OBJECTIVE: To relate psychological pro®les, cerebral asymmetry and the hypothalamus ± pituitary ± adrenal axis (HPA) reactivity to clinical characteristics of common obesity. METHODS: Sixty consecutive adult female overweight and obese patients attending the outpatient endocrine department were included in this study. Clinical evaluation speci®cally selected a priori the following indexes: obesity age of onset, parenthood obesity, carbohydrate craving, binge eating with purging, obesity degree (de®ned by the body mass index (BMI) Ð weight (kg)aheight (m 2 )), body fat distribution (de®ned by the abdominal ± thigh ratio (AaT)) and initial weight loss after medical treatment. Psychological evaluation was performed with the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI). In the last 30 patients, the Edinburgh Inventory of Manual Preference (EIMP) and the corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) test were also performed. RESULTS: Clinical characteristics de®ned a priori were independent variables as evaluated by contingency table analysis. Factorial analysis of variance (ANOVA) revealed a signi®cantly different MMPI pro®le, according to parental obesity, with posthoc signi®cantly higher scores on the hypochondriasis (Hs), paranoia (Pa), psychasthenia (Pt) and schizophrenia (Sc) scales in patients with obese parents. Obese patients presented signi®cantly higher dichotomized manual preference indexes in relation to overweight patients. Parental obesity, binge eating behaviour with purging, body fat distribution and the dichotomized manual preference index were independent signi®cant factors for the ACTH response in the CRH test, together explaining 41% of the response variability. Age of onset of obesity and the dichotomized manual preference index were independent and signi®cant factors for the cortisol response, together explaining 37% of its variability. A non-normal distribution was found for the ACTH response: high-and low-responders presented signi®cantly different MMPI pro®les, with high-responders presenting higher scores on all clinical scales except masculinityafemininity (Mf). CONCLUSION: Overweightaobese subjects with parental obesity present a distinctive personality pro®le and a higher ACTH response in the CRH test. Cerebral asymmetry may be a relevant factor for obesity development and is associated with the HPA reactivity. HPA reactivity is a sensitive index integrating clinical, psychological and neural asymmetric factors. International Journal of Obesity (2001) 25, 24 ± 32
OBJECTIVE: To characterize serum lipid abnormalities in overweight and obese female patients and to quantify the relative importance of associated factors. METHODS: Cross sectional study at the ®rst visit to the out-patient department. 237 consecutive overweight and obese female patients (age 31 AE 14 y, body mass index (BMI) 34.2 AE 6.0 kg/m 2 ) were studied. Evaluation included a questionnaire-based assessment of dietary and physical activity habits, determination of anthropometric indexes (BMI, abdominal/thigh ratio (A/T) and conicity index (CI)) and endocrine evaluation. Statistical analysis by factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. RESULTS: Dyslipidaemia was present in 46% of the patients, with hypercholesterolaemia (35%) being more frequent than hypertriglyceridaemia (10%). Age but not dietary habits or physical activity patterns was signi®cantly related to serum lipid concentrations, independently accounting for 6±10% of their variability. Pharmacological drug use resulted in increased serum triglyceride concentrations, explaining less than 5% of their variability. Serum cholesterol concentrations were not signi®cantly related either to anthropometric or to endocrine indexes. For serum triglyceride concentrations, anthropometric indexes accounted for 6% of their variability and endocrine indexes±postprandial insulin, serum cortisol, testosterone and androstenedione together accounted for 32%. CONCLUSION: In mild to moderate female obesity of the peripheral type, dyslipidaemia is common. However the most common abnormality, hypercholesterolaemia is not signi®cantly related to anthropometric or endocrine indexes, while these together account for more than one third of variability in serum triglyceride concentrations.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.