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1 d by a high accumulation of body fat (severe obesity).
2 inflammatory conditions including aging and obesity.
3 he lean state and metabolic dysregulation in obesity.
4 adolescent adiposity and risk of overweight/obesity.
5 erebrovascular dysfunction despite prolonged obesity.
6 f too much fat and to protect adults against obesity.
7 ting pandemic of metabolic disease driven by obesity.
8 as rheumatoid arthritis, liver fibrosis, or obesity.
9 ity is reduced in breast epithelial cells in obesity.
10 ck Children (2002-2011), excluding prevalent obesity.
11 reatment of drug addiction, anxiety, pain or obesity.
12 growth restriction (IUGR) leads to offspring obesity.
13 etween inflammation and the comorbidities of obesity.
14 inhibits lipolysis and promotes diet-induced obesity.
15 of meals are also potential risk factors for obesity.
16 increasing energy expenditure to counteract obesity.
17 a novel therapeutic target for patients with obesity.
18 k indirectly through their relationship with obesity.
19 ls display distinct metabolic adaptations to obesity.
20 could be a potential therapeutic target for obesity.
21 een implicated in substance use disorder and obesity.
22 tion for patients with cirrhosis and extreme obesity.
23 is associated with many diseases, including obesity.
24 e system in the inception and progression of obesity.
25 metabolism and is implicated in diet-induced obesity.
26 d protects from inflammation, steatosis, and obesity.
27 ycerides, and female-specific overweight and obesity.
28 ildren might not lower the risk of childhood obesity.
29 in fat intake and development of fat-induced obesity.
30 opportunity for preventing subsequent adult obesity.
31 limits its application for the treatment of obesity.
32 e immunity and metabolic disorders including obesity.
33 later life and is associated with childhood obesity.
34 set metabolic diseases, such as diabetes and obesity.
35 energy metabolism driving toward age-related obesity.
36 a-arrestin family previously linked to human obesity.
37 highly palatable food (HPF), that may drive obesity.
38 r that contributes to hedonic overeating and obesity.
39 een healthy individuals and individuals with obesity.
40 owth and protects against the development of obesity.
41 ltiple species, an effect that is blunted by obesity.
42 ion and timing in relation to overweight and obesity.
43 are selectively reduced in a mouse model of obesity.
44 and metabolic disease including diabetes and obesity.
45 n anabolic hormones, such as insulin, during obesity.
46 ful alcohol use, 1.4 (0.9-2.0, p = 0.10) and obesity, 1.4 (0.9-2.2, p = 0.13) We found no evidence th
47 the adjusted incidence rate among women with obesity (2.29 [95% CI, 2.02-2.56]), high triglycerides (
51 were age, hypertension, diagnoses including obesity, alcohol, sleep apnea, diabetes, chronic obstruc
52 oth rodents and non-human primates, maternal obesity also predicts a preference for palatable foods i
56 determined the incidence and risk factors of obesity among pediatric solid-organ transplant recipient
57 ta from Eurostat show that the prevalence of obesity among those aged 15-19 years remains under 5%, w
58 tients with coronavirus disease 2019 include obesity, an elevated d-dimer value, elevated C-reactive
63 We also discuss the major contribution of obesity and alcohol to the ten most common cancers as we
65 uggest a neurobiological interaction between obesity and brain structure under physiological and path
67 mmune cells in human WAT under conditions of obesity and calorie restriction (CR) is not fully unders
68 dv36 seropositivity and its association with obesity and diabetes among adults attending a diabetes c
69 isease and general health conditions such as obesity and diabetes are closely linked by sharing commo
72 3 has been implicated in the pathogenesis of obesity and diabetes; however, the mechanisms and tissue
73 iota composition, and 4) prevent and reverse obesity and dysregulated glucose homeostasis in multiple
74 ze the transplant candidacy of patients with obesity and end-stage organ disease and improve perioper
88 s that have shown effects in mouse models of obesity and metabolic disorders, and how these might be
89 chedule is associated with increased risk of obesity and metabolic dysfunction in humans.(1-9) Howeve
90 ve, we highlight 1) the relationship between obesity and metabolic pathways putatively driving hepati
91 this field of research on innate immunity in obesity and metabolic perturbation, as well as future di
92 and April 2018, we randomized 24 adults with obesity and mild-moderate insulin resistance (homeostati
95 ity are associated with an increased risk of obesity and related metabolic disorders, but the role of
96 omes, 8 on cardiovascular disease, 3 each on obesity and rheumatoid arthritis, and 2 on chronic kidne
98 es evaluated the relationship between severe obesity and short-term outcomes and long-term mortality.
103 estinal microbiome have been associated with obesity and type 2 diabetes, in epidemiological studies
104 Here we seek to empirically test whether obesity and UE overlap behaviourally with addiction and
112 -related, toxic and haemodynamic factors and obesity are also important causes of podocyte injury and
115 rrently, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and obesity are major global public health issues, and their
117 etabolic disorders, has been associated with obesity, arrhythmias, cardiac ischemia, insulin resistan
118 ere used to assess the role of pre-pregnancy obesity as a mediator in the association between materna
119 plays a central role in the pathogenesis of obesity as well as in the associated cardiovascular comp
120 ulin action that manifests with diet-induced obesity, as insulin action is preserved to protect funda
121 deficient (CysC knockout [KO]) mice worsened obesity-associated adipose tissue inflammation and dysfu
122 fatty acid binding protein (FABP4) promotes obesity-associated breast cancer development, thus sugge
124 ipheral insulin-sensitive tissues and, thus, obesity-associated deterioration of glucose metabolism.
125 ntally validate the predicted function of an obesity-associated lncRNA, LINC01018, in regulating the
129 tion were significantly higher in women with obesity at the begining of pregnancy (mean difference: -
130 n health and disease with a special focus on obesity, bariatric surgery-induced weight loss, and immu
135 nts and Main Results: Subjects with ARDS and obesity (BMI=57+/-12 kg/m(2)), following LRM, required a
136 trolled diabetes (hemoglobin A1c level >8%), obesity (body mass index >30), and depressive symptoms (
137 We assessed their penetrance and effect on obesity (body mass index [BMI] >= 30 kg/m2) in >450,000
138 could play a role in cancer etiology through obesity but also through inflammatory and oxidative mech
139 weight in patients with type 2 diabetes and obesity but have limited weight-lowering efficacy and mi
140 tively associated with adolescent overweight/obesity but not with suicidal ideation with planning.
141 Epidermal thickness did not differ with obesity but the expression of genes encoding proteins as
142 weight loss option for Veterans with severe obesity, but fewer than 0.1% of Veterans with severe obe
145 and epidermal FABP (E-FABP) in the fields of obesity, chronic inflammation, and cancer development.
146 In conclusion, CysC is upregulated under obesity conditions and thereby counteracts inflammation
147 ctal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), yet how and when obesity contributes to PDAC progression is not well unde
148 on, diabetes with chronic complications, and obesity demonstrated age-dependent effects, with the hig
150 g pregnancy is rising as older maternal age, obesity, diabetes mellitus and hypertension become more
160 al therapeutic target of anticancer and anti-obesity drugs by inhibiting its DNA-binding activities.
161 For HbA1c, however, the association with obesity duration persisted, independent of obesity sever
162 ally adjusted models, male sex, underweight, obesity, education, poor self-rated health, television-v
163 nd how macrophage-driven inflammation due to obesity enhances tumor formation, mice were treated with
164 nts could inform policies for control of the obesity epidemic in India and other urbanising LMICs.
165 results agree with previous reports showing obesity exacerbates AD-related pathology and symptoms in
166 pe 2 diabetes mellitus, ubiquitous abdominal obesity, exposure to the world's highest levels of air p
167 oss BMI groups, except in women with class 3 obesity, for whom low weight gain and weight loss may be
173 tive association between plasma ANGPTL5, and obesity, high sensitivity C-reactive protein (HsCRP) and
175 that subsequently inhibit food consumption, obesity, hyperglycemia, and liver steatosis in HFD-treat
177 tal heart disease, various cardiomyopathies, obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and chronic kidney dise
178 he influence of the metabolic syndrome (MS) (obesity, hypertension, elevated triglycerides, reduced l
181 n of P2Y(6)R protects mice from diet-induced obesity, improving glucose tolerance and insulin sensiti
186 entify the prevalence of hypoalbuminemia and obesity in orthopaedic trauma patients with high-energy
189 2015-2018 the US prevalence of youth severe obesity increased in Hispanics and non-Hispanic blacks (
190 2 in macrophage activation in the context of obesity-induced adipose tissue inflammation and insulin
192 al women seem to be generally protected from obesity-induced metabolic and cardiovascular complicatio
196 Oral administration of UAB126 ameliorated obesity, insulin resistance, hepatic steatosis, and hype
198 Despite the rising incidence of childhood obesity, international data from Eurostat show that the
203 t increased insulin secretion in people with obesity is associated with excess adiposity itself and i
206 earch should put to rest the contention that obesity is common in severe COVID-19 because it is commo
207 tients with myocardial infarction and severe obesity is increasing and there is a lack of evidence ho
214 gest that interaction between gingivitis and obesity may exhibit disease reciprocity in which activat
217 vestigated the extent to which pre-pregnancy obesity mediates the association between maternal place
218 hway of asthma pathogenesis in patients with obesity/metabolic syndrome, in which the GRK2-mediated s
219 Stable metabolically unhealthy overweight or obesity (MUOO) (HR 2.22, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.
221 roportions with the increasing prevalence of obesity, nonalcoholic liver disease, and alcohol overuse
224 transplantation recapitulated the effects of obesity on microglial activation and IL-1beta gene expre
226 owever, we don't understand the influence of obesity on susceptibility to infection or on non-severe
227 IF1L is not essential for the development of obesity or impaired glucose handling due to HFD, and adv
230 tigates how changes in population weight and obesity over time are associated with genetic predisposi
234 dle-aged mice, we modeled metabolic disease (obesity/prediabetes) via chronic high-fat (HF) diet and
235 riation in underweight and overweight and/or obesity prevalence in the country, adjusted for cluster
237 fying them as a novel therapeutic target for obesity-related asthma, a disease that is suboptimally r
238 gested a modest association for leucine with obesity-related cancers (1.04 [1.00-1.08]), and no assoc
243 mation (metaflammation) is characteristic of obesity-related metabolic disorders, associated with inc
244 ntial outcome approach was used to determine obesity-related periodontitis risk using the Australian
246 tion analysis including 21 inversions and 25 obesity-related traits on a total of 408,898 Europeans a
247 relationship between mean adipocyte area and obesity-related traits, and identify genetic factors ass
254 A prominent hypothesis is that people with obesity respond to rewards similarly to people with addi
255 dministration of FMT capsules in adults with obesity results in gut microbiota engraftment in most re
261 m p62 deficiency is manifest after birth and obesity subsequently develops despite normal food intake
262 4 to 8 times larger projected impact against obesity than would be achieved though reformulation alon
263 es define microenvironmental consequences of obesity that foster tumorigenesis rather than new driver
264 the presence of metabolic stress, such as in obesity, the resulting degradation products may play a d
268 r microstructure in children with overweight/obesity; those findings indicate that the association of
269 Here, we used a mouse model of maternal obesity to investigate the importance of early life ER s
272 high-intensity, lifestyle-based program for obesity treatment delivered in primary care clinics in w
273 This review addresses the interplay between obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and cardiovascular di
274 a potential target to decrease the risks of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, an
275 e is now recognized as a key risk factor for obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases.
277 of metabolic diseases (hypertriglyceridemia, obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, metabolic syndro
281 portion of T2DM incident cases attributed to obesity was 55.6% in 1990, 59.5% in 2020, and 62.6% in 2
286 rts, we investigated whether the duration of obesity was related to heterogeneity in cardiometabolic
288 ncrease in the average BMI and prevalence of obesity was steeper among the genetically predisposed.
289 on identifying the genetic susceptibility to obesity, we performed a GWAS on metabolically healthy th
293 hypertension with chronic complications, and obesity were risk factors in most age-groups, with highe
294 ome, Charlson Comorbidity Index, diabetes or obesity when compared to no-CCY (all P > 0.05), but were
295 ght loss on insulin secretion in people with obesity who did not improve insulin sensitivity despite
296 oV-2 burden, demographic characteristics and obesity with a minor contribution of chronic comorbid co
299 ese findings provide one explanation for how obesity worsens cancer outcomes and may point to a new m