 cases of psychosomatic diseases in the field of internal medicine. It is a complete fasting for 10 days with nothing by mouth except for drinking
water
, and 500 ml of parenteral fluid containing vitamins are administered intravenously every day. Absolute bed rest and self meditation are required in a closed individual room, and patients are not allowed to meet anyone but physicians and nurse in charge. The return to normal ordinary diet follows the order of fluid diet, soft diet and semiordinary diet during 5 days. In the period of the therapy, various clinical and laboratory examinations were carried out. Significance of these examinations consists in prediction of possible danger during the fasting period and elucidation of its therapeutic mechanism. Consequently, an outstanding efficacy rate of 87% with excellent prognosis was attained, and the following diseases were determined as suitable indication of this therapy; irritable colon, dysorexia nervosa, borderline hypertension, neurocirculatory asthenia, bronchial asthma, mild diabetes mellitus,
obesity
, lumbago without organic findings, conversion hysteria, various neurosis with somatic symptoms and masked depression. Possible mechanism of action of the therapy is that fasting acts as an extreme stress on the function of the autonomic nervous and endocrine systems, then it regulates the function of whole body including the brain, also it acts as one of the behaviour therapy for abnormal conditioning.
...
PMID:Fasting therapy for psychosomatic diseases with special reference to its indication and therapeutic mechanism. 96 29
During a metabolic ward study, the addition of dietary fiber in the form of wheat bran biscuits to the diet of five volunteer subjects resulted in an increase in the stool wet weight and fecal solids. The excretion of fecal solids was highly correlated with the intake of unavailable carbohydrates, and fecal losses of
water
were similarly correlated with fecal excretion of these constituents. The major component of the increase in fecal solids was due to the noncellulosic polysaccharide fraction of dietary fiber. There was an increased fecal excretion of nitrogen fat and energy by most subjects when the supplement was eaten. However, the increased loss of energy in the feces was only 40-80 kcal/day, and therefore a large supplemental intake of dietary fiber had only minor effects on energy metabolism. Supplemental fiber is thus unlikely to induce a useful loss of calories in the management of
obesity
. The addition of dietary fiber caused an increased excretion of most inorganic constituents, particularly sodium and phosphorus; increased excretion of iron and magnesium was also found in two subjects.
...
PMID:Metabolic responses to dietary supplements of bran. 96 16
Skeletal muscle growth in two genetic lines of pigs that differed in total muscle content was studied at live weights of 23, 45, 68, 91, 104, 118 kg. Total physically separable muscle and cross-sectional area of the longissimus dorsi muscle were greater in the muscular than in the obese genetic lines. Above 45 kg, animals in the muscular genetic line had less total separable fat than animals in the obese line, but the two lines did not differ in total physically separable fat at 23 and 45 kg live weight. Hence, these two genetic lines may differ in weight at which maturity is reached as much as in inherent propensity for
obesity
. Longissimus muscle form the muscular line had more
water
, less protein, and less lipid than longissimus from the obese line. DNA and RNA concentration, total DNA and RNA content, and RNA/DNA ratio of the pituitary and liver did not differ between the two genetic lines. Above 68 kg, longissimus from the muscular line had higher DNA and RNA concentrations than longissimus from the obese line; this difference did not exist between 23 and 68 kg. RNA/DNA ratio of the longissimus muscle was greater and protein-to-DNA and protein-to-RNA ratios in longissimus were lower in the muscular than in the obese line. Total DNA content of physically separable muscle increased 2.0 (obese) to 2.7 (muscular)-fold between 23 and 118 kg; hence, number of muscle nuclei increases during growth. Total DNA content of physically separable muscle was greater in the muscular than in the obese line and was the measurement most highly related to total muscle content.
...
PMID:Muscle growth in two genetically different lines of swine. 97 69
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