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Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 18e Chapter 77. Biology of Obesity Sections: Biology of Obesity: Introduction, Further Readings. Topics Discussed: obesity. Excerpt:"In a world where food supplies are intermittent, the ability to store energy in excess of what is required for immediate use is essential for survival. Fat cells, residing within widely distributed adipose tissue depots, are adapted to store excess energy efficiently as triglyceride and, when needed, to release stored energy as free fatty acids for use at other sites. This physiologic system, orchestrated through endocrine and neural pathways, permits humans to survive starvation for as long as several months. However, in the presence of nutritional abundance and a sedentary lifestyle, and influenced importantly by genetic endowment, this system increases adipose energy stores and produces adverse health consequences.Obesity is a state of excess adipose tissue mass. Although often viewed as equivalent to increased body weight, this need not be the caselean but very muscular individuals may be overweight by numerical standards without having increased adiposity. Body weights are distributed continuously in populations, so that choice of a medically meaningful distinction between lean and obese is somewhat arbitrary. Obesity is therefore more effectively defined by assessing its linkage to morbidity or mortality.Hyperinsulinemia..."
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