Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0037315 (
sleep apnea
)
8,000
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This article reviews several aspects of the association between obesity and
cancer
. Current perspectives of cancers of the breast, endometrium, colon and prostate are described. Obesity is a growing problem in contemporary societies, due to the rapid adoption of a modernized lifestyle that results in increased carbohydrate and fat-rich dietary intake, reduced physical activity and extended life expectancy. More than half of adult Americans are overweight or obese, and so is the population of many other countries. There are several definitions for the state of obesity. The body mass index (BMI), which measures overall adiposity, is universally available, the easiest to determine, and therefore the most commonly studied. Anthropometric measurements of subcutaneous fat distribution, such as measurement of girth, circumference of the arms, hips and thighs, or of skinfolds in various body regions are also often used. They allow to categorize the distribution of subcutaneous fat into android and gynoid types (den Tonkelaar, Seidell et al., 1994; Huang, Willett et al., 1999). The android, or abdominal, fat is determined from the waist to hip ratio, and is of particular relevance to
cancer
. Increased body weight and fat are associated with high health risks, and therefore body fat distribution and BMI are major predictors of obesity associated risks (Calle, Thun et al., 1999; "Overweight, obesity, and health risk," Yanovski, 2000). These include diabetes mellitus type 2, coronary heart disease,
sleep apnea
and pulmonary dysfunction, stroke, diseases of the gallbladder, liver and the musculoskeleton, reproductive dysfunction, venous insufficiency, deep vein thrombosis, poor wound healing, and more (Pi Sunyer, 1993; "Overweight, obesity, and health risk", Yanovski, 2000). All these are associated with increased mortality, especially in individuals with other risk factors (Calle, Thun et al., 1999).
Cancer
is also associated with obesity (Garfinkel, 1985), and the present paper attempts to summarize current perspectives of this association, especially in cancers of the breast, endometrium, colon and prostate.
...
PMID:Obesity and cancer. 1293 6
The debate about whether obesity should be called a disease continues. From a clinical perspective, it meets the criteria needed to call it a disease. It has an etiology--an imbalance between energy intake and expenditure. It has a pathogenesis in the feedback systems involving leptin, neurochemicals in the brain, and the neural and endocrine messages that respond to the intake of food. The pathology of obesity lies in its enlarged fat cells, and the pathophysiology lies in the changes in the secretion of products from these enlarged fat cells, including cytokines, procoagulants, inflammatory peptides, and angiotensinogen. These secretory products of fat cells and the increased mass of fat are responsible for the associated metabolic diseases, such as diabetes, hypertension, heart disease,
sleep apnea
, and some sorts of
cancer
. Treatments consist of techniques to alter the balance between energy intake and energy expenditure. This constellation of factors leads to the conclusion that obesity should be called a disease.
...
PMID:Obesity is a chronic, relapsing neurochemical disease. 1455 29
Health problems resulting from obesity could offset many of the recent health gains achieved by modern medicine, and obesity may replace tobacco as the number one health risk for developed societies. An estimated 300,000 deaths per year and significant morbidity are directly attributable to obesity, mainly due to heart disease, diabetes,
cancer
, asthma,
sleep apnea
, arthritis, reproductive complications and psychological disturbances. In parallel with the increasing prevalence of obesity, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of scientific and clinical studies on the control of energy homeostasis and the pathogenesis of obesity to further our understanding of energy balance. It is now recognized that there are many central and peripheral factors involved in energy homeostasis, and it is expected that the understanding of these mechanisms should lead to effective treatments for the control of obesity. This brief review discusses the potential role of several recently discovered molecular pathways involved in the control of energy homeostasis, obesity and eating disorders.
...
PMID:Energy homeostasis, obesity and eating disorders: recent advances in endocrinology. 1474 63
Obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS) is the cessation of airflow with the continuance of respiratory effort during sleep. OSAS associated with a neck mass is extremely rare. Angiolipoma is a rare, benign, fatty tumour composed of mature lipocytes and multiple areas containing angiomatous elements. The treatment for an angiolipoma is surgical excision. We report the case of a 47-year-old male who presented with a history of loud snoring associated with
sleep apnoea
. A polysomnographic study demonstrated an apnoea-hypopnoea index of 72/h. CT showed a 3.5 x 3 x 8 cm3 hypoattenuated mass of fat density in the left parapharyngeal space causing an impression on the nasopharynx and oropharynx with a peripheral hyperintense area. A cervical transparotid surgical approach was used. A histological study led to the definitive diagnosis of angiolipomal without evidence of
malignancy
. After surgery, the snoring disappeared and the patient remained tumour-free after 54 months of follow-up. This is the first case in the literature of a patient with nocturnal polysomnographic-documented OSAS caused by a left parapharyngeal angiolipoma.
...
PMID:Parapharyngeal angiolipoma causing obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome. 1507 27
Obesity is an epidemic disease that threatens to inundate health care resources by increasing the incidence of diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, and
cancer
. These effects of obesity result from two factors: the increased mass of adipose tissue and the increased secretion of pathogenetic products from enlarged fat cells. This concept of the pathogenesis of obesity as a disease allows an easy division of disadvantages of obesity into those produced by the mass of fat and those produced by the metabolic effects of fat cells. In the former category are the social disabilities resulting from the stigma associated with obesity,
sleep apnea
that results in part from increased parapharyngeal fat deposits, and osteoarthritis resulting from the wear and tear on joints from carrying an increased mass of fat. The second category includes the metabolic factors associated with distant effects of products released from enlarged fat cells. The insulin-resistant state that is so common in obesity probably reflects the effects of increased release of fatty acids from fat cells that are then stored in the liver or muscle. When the secretory capacity of the pancreas is overwhelmed by battling insulin resistance, diabetes develops. The strong association of increased fat, especially visceral fat, with diabetes makes this consequence particularly ominous for health care costs. The release of cytokines, particularly IL-6, from the fat cell may stimulate the proinflammatory state that characterizes obesity. The increased secretion of prothrombin activator inhibitor-1 from fat cells may play a role in the procoagulant state of obesity and, along with changes in endothelial function, may be responsible for the increased risk of cardiovascular disease and hypertension. For
cancer
, the production of estrogens by the enlarged stromal mass plays a role in the risk for breast cancer. Increased cytokine release may play a role in other forms of proliferative growth. The combined effect of these pathogenetic consequences of increased fat stores is an increased risk of shortened life expectancy.
...
PMID:Medical consequences of obesity. 1518 Oct 27
One hundred and sixty-four consecutive patients attending a busy respiratory outpatient service were asked how acceptable was the concept of alternating face to face consultation with consultation by either telephone or email. The patients were then assessed as to their suitability for such non-traditional methods of consultation. Thirty patients (18.3%) were not agreeable to other forms of consultation and five could not speak English. One hundred and thirty-three (84%) had a suitable daytime telephone number for consultation purposes, but only 34 (21%) had email access, with this being commoner in the younger ages. One hundred and five patients were not thought to be suitable for alternative methods of consultation because of: the severity of their condition, the difficulty of assessing it over the telephone, or because they needed to attend the hospital for investigations. However, even in a clinic where the policy was already to return as many patients as possible to the care of their primary care physicians, and in a clinic where much work was already shared with respiratory nurse specialists, over one-third of patients were thought to be suitable for alternating face to face with telephone consultation. The diagnoses in those cases included asthma, suspected obstructive
sleep apnoea
, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), unexplained cough, and some patients with respiratory
malignancy
being visited at home by the palliative medicine services. However, for those with asthma and for those awaiting results of investigations especially, use of telephone consultation appears to be an acceptable and convenient way of reducing the pressure upon time available for face to face consultations.
...
PMID:An assessment of the feasibility of telephone and email consultation in a chest clinic. 1521 Feb 54
Obesity is an important health problem for the growing elderly segment of the population. Age-related changes in body composition should be taken into account when considering morbidity. Today, sarcopenic obesity, which is defined as excess fat with loss of lean body mass, is a highly prevalent problem. Obesity in the elderly is related to morbidity; e.g.,
sleep apnea
,
cancer
, osteoarthritis, diabetes and hypertension. The advantages and disadvantages of using BMI, waist circumference, waist: hip ratio, and body weight to measure age-related changes in obesity are discussed. In addition, the merits of treatment options for obesity; e.g., behavioral modifications, diet, and exercise--are described. One important conclusion derived from a review of these treatments is that age itself is not a contraindication for pharmacotherapy or even surgery for morbid obesity.
...
PMID:Obesity in the elderly: survival of the fit or fat. 1555 40
Obesity has reached epidemic levels in industrialized countries and is increasing worldwide. This trend has serious public health consequences, since obesity increases the risk of diabetes, hypertension, heart disease,
sleep apnea
,
cancer
, arthritis, cholelithiasis, fatty liver disease, and other complications. Obesity is the result of an imbalance between energy intake and expenditure; hence, an understanding of how gastrointestinal function is integrated with the hormonal regulation of energy balance is pertinent to the pathophysiology of obesity. Nutrients, peptides, and neural afferents from the gut influence the size and frequency of meals and satiety. The long-term regulation of energy stores is mediated primarily through the actions of adiposity hormones, such as leptin and insulin, in the hypothalamus and other neuronal circuits in the brain. Efforts are underway to determine how these peripheral and central pathways may be targeted for treatment of obesity and related diseases.
...
PMID:Gut peptides and other regulators in obesity. 1560 2
With an increased prevalence of obesity in developed countries, associated chronic diseases rise in a parallel way. Morbidity secondary to overweight and obesity include type 2 diabetes, dislipemia, hypertension, heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, cholelithiasis, osteoarthritis, heart insufficiency,
sleep apnoea
, menstrual changes, sterility and psychological alterations. There is also a greater susceptibility to suffer some types of
cancer
, infections, greater risk of bacteremia and a prolonged time of wound healing after surgical operations. All these factors indicate that obesity exerts negative effects upon the immune system. Immune changes found in obesity and their possible interrelations are described in this article. Changes produced during obesity affect both humoral and cellular immunity. It is known that adipose tissue, together with its role as energy reserve in form of triglycerides, has important endocrine functions, producing several hormones and other signal molecules. Immune response can be deeply affected by obesity, playing leptin an important role. Properties of leptin, alterations of leptin levels in different situations and its changes with different medical and surgical therapies for obesity are described in this article.
...
PMID:[Obesity and the immune system]. 1567 46
The challenges of the epidemic are not limited to concerns about bulk and weight. The disabilities caused by obesity are physiologic and psychosocial. The increased waist to hip girth is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and diabetes. Obesity also has been related directly to increased risk of
sleep apnea
,
cancer
, gallbladder disease, musculoskeletal disorders, severe pancreatitis, bacterial panniculitis, diverticulitis, infertility, urinary incontinence, and idiopathic intracranial hypertension. The psychosocial factors and quality of life in the obese population also have been documented. Although there is some debate, the obese have been found to be twice as likely to suffer from anxiety, impaired social interaction,and depression when compared with the nonobese population. Although advances in obesity surgery have resulted in long-term, lasting treatment of this disease and some of its comorbidities (ie, diabetes, hypertension,
sleep apnea
), There is a pressing need to develop a comprehensive medical and nutrition plan to reduce the prevalence of this newly identified disease state. Some draw parallels to tobacco and the morbidity and mortality associated with its use. Perhaps there are similarities in these two epidemics. Both start with education of the population as to the morbidities and mortality associated with the disease. As with tobacco, this education is especially important for youth. Without a plan of education to promote nutrition and increased physical activity, and continued research into the causes of obesity, the prevalence of obesity will continue to rise in the United States.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of obesity in the United States. 1582 34
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>