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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Diabetic patients typically have a low compliance rate to intervention and lifestyle change. Although diabetes has been studied for years, the disease remains a leading cause of death in the United States and approaches a prevalence of 40% in certain ethnic populations. The mortality rate for NIDDM is two three times higher than the average healthy person, primarily due to cardiovascular complications. More than 10 million people in the United States alone are diagnosed with diabetes. Clearly, with health care resources dwindling, improved treatment outcomes are needed. The physiologic mechanism involved in the development of the preliminary phase of Type II diabetes or syndrome X is particularly amenable to primary and secondary prevention as well as health promotion activities. NPs provide an alternative delivery of care based on health-promotion and disease-prevention principles. NPs working in a primary care delivery model with patients at risk for diabetes have the opportunity to bring about measurable outcome differences.
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PMID:Syndrome X. Primary care provider's role in health promotion and disease prevention. 878 75

Recent trends in the American lifestyle, such as a high-fat diet and inactivity, have promoted the emergence of a metabolic disorder titled syndrome X. Although originally linked to non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and characterized by insulin resistance, syndrome X is now better described as a cascade of disorders encompassing not only NIDDM, but also hypertension, atherosclerosis, centrally distributed obesity, and dyslipidemia. Further pathology has been linked to syndrome X, such as polycystic ovary disease, microvascular angin, and the presence of acanthosis nigricans. Recognition and appropriate management of syndrome X will prevent deleterious patient outcomes that might occur without continuity of care in treating associated disorders. Pharmacological management of syndrome X includes the use of insulin-sparing antihyperglycemic agents and/or combination therapy and avoidance of several frequently prescribed medications. Clinicians need to initiate renewed efforts to provide lifestyle counselling to promote ideal body weight, since interpretation of research data concerning syndrome X reinforces that serious health consequences will result from obesity and inactivity.
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PMID:Syndrome X. Recognition and management of this metabolic disorder in primary care. 878 76

Aging is associated with an increased incidence of hypertension, noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and coronary heart disease. Because these conditions often cluster in the same individuals, there has been speculation that a common mechanism is responsible for all of these pathological states. Both epidemiological and clinical research has shown that insulin resistance and/or hyperinsulinemia are associated with glucose intolerance, dyslipidemia (high plasma triglyceride and low high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels), and higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures. Therefore, insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia have been proposed as the causal link among the elements of the cluster mentioned above, now most commonly referred to as the insulin resistance syndrome, syndrome X, or the metabolic syndrome. The elderly are more glucose intolerant and insulin-resistant, but it remains controversial whether this decrease in function is an inevitable consequence of "biological aging" or the result of what might be referred to as environmental or lifestyle variables: increased obesity, a detrimental pattern of fat distribution, or physical inactivity that usually accompany age. All of these modifiable environmental factors have also been shown to result in increases in insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia and are risk factors for the development of the diseases of the metabolic syndrome. Recent interventional studies that have attempted to reverse these conditions in the elderly have shown improved insulin sensitivity, and glucose tolerance. Insulin secretion, on the other hand, seems to decrease with age even after adjustments for differences in adiposity, fat distribution, and physical activity. This may be responsible for the glucose intolerance in the very old even after improvements have been made in their lifestyle variables.
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PMID:The effect of age on insulin resistance and secretion: a review. 882 67

Cardiac Syndrome X (microvascular angina) and the more recently described metabolic Syndrome X (an epidemiological association between insulin resistance and atheroma, dyslipidaemia, and hypertension) may have more in common than the chance of their common sobriquet, in view of evidence that microvascular angina too is characterised by insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction. The implications are discussed.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 1996 Jul
PMID:Cardiovascular syndromes X, endothelial dysfunction and insulin resistance. 886 55

Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most important cause of death and disability among older women. A 50-year-old woman has a 46% risk of having CHD and a 31% risk of dying from it. Female CHD patients have a distinct clinical presentation, which includes more severe thromboembolic disease without coronary arteriosclerosis. Syndrome X also appears to be more prevalent in women. Oestrogen deficiency may be a trigger for this syndrome. The magnitude of the effect of various risk factors may also differ between women and men. In addition, there are risk factors unique to women. Lipid profiles differ between men and women. After menopause, the lipid profile changes unfavourably, with increasing levels of LDL cholesterol and decreasing levels of HDL cholesterol. Cigarette smoking, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and obesity are all recognised risk factors for CHD in women. It is important to recognise that risk factors for CHD differ between men and women. Advising women to quit cigarette smoking, avoid obesity, increase physical activity, and prevent and treat hypertension and hyperlipidaemia will result in a reduction in CHD risk. Additional studies are needed to further contribute to our understanding of the complex risk factors underlying the development of CHD in women.
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PMID:Risk factors for cardiovascular disease in women: assessment and management. 886 75

Israel has one of the highest dietary polyunsaturated/saturated fat ratios in the world; the consumption of omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) is about 8% higher than in the USA, and 10-12% higher than in most European countries. In fact, Israeli Jews may be regarded as a population-based dietary experiment of the effect of a high omega-6 PUFA diet, a diet that until recently was widely recommended. Despite such national habits, there is paradoxically a high prevalence of cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and obesity-all diseases that are associated with hyperinsulinemia (HI) and insulin resistance (IR), and grouped together as the insulin resistance syndrome or syndrome X. There is also an increased cancer incidence and mortality rate, especially in women, compared with western countries. Studies suggest that high omega-6 linoleic acid consumption might aggravate HI and IR, in addition to being a substrate for lipid peroxidation and free radical formation. Thus, rather than being beneficial, high omega-6 PUFA diets may have some long-term side effects, within the cluster of hyperinsulinemia, atherosclerosis and tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Diet and disease--the Israeli paradox: possible dangers of a high omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid diet. 896 90

In population-based observational studies it has been repeatedly shown that both treated and untreated hypertensives are dyslipidaemic and glucose intolerant to a large extent. Prospective studies have also indicated that hypertension is a risk factor for the development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Therefore, evidence is accumulating that these clinical conditions share a common background with pathophysiological mechanisms, eg, insulin resistance (syndrome X) or possible adverse conditions during fetal life. Both non-pharmacological treatment (diet, physical exercise) and new suitable drugs, such as the "insulin sensitizers', may be used to treat the metabolic and haemodynamic disturbances linked to insulin resistance. Clinical studies are needed to document the effects of such treatments for patient with "Syndrome X' and to compare them with more traditional drugs.
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PMID:Diabetes and syndrome X in hypertension--population aspects. 896 97

The aim of the present investigation was to study normal rats fed a sucrose-rich diet (SRD) for a prolonged period (up to 30 weeks) (1) to obtain additional data on the hormonal and metabolic patterns induced by this treatment and (2) to provide information on changes taking place in the pancreatic islet cell populations. We found that long-term feeding with a SRD resulted in a steady state of hypertriglyceridemia and hyperglycemia in which insulin levels remained unchanged and unable to compensate for the increased demands of the developing metabolic changes. The endocrine pancreas showed a significant increase of both islet number and B-cell area, as well as changes in the profile of islet cell distribution. However, these changes were not accompanied by an increase in the pancreatic content of immunoreactive insulin (IRI). It may therefore be postulated that the newly emerged B-cell mass has some sort of derangement with the increased insulin demand resulting from insulin resistance induced by the long-term SRD feeding. Thus, feeding a SRD to normal rats may prove to be an attractive animal model for studying the role of environmental nutritional factors in the unsettled issue of the relationship between insulin resistance and relative insulin deficiency. The model might provide key information for understanding the pathophysiology of human diseases such as type II diabetes, dyslipidemia, and a number of entities included in so-called syndrome X.
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PMID:Long-term administration of a sucrose-rich diet to normal rats: relationship between metabolic and hormonal profiles and morphological changes in the endocrine pancreas. 896 87

Characteristic feature of pathogenesis, epidemiology and laboratory findings in hyperuricemia of gouty patients are studied and reasonable treatments of gout in clinical medicine are discussed. Gout is characterized by repeated arthritis attacks on the metacarpophalangeal joint of the first toe or other small joints, especially overworked joints or those exposed to cold. The arthritis attack lasts for 3.5 days and then diminishes gradually. The intervals are shortened in patients under poor hyperuricemic control but tophi formation is less frequent. Complications in combination with hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, obesity and hypertension, which are compatible to syndrome X, are frequent in gouty patients and are suspected of rapidly progressing to arteriosclerosis, such as ischemic heart diseases. Hyperuricemia consists of over-production and underexcretion, which can be diagnosed by the urate clearance test. Classification is valuable for surveying the underlying diseases of secondary hyperuricemia and treating gouty patients. Underexcretion was observed in 85% of gouty patients with hyperuricemia and even the mean urate clearance in the overproduction type was significantly lower than that of normal controls, suggesting that underexcretion is a fundamental phenomenon in all gouty patients. Treatments of complications as well as those of hyperuricemia with uricosuric agents are required for clinical treatment of gouty patients.
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PMID:[Characteristic features of gouty patients]. 897

There are several types of obesity, and the metabolic conditions associated with these phenotypes are also heterogeneous. Obesity of the male (android) type shows a dominant visceral and upper thoracic distribution of adipose tissue, whereas in the feminine (gynecoid) type adipose tissue is found predominantly in the lower part of the body (hips and thighs). Android obesity is clearly a cardiovascular risk factor, more so than gynecoid obesity. Hereditary factors contribute significantly to the occurrence of this pathology in families, although environmental factors play a role in its development. Android obesity is associated with metabolic anomalies which also characterize the syndrome X: resistance to insulin, arterial hypertension and dyslipidemia. The predisposition of individuals with android obesity to become diabetic rests in part on genetic and in part on environmental factors. Hyperinsulinemia and a high flux of free fatty acids act at the level of liver and endocrine pancreas to increase resistance to insulin and to decrease insulin secretion, two determining factors for type II diabetes. Other functional anomalies have been involved to explain android obesity such as dysregulation of adrenocortical and sexual steroids or a global derangement of stress mechanisms. No significant proof, however, seems to support either one of these hypotheses.
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PMID:[Android-type obesity and gynecoid-type obesity]. 899 75


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