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)

Adiponectin (ADPN), exclusively expressed and secreted from adipocytes, is a recently discovered protein hormone with anti-atherogenic and anti-inflammatory properties in contrast to other well-known adipocytokines. It has independent negative associations with obesity and hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. Apart from chronic renal failure, nephrotic syndrome was suggested as the only renal disease condition associated with raised plasma ADPN levels in adults. We aimed to evaluate the effect of nephrotic state on serum adiponectin (ADPN) levels in pediatric patients with steroid-responsive nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) by comparing the levels in relapse and remission as well as in control subjects and documenting possible relationships between ADPN and proteinuria as well as serum protein/lipid parameters. 34 patients with SRNS and 22 healthy age, sex and BMI-matched control subjects were enrolled into the study. 15 of the 34 SRNS patients had active diseases, and these were known as the SRNS-relapse group (ten relapsed and five newly-diagnosed patients), while the remaining 19 were in complete remission (the SRNS-remission group). Serum ADPN levels, blood chemistry (protein/albumin, triglyceride (TG), cholesterol (Cho) and lipoprotein levels) and 24-hour proteinuria were studied. ADPN levels were determined by ELISA. As expectedly, there were significant alterations in serum protein-lipid parameters and 24-hour proteinuria levels in SRNS patients consistent with their disease activity. SRNS-relapse patients had substantially higher ADPN levels (36.77+/-15.06 (5.61-59.41, median 39.84) microg/ml), compared to those in SRNS-remission and control groups (14.17+/-6.02 (3.28-29.40, median 12.80) microg/ml and 11.84+/-7.53 (2.81-31.46, median 10.85) microg/ml, respectively, p=0.001). There were strong positive correlations between serum ADPN levels and Cho (r=0.637, p=0.000), TG (r=0.516, p=0.002), low density lipoprotein (r=0.614, p=0.000) levels and 24-hour proteinuria (r=0.828, p=0.000) levels, whereas protein (r=-0.695, p=0.000) and albumin (r=0.732, p=0.000) levels were inversely correlated with ADPN levels. Regression analysis showed a significant correlation between ADPN and proteinuria (p=0.000). In conclusion, remarkably increased serum ADPN levels were detected in SRNS-relapse compared to those in SRNS-remission. This phenomenon might be the reflection of a compensatory response to nephrotic state characterized by massive proteinuria, hypoalbuminemia and hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:High serum adiponectin levels during steroid-responsive nephrotic syndrome relapse. 1569 Jan 90

Until recently, the majority of cases of diabetes mellitus among children and adolescents were immune-mediated type 1a diabetes. Obesity has led to a dramatic increase in the incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) among children and adolescents over the past 2 decades. Obesity is strongly associated with insulin resistance, which, when coupled with relative insulin deficiency, leads to the development of overt T2DM. Children and adolescents with T2DM may experience the microvascular and macrovascular complications of this disease at younger ages than individuals who develop diabetes in adulthood, including atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, stroke, myocardial infarction, and sudden death; renal insufficiency and chronic renal failure; limb-threatening neuropathy and vasculopathy; and retinopathy leading to blindness. Health care professionals are advised to perform the appropriate screening in children at risk for T2DM, diagnose the condition as early as possible, and provide rigorous management of the disease.
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PMID:Childhood obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1606 6

Insufficient blood flow through end-resistance arteries leads to symptoms associated with peripheral vascular disease. This may be caused in part by poor macrocirculatory inflow or impaired microcirculatory function. Dysfunction of the microcirculation occurs in a similar fashion in multiple tissue beds long before the onset of atherosclerotic symptoms. Impaired microcirculatory vasodilatation has been shown to occur in certain disease states including peripheral vascular disease, diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, chronic renal failure, abdominal aortic aneurysmal disease, and venous insufficiency, as well as in menopause, advanced age, and obesity. Microcirculatory structure and function can be evaluated with transcutaneous oxygen, pulp skin flow, iontophoresis, and capillaroscopy. We discuss the importance of the microcirculation, investigative methods for evaluating its function, and clinical applications and review the literature of the microcirculation in these different states.
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PMID:Evaluation of the microcirculation in vascular disease. 1617 12

Traditional risk factors, such as high blood pressure (BP), obesity and hypercholesterolaemia, play an important role in the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD), not only in the general population but also in patients with chronic renal disease. In recent years, it has become less clear whether these conventional risk factors are responsible for the extremely high risk of CVD in chronic haemodialysis (CHD) patients. Recent studies have shown that low BP, body mass index (BMI) and serum cholesterol are often correlated with an unfavourable clinical outcome. Thus, whereas traditional risk factors of CVD are correlated with an unfavourable outcome in the general population and patients with chronic renal failure not yet on dialysis, in CHD patients these factors appear to be protective and associated with an improved survival. Therefore, these phenomena have been referred to as 'paradoxical or reverse epidemiology'. The aetiology of this inverse relationship is not clear. Interestingly, in CHD patients, both C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammation, and (pre)albumin, a marker of nutrition, are important independent predictors of mortality. It has been speculated that what is known as the malnutritioninflammation-atherosclerosis complex underlies, at least partly, the phenomenon of reverse epidemiology, since malnutrition causes a low BMI and hypocholesterolaemia. Hence, besides care for adequate nutrition, attempts should be made to reduce inflammation. In this respect, various haemodialysis-related factors, such as the purity of the dialysate and several characteristics of the dialyser, deserve attention.
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PMID:Reverse epidemiology: paradoxical observations in haemodialysis patients. 1630 58

Either inflammation or hyperuricemia has been related with increased cardiovascular risk and mortality. A hypothetical relationship between serum uric acid levels (SUA) and inflammatory markers has never been tested in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of increased C-reactive protein (CRP) levels in CKD patients, and to test the hypothesis of a relationship between SUA and CRP levels. The study group consisted of 337 patients (174 males, mean age 63 +/- 16 years) with advanced chronic renal failure not yet on dialysis. None of them had overt inflammatory or infectious diseases. High sensitivity CRP levels were analyzed as a binary (above or below median value), or continuous variable (log-transformed CRP), by multiple logistic or linear regression analysis, respectively. Demographics, clinical, and biochemical characteristics, including SUA levels, were the variables tested in these analysis. In a subset of 169 patients without diabetes, the same analysis were carried out, with the inclusion of fasting insulin levels and HOMA-IR as independent variables. Median CRP level was 3.25 mg/L, and mean SUA level was 7.59 +/- 1.94 mg/dl. Patients with CRP levels above the median had significantly higher mean SUA level than that of the rest of study patients (7.93 +/- 1.79 vs 7.24 +/- 2.03 mg/dl, p = 0.001). SUA levels correlated significantly with log-transformed CRP levels (r = 0. 16, p = 0.0022). The relationship between SUA and CRP levels remained statistically significant after adjustment for age, sex, comorbid index, obesity, residual renal function, diuretic and allopurinol treatment, in the multivariate logistic and linear regression models (OR: 1.296, p = 0.0003; and beta: 0.204, p = 0.0002). The significant association between SUA and CRP levels did not change when HOMA-IR and fasting insulin levels were included as independent variables in the subset of 169 patients without diabetes. In conclusion, SUA levels are related with CRP levels in CKD patients.
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PMID:[Serum uric acid and C-reactive protein levels in patients with chronic kidney disease]. 1651 5

Few large-scale epidemiologic studies have quantified the possible link between obesity and chronic renal failure (CRF). This study analyzed anthropometric data from a nationwide, population-based, case-control study of incident, moderately severe CRF. Eligible as cases were all native Swedes who were aged 18 to 74 yr and had CRF and whose serum creatinine for the first time and permanently exceeded 3.4 mg/dl (men) or 2.8 mg/dl (women) during the study period. A total of 926 case patients and 998 control subjects, randomly drawn from the study base, were enrolled. Face-to-face interviews, supplemented with self-administered questionnaires, provided information about anthropometric measures and other lifestyle factors. Logistic regression models with adjustments for several co-factors estimated the relative risk for CRF in relation to body mass index (BMI). Overweight (BMI>or=25 kg/m2) at age 20 was associated with a significant three-fold excess risk for CRF, relative to BMI<25. Obesity (BMI>or=30) among men and morbid obesity (BMI>or=35) among women anytime during lifetime was linked to three- to four-fold increases in risk. The strongest association was with diabetic nephropathy, but two- to three-fold risk elevations were observed for all major subtypes of CRF. Analyses that were confined to strata without hypertension or diabetes revealed a three-fold increased risk among patients who were overweight at age 20, whereas the two-fold observed risk elevation among those who had a highest lifetime BMI of >35 was statistically nonsignificant. Obesity seems to be an important-and potentially preventable-risk factor for CRF. Although hypertension and type 2 diabetes are important mediators, additional pathways also may exist.
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PMID:Obesity and risk for chronic renal failure. 1667 17

In the past years, in Brazil and in developed countries, obesity has become a major public health problem. It was identified that besides DM2 and metabolic syndrome other clinical entities were associated with insulin resistance. In this review we describe some of these alterations emphasizing nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, but also including polycistic ovary disease, hyperuricemia, chronic renal failure, heart failure, cognitive decline and cancer.
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PMID:[Insulin resistance/hyperinsulinemia associated diseases not included in the metabolic syndrome]. 1676 2

Obesity represents one of serious risk factors in chronic renal failure patients (CRF). In three years prospective double-blind randomised multicentre study we monitored 66 patients with advanced chronic renal insufficiency, GFR 24.4-37.3 ml/min (0.41 to 0.62 ml/s) and BMI > or = 30 kg/m2 on long term low-protein diet (0.6 P/kg BW/day) and ACEI + ARB. Thirty four randomly selected patients (group I) were treated with keto amino acids, 32 patients in control group (group II) with placebo. During the study period significant decrease of BMI, proteinuria and slowing in progression of renal failure (C(in)) were found. Significant changes were also noted in parameters of albumin and transferrin (p < 0.02), leucin and WQ (p < 0.01 - p < 0.02), glycaemia and HbA1c (p < 0.02), triglycerides (p < 0.01), leptin and ObRe (p < 0.01) and selected parameters of endothelial dysfunction (ET1, p < 0.02, TGFbeta1, p < 0.02). Significantly also decreased PTH value (p < 0.01). Successful treatment of obesity can significantly improve long term prognosis in CRF patients.
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PMID:[Obesity and progression of chronic renal insufficiency: a Czech long term prospective double-blind randomised multicentre study]. 1687 60

A retrospective study was done in 66 children (0.21% of all admitted children) below the age of 18 years with persistent hypertension diagnosed at the Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital from Jan 1999 to Dec 2003. Male to female ratio was 1.4:1 with 54.5% aged between 6-12 years old and 9.1% aged less than 1 year. Hypertension was found to be severe (BP more than the 99th percentile for age, sex and height) in 79.1% but most (78.6%) of the patients did not have symptoms related to hypertension. Chronic headaches were found in 10%, hypertensive encephalopathy in 8.6%, epistaxis in 1.4% and visual disturbance in 1.4%. The most common cause of hypertension was renal parenchymal diseases (62.7%) mainly lupus nephritis (26.9%), idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (16.4%) and chronic renal failure (16.4%). Other causes of hypertension included renovascular diseases (7.5%), drug-induced (7.5%), essential (7.5%), tumors (4.5%), coarctation of aorta (3.0%), bronchopulmonary dysplasia (3.0%), and pheochromocytoma (1.5%). Obesity and overweight (body mass index, BMI more than 25) was found in only 10 patients (15.1%). The proportion of children with BMI more than 25 was not different between essential and secondary hypertension (p = 0.15). Left ventricular hypertrophy was noted in 7.5%, hypertensive retinopathy in 3.0%, and hypertensive encephalopathy in 9.0%. One-third of the patients had normal BP within 1 month and another 47.0% had normal BP within 6 months of diagnosis. One-fifth of the patients also needed surgical intervention for specific underlying diseases. The authors suggest that since a large number of children with hypertension have secondary hypertension, intensive investigation and prompt management should be done in all. Obesity and overweight is not reliable in the differentiation between primary and secondary hypertension. Short term outcome of hypertension is good with medications and surgery in selected cases but long term outcome is still unknown.
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PMID:Persistent hypertension in Thai children: etiologies and outcome. 1704 51

Kidney disease after transplantation of a nonrenal organ has been described to be the result of the nephrotoxicity from the commonly used calcineurin-inhibitors as well as other factors. The aim of this study was to evaluate renal function and potential risk factors for the development of chronic renal failure among nonrenal organ recipients. We designed a single-center retrospective study including all 165 of our cardiac and liver recipients between February 1998 and October 2003, collecting clinical, analytic, and therapeutic data. We excluded double transplants and patients with survival less than 6 months. Creatinine clearance was calculated according to the Cockcroft-Gault and the Levey Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD)-5 equations. Although 165 patients received a cardiac or liver transplantation, 17 died in the first 6 months and three were double transplants; therefore we analyzed 145 patients: 107 (74%) cardiac transplantations and 38 (26%) liver transplantations. There were 106 male and 39 female recipients. The mean age (+/-SD) at the time of transplantation was 54 +/- 10 years and the mean follow-up was 2.9 +/- 1.7 years. Urinalysis before transplantation was only performed in 33 patients (22.8%) including three (2.1%) who had proteinuria. Serum creatinine increased until 12 months after transplantation (P < .001), then it recovered its average level. Creatinine clearance calculated using the aforementioned equations showed a similar pattern, with a progressive decline to 12 months (P < .05), with eventual stabilization or even improvement. The factors that we observed to increase the risk of renal damage were age, female sex, obesity, and the presence of proteinuria prior to transplantation. There was a good correlation (r = 0.96) between cyclosporine but not tacrolimus trough levels and serum creatinine at 48 hours after transplantation.
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PMID:Study of the renal function in nonrenal organ transplantation. 1711 81


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