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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of oral diethylaminoethyl-dextran (3 g total), taken 30 min before a standard mixed test meal, on plasma glucose, total cholesterol, triglycerides, total lipids, gastrin-like immunoreactivity,
bombesin
-like immunoreactivity, gastric-inhibitory-polypeptide-like immunoreactivity and neurotensin-like immunoreactivity were evaluated in eight healthy volunteers following a double-blind protocol. Incremental peak plasma concentrations of total lipids and triglycerides were significantly reduced by pretreatment with diethylaminoethyl-dextran pretreatment, while peaks of plasma glucose and total cholesterol were not significantly affected. Diethylaminoethyl-dextran also inhibited postprandial gastrin-like gastric-inhibitory-polypeptide-like and neurotensin-like immunoreactivity; by contrast,
bombesin
-like immunoreactivity was not significantly modified. The present study indicates that diethylaminoethyl-dextran is able to regulate some postprandial metabolic and hormonal parameters in man; consequently it might be useful in the treatment of hyperlipoproteinaemia and
obesity
.
...
PMID:Short-term effects of diethylaminoethyl-dextran on postprandial gastrointestinal hormone responses in man. 169 37
1. Hypothalamic concentrations of nine peptides with experimental effects on energy balance were compared in obese (fa/fa) and lean (Fa/?) male Zucker rats. To determine whether any peptide differences between obese and lean rats might be due to the overweight condition per se, separate groups of obese rats were food-restricted to reduce their body weight to lean values. 2. Concentrations of neuromedin B, a
bombesin
-like peptide, in the central hypothalamus were significantly higher in obese than in lean rats. This difference was not affected in food-restricted obese rats. 3. Hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y, an extremely potent central appetite stimulant, were similar in lean and freely fed obese rats but central hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y rose significantly in food-restricted obese rats. 4. These findings suggest that disturbances in hypothalamic neuromedin B concentrations may be involved in the
obesity
syndrome of the fa/fa Zucker rat. Increased central hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y in food-restricted rats suggest that this peptide may help to defend body weight by stimulating eating after weight loss.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic regulatory peptides in obese and lean Zucker rats. 170 1
Central and lateral hypothalamic concentrations of 9 regulatory peptides implicated in the control of feeding behaviour were measured in corpulent (cp/cp) JCR:LA-cp rats which develop spontaneous
obesity
, hyperinsulinaemia and hyperlipidaemia, and in lean (+/?) controls. In female cp/cp rats, central hypothalamic levels of neuropeptide Y (NPY), neurotensin, somatostatin and substance P were significantly lower (p less than 0.02) than in lean female controls. Following food restriction with a 16% reduction in body weight, these differences were apparently reversed and there were also significant rises in the lateral hypothalamic concentrations of neurotensin and of galanin. The other 4 peptides examined (
bombesin
, calcitonin gene-related peptide, neuromedin B and vasoactive intestinal peptide) did not differ significantly between cp/cp and lean females, either fed freely or food-restricted. Male cp/cp rats showed no significant differences from lean males in central or lateral hypothalamic concentrations of any of the 9 peptides. NPY and galanin are powerful and specific central appetite stimulants, whereas neurotensin, substance P and somatostatin inhibit feeding when injected centrally. Disturbances in these putative appetite-regulating peptides may be involved in the hyperphagia and other hypothalamic abnormalities in this spontaneous
obesity
syndrome. The apparent absence of differences between the male corpulent and lean groups may relate to sexual dimorphism of the syndrome, which is more marked in the females.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic regulatory peptide disturbances in the spontaneously obese JCR: LA-corpulent rat. 172 Mar 64
Hypothalamic tissue levels of nine regulatory peptides (
bombesin
, calcitonin gene-related peptide [CGRP], galanin, neuromedin B, neuropeptide Y [NPY], neurotensin, somatostatin, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal peptide [VIP]) were compared in Aston obese diabetic (ob/ob) and lean (+/?) mice aged 4, 16, and 28 weeks. Neurotensin concentrations were significantly lower in ob/ob mice than in lean mice, with a 20% reduction (P = .03) in the whole hypothalamus at 4 weeks of age, a 24% reduction (P = .009) in the lateral hypothalamus at 16 weeks, and a 50% reduction (P = .0007) in the central hypothalamus at 28 weeks of age. Apart from a 42% increase in vasoactive intestinal peptide concentrations in the central hypothalamus of ob/ob mice at 28 weeks (P = .02), levels of the other eight peptides examined did not differ significantly between obese and lean groups. Neurotensin is known to cause anorexia and increased energy expenditure when injected into the central hypothalamus. Reduced hypothalamic neurotensin concentrations may reflect reduced neurotensinergic activity, which might contribute to hyperphagia and decreased energy expenditure, two major defects that contribute to
obesity
and diabetes in the ob/ob syndrome.
...
PMID:Reduced hypothalamic neurotensin concentrations in the genetically obese diabetic (ob/ob) mouse: possible relationship to obesity. 194 36
Until such time as new products under development provide us with the ideal drug, current research on the treatment of
obesity
concentrates on diet and way of life. The value of leguminous plants and a reasonable amount of fruit is emphasized, and prescription is assisted by computer programs. Physical exercise, particularly when moderate and prolonged, uses lipolysis for the best. Pharmaceutical research is directed towards drugs acting on the hypothalamus, devoid of amphetamine-like effects (e.g. d-fenfluramine, PM 170, mazindol or even naloxone and
bombesin
), acting on insulin secretion (e.g. phenytoin) or directly stimulating lipolysis in fatty tissue (e.g. RO 220654).
...
PMID:[Current ideas on the treatment of obesity]. 242 55
Cholecystokinin (CCK) and Bombesin (BBS) are two neuropeptides which induce changes in monoamines in the brain after peripheral administration. A vagal mediation of these effects was investigated since the satiety responses to both peptides are affected differently by vagotomy. This work was performed on genetically obese and lean Zucker rats and on "cafeteria-fed" and lean Sprague-Dawley rats as the effects of the peptides are dissimilar in these different groups. Vagotomy either inhibited or potentiated the peptide-induced effects, or created new variations. With CCK, the inhibition occurred mainly in the serotonergic system and in the Zucker strain, while new effects appeared in the dopaminergic system of lean rats of both strains. With
bombesin
, vagotomy inhibited the effects in the dopaminergic system in all lean rats, while new effects were observed in the serotonergic system in the Zucker strain. These data enable the differentiation of the mechanisms of action of both peptides and their selective effects, according to the strain of rat and the presence or absence of
obesity
.
...
PMID:Cholecystokinin and bombesin in vagotomized or intact lean and obese rats: effects on neurotransmitters in brain. 288 74
Congenitally obese mice are hyperphagic, suggesting that their
obesity
is secondary to defects in normal satiety mechanisms. The present study compares the effects of caerulein,
bombesin
, and pancreatic polypeptide (three equimolar doses each of 3, 9, and 27 nmol/kg) on food intake in 10 pairs of lean and obese mice. After the intraperitoneal injection of saline, obese mice eat 240% more of a liquid meal (Magnacal) than their lean littermates (P less than 0.01). All three doses of caerulein significantly inhibited food intake in both obese and lean mice. Although the highest dose of
bombesin
significantly decreased food intake in both obese and lean mice, the lowest dose was only effective in obese mice. In contrast, none of these doses of pancreatic polypeptide had a significant effect on food intake in either lean or obese mice. A dose of bovine pancreatic polypeptide of 200 nmol/kg was required to significantly reduce food intake in lean and obese mice. This study demonstrates that obese mice respond to satiety signals and may even be more sensitive than their lean littermates to some messengers. In addition, the previously described reversal of this
obesity
syndrome by pancreatic polypeptide in doses of approximately 2.5 and 25 nmol X kg-1 X day-1 is unlikely to be due to effects of this peptide on food intake.
...
PMID:Effects of pancreatic polypeptide, caerulein, and bombesin on satiety in obese mice. 397 86
There is evidence for involvement of gastrointestinal hormones in pathogenesis of
obesity
and reports on lipolytic activity in animals. The in vitro lipolytic activity of these hormones was tested in human adipocytes. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, glucagon, secretin, human gastrin I, gastrin releasing polypeptide, gastric inhibitory polypeptide, pancreatic polypeptide, motilin,
bombesin
, neurotensin, C-peptide, as well as cholecystokinin did not stimulate lipolysis significantly above basal. These results indicate that the involvement of these hormones in
obesity
in man might not be due to a direct lipolytic effect on the human adipocyte.
...
PMID:Glycerol release from incubated human adipocytes is not affected by gastrointestinal peptides. 401 16
In the past 10 years, numerous gut peptides have been tested for their satiating effect on food intake. Cholecystokinin (CCK),
bombesin
, pancreatic glucagon, and somatostatin have the best supporting evidence for such a specific behavioral effect. The satiety effect of CCK, somatostatin, and glucagon is abolished or markedly reduced by abdominal vagotomy, but the satiety effect of
bombesin
is not. The effect of vagotomy has been interpreted as the result of the loss of vagal afferent fibers that are necessary for carrying information about visceral effects of these peptides to the brain. This hypothesis is under active investigation. There are three reports that CCK decreases the size of a test meal in lean and obese humans. This suggests that CCK or the other peptides may be useful in treating human
obesity
and bulimia.
...
PMID:Gut peptides and postprandial satiety. 614 53
Although the incidence of
obesity
in the domesticated dog is high, few studies have investigated the regulation of food intake in this species. In the present study we investigated the response of the dog to a number of putative satiety agents including cholecystokinin (CCK),
bombesin
, calcitonin and naloxone. CCK significantly suppressed food intake during a scheduled fifteen minute meal in intact dogs and in dogs receiving total subdiaphragmatic vagotomies. Emesis occurred following injection of higher doses of CCK in most dogs. Bombesin and calcitonin reduced intake in both normal and vagotomized dogs, although higher doses of calcitonin were needed to significantly suppress feeding in vagotomized dogs compared with intact animals. Naloxone reduced feeding by as much as 60% in intact and vagotomized animals. Glucagon suppressed feeding in intact dogs, but not in vagotomized animals. Somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide did not alter food intake. Thus the domesticated dog responds somewhat differently to some neuropeptides compared with the laboratory rat stressing the importance of examining the regulation of food intake across species.
...
PMID:Peptidergic regulation of feeding in the dog (Canis familiaris). 614 23
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