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:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Development of dementia depends on genetic susceptibility and on risk factors accessible to primary prevention. Among the latter, vascular risk factors are well defined: prevention of hyperhomocysteinemia,
diabetes mellitus
, hypercholesterolemia, and, to some extent, of arterial hypertension could avoid the cognitive decline of dementia.
Estrogen
replacement therapy, antiinflammatory drugs, alcohol, vitamin E and intellectual activities seem efficacious in term of primary prevention. When dementia is present, only vitamin E, selegiline and some antiinflammatory drugs have proved efficacy compared to placebo to slow the cognitive decline. Long-term effects of cholinesterase inhibitors need to be investigated in future trials.
...
PMID:[Prevention of dementia: is it possible?]. 1286 24
We evaluated the association of hemostatic factors with insulin resistance in relation to reproductive hormones including FSH, estradiol, testosterone, and SHBG. SHBG was used to calculate the free estradiol index and free androgen index. We studied 3,200 women, aged 42-52 yr, in the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation, a prospective multiethnic study of the menopausal transition. We measured the hemostatic factors, fibrinogen, factor VIIc, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1), as well as glucose and insulin to calculate insulin resistance. After adjustment for body mass index, site, and ethnicity, SHBG was correlated with PAI-1 (partial r = -0.30) and t-PA (partial r = -0.12). Although testosterone was associated with t-PA (partial r = 0.13) and PAI-1 (partial r = 0.07), free androgen index was strongly correlated with t-PA (partial r = 0.18) and PAI-1 (partial r = 0.26). SHBG modified the association of hemostatic factors with insulin resistance. Women with greater insulin resistance had lower SHBG and higher PAI-1.
Estrogen
measures were not associated with insulin resistance. The influence of sex hormones on hemostatic factors and insulin resistance is poorly understood. SHBG, which influences the amount of bioavailable hormone, significantly modified the association of PAI-1 and t-PA with insulin resistance. The longitudinal Study of Women's Health Across the Nation will help us discern whether this interaction contributes to heart disease and
diabetes
among postmenopausal women.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance, hemostatic factors, and hormone interactions in pre- and perimenopausal women: SWAN. 1455 72
Stroke morbidity increases with age. That is the reason why it affects especially the middle aged and elderly. Life expectancy is longer for females than males by 10 years, that is why stroke is a major problem in women. Women die twice more frequently from stroke than men (16% vs. 8%). Stroke risk factors are basically the same in spite of gender. The most important are hypertension,
diabetes
, dyslipidaemia, atrial fibrillation, coronary heart disease, previous stroke, smoking, alcohol abuse, obesity and lack of physical activity. Their impact, however, is different in males and females. Women with
diabetes
, atrial fibrillation, myocardial infarction, obese, drinking excessive amounts of alcohol and smoking are more likely to suffer of stroke than males with the same burden. A less favourable outcome after stroke has been observed in female patients--higher mortality rates and disability. It is possible that poor prognosis is related to a drop in blood estrogen concentration after menopause.
Estrogen
replacement therapy has not proved to be beneficial in preventing stroke and improving outcome. There are several specific conditions: pregnancy, migraine in women associated with the occurrence of stroke.
...
PMID:[Does gender exert influence on stroke?]. 1456 Jul
Overweight and abdominal obesity increase mortality risk, although the risk may be mediated by traditional cardiac risk factors. The authors assessed the association of baseline measures, change in overall body weight and abdominal obesity (waist circumference), and weight and waist circumference cycling with total mortality among postmenopausal women with known heart disease. They used data from 2,739 US women who participated in the Heart and
Estrogen
/progestin Replacement Study between 1993 and 2001. Over 6.8 years of follow-up, 498 women died. In adjusted Cox models that included either baseline waist circumference or body mass index (BMI), each was associated with mortality. However, after further adjustment for
diabetes
, hypertension, and lipoproteins, these associations disappeared. In models including both waist circumference and BMI, larger waist circumference (hazard ratio=1.40 per standard deviation, 95% confidence interval: 1.16, 1.68) was associated with increased risk and higher BMI (hazard ratio=0.81 per standard deviation, 95% confidence interval: 0.67, 0.97) was associated with decreased risk of total mortality, independent of cardiac risk factors. Weight and waist circumference cycling were not associated with mortality. Results show that both BMI and waist circumference are associated with mortality among postmenopausal women with established heart disease, but waist circumference may be more important than BMI, and their effects may be largely mediated by other cardiac risk factors.
...
PMID:Association of total and central obesity with mortality in postmenopausal women with coronary heart disease. 1465 1
Diabetic hyperglycemia increases ischemic brain damage in experimental animals and humans. The mechanisms are unclear but may involve enhanced apoptosis in penumbral regions.
Estrogen
is an established neuroprotectant in experimental stroke. Our previous study demonstrated that female diabetic db/db mice suffered less damage following cerebral hypoxia-ischemia (H/I) than male db/db mice. Here we investigated the effects of
diabetes
and estrogen apoptotic gene expression following H/I. Female db/db and nondiabetic (+/?) mice were ovariectomized (OVX) and treated with estrogen or vehicle prior to H/I; brains were analyzed for damage and bcl-2 family gene expression. OVX increased ischemic damage in +/? mice; estrogen reduced tissue injury and enhanced antiapoptotic gene expression (bcl-2 and bfl-1). db/db mice demonstrated more damage, without increased bcl-2 mRNA; bfl-1 expression appeared at 48 hours of recovery associated with infarction. To our knowledge, this is the first description of bfl-1 in the brain with localization to microglia and macrophages. Early induction of bfl-1 expression in +/? mouse brain was associated with microglia; delayed bfl-1 expression in diabetic brain was in macrophages bordering the infarct. Furthermore, estrogen replacement stimulated early postischemic expression of bcl-2 and bfl-1 and reduced damage in normoglycemic animals but failed to protect the diabetic brain.
...
PMID:Estrogen stimulates microglia and brain recovery from hypoxia-ischemia in normoglycemic but not diabetic female mice. 1470 12
We present the fourth case of an adult man (29 yr old) affected by aromatase deficiency resulting from a novel homozygous inactivating mutation of the CYP19 (P450(arom)) gene. At first observation, continuing linear growth, eunuchoid body proportions, diffuse bone pain, and bilateral cryptorchidism were observed. The patient presented also a complex dysmetabolic syndrome characterized by insulin resistance,
diabetes mellitus
type 2, acanthosis nigricans, liver steatohepatitis, and signs of precocious atherogenesis. The analysis of the effects induced by the successive treatment with high doses of testosterone, alendronate, and estradiol allows further insight into the roles of androgens and estrogens on several metabolic functions. High doses of testosterone treatment resulted in a severe imbalance in the estradiol to testosterone ratio together with the occurrence of insulin resistance and
diabetes mellitus
type 2.
Estrogen
treatment resulted in an improvement of acanthosis nigricans, insulin resistance, and liver steatohepatitis, coupled with a better glycemic control and the disappearance of two carotid plaques. Furthermore, the study confirms previous data concerning the key role of estrogens on male bone maturation, at least in part, and regulation of gonadotropin secretion. The biopsy of the testis showed a pattern of total germ cell depletion that might be due to the concomitant presence of bilateral cryptorchidism. Thus, a possible role of estrogen in male reproductive function is suggested but without revealing a direct cause-effect relationship. Data from this case provide new insights into the role of estrogens in glucose, lipid, and liver metabolism in men. This new case of aromatase deficiency confirms previous data on bone maturation and mineralization, and it reveals a high risk for the precocious development of cardiovascular disease in young aromatase-deficient men.
...
PMID:Dysmetabolic syndrome in a man with a novel mutation of the aromatase gene: effects of testosterone, alendronate, and estradiol treatment. 1471 28
Many animal studies and studies on intermediate clinical endpoints have shown hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to be associated with both favourable and unfavourable cardiovascular effects. We reviewed the literature regarding HRT and the distinct endpoint of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in peri- and postmenopausal women. Searches of the MEDLINE and EMBASE databases were conducted. Fifty papers were identified as eligible for inclusion: eight randomised controlled trials, 18 cohort studies, 23 case-control studies and one case-control and cohort study. The single large primary prevention randomised controlled trial on HRT and the risk of AMI in generally healthy women (Women's Health Initiative trial) reported a small yet significantly increased risk of AMI in postmenopausal women receiving combined HRT. This contrasts with a large number of observational studies that suggested a protective effect, although in many of these studies the results were not statistically significant. Inconclusive evidence on the effect of duration of use does not support the notion that a possible protective association is causal. Detection bias and residual confounding are alternative explanations for the associations observed in the randomised controlled trial and observational studies. No studies on groups of women with existing cardiovascular disease or with
diabetes mellitus
, including the only large secondary prevention trial (Heart and
Estrogen
/Progestin Replacement Study), reported a significant change in AMI risk between HRT users and non-users. There is insufficient evidence to suggest that HRT is associated with a change in the risk of AMI in the majority of women. However, certain subgroups of women with specific genetic polymorphisms may be more susceptible to a change in the risk of AMI with HRT use.
...
PMID:Hormone replacement therapy and risk of acute myocardial infarction : a review of the literature. 1592 2
Prevalence of
diabetes mellitus
(types 1 and 2) in postmenopausal women is about 10-20% according to age. It can be associated with a metabolic syndrome in about 60% of cases, thereby severely increasing cardiovascular risk (among others) in these women.
Estrogen
or estrogen-progestin replacement therapy does not usually impair
diabetes
control. It will be submitted to the same indications/contraindications, in relation with the risk/benefit balance, as for all other postmenopausal women. However, increased risks inherent to diabetic subjects concerning metabolism, coagulation/hemostasis, and cardiovascular disease, should be considered. Therefore, estrogen in minimal effective dosages, eventually by transdermal route, as well as metabolically neutral progestins near to progesterone should be preferred. In case of pre-existing or occurring vascular problems, a careful approach or even suppression of replacement therapy should prevail.
...
PMID:[Menopause-related risks and hormone therapy in diabetic women]. 1603 32
The prevalence and progression of type 2 diabetes have increased remarkably in postmenopausal women. Although estrogen replacement and exercise have been studied for their effect in modulating insulin sensitivity in the case of insufficient estrogen states, their effects on beta-cell function and mass have not been studied. Ovariectomized (OVX) female rats with 90% pancreatectomy were given a 30% fat diet for 8 wk with a corresponding administration of 17beta-estradiol (30 microg/kg body weight) and/or regular exercise. Amelioration of insulin resistance by estrogen replacement or exercise was closely related to body weight reduction. Insulin secretion in first and second phases was lower in OVX during hyperglycemic clamp, which was improved by estrogen replacement and exercise but not by weight reduction induced by restricted diets. Both estrogen replacement and exercise overcame reduced pancreatic beta-cell mass in OVX rats via increased proliferation and decreased apoptosis of beta-cells, but they did not exhibit an additive effect. However, restricted diets did not stimulate beta-cell proliferation. Increased beta-cell proliferation was associated with the induction of insulin receptor substrate-2 and pancreatic homeodomain protein-1 via the activation of the cAMP response element binding protein.
Estrogen
replacement and exercise shared a common pathway, which led to the improvement of beta-cell function and mass, via cAMP response element binding protein activation, explaining the lack of an additive effect with combined treatments. In conclusion, decreased beta-cell mass leading to impaired insulin secretion triggers glucose dysregulation in estrogen insufficiency, regardless of body fat. Regular moderate exercise eliminates the risk factors of contracting
diabetes
in the postmenopausal state.
...
PMID:Estrogen and exercise may enhance beta-cell function and mass via insulin receptor substrate 2 induction in ovariectomized diabetic rats. 1603 83
Large differences exist between women and men in the syndrome of heart failure (HF). In contrast to men, hypertension and
diabetes
represent the major risk factors for development of HF in women and hypertension is also the major cause of left ventricular hypertrophy and stroke. Left ventricular hypertrophy in women increases the risk for mortality to a higher degree than it does in men. The clinical course of HF is generally more benign and more frequently characterized by HF with preserved systolic function.
Estrogen
receptors are present in the human heart. Based on data from rodent models, they are believed to modulate hypertrophy and the progression of HF. Some of the signaling pathways have been described and involve phosphorylation of intracellular kinases and production of nitric oxide. Interestingly, estrogen receptors are upregulated in human hypertrophy and HF. The clinical course of HF in women is characterized by the more frequent occurrence of diastolic HF. Myocardial remodeling with age and, as a consequence, of mechanical load is different in both genders. Adherence to guidelines in the diagnosis and treatment of HF is less strict in women than in men, leading to undertreatment with inhibitors of the renin-angiotensin system. Women are generally underrepresented in clinical trials in HF and gender-specific analyses have been neglected in most older large survival trials. In some of the large survival studies angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or beta-receptor blockers did not reach significant endpoints in women. However, meta-analyses show overall positive effects for these groups of substances. Angiotensin receptor blockers were effective in large studies including high percentages of women.
...
PMID:Heart failure and its treatment in women. Role of hypertension, diabetes, and estrogen. 1613 38
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>