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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Epidemiological evidence supports a link between hyperinsulinemia and blood pressure. In nondiabetic, normotensive individuals, the male sex, age, obesity, and body fat distribution all are associated with higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure and with higher plasma insulin concentrations. Nevertheless, when accounting for the above physiological variables, blood pressure still is independently related to plasma insulin. In the general population, hypertensive individuals have multiple metabolic abnormalities (glucose intolerance, hyperinsulinemia, and dyslipidemia). A striking pattern of overlap exists among obesity,
diabetes
, and hypertension. Physiological studies (euglycemic insulin clamp) have shown that essential hypertension per se is a state of insulin resistance: lean, nondiabetic subjects with untreated hypertension have a mean 40% reduction in the ability of physiological hyperinsulinemia to stimulate whole-body glucose uptake. Other insulin actions (suppression of hepatic glucose output, lipolysis, lipid oxidation, and promotion of K+ uptake) are conspicuously preserved. In perfused forearm studies, local (intra-arterial) hyperinsulinemia induces subnormal rates of glucose uptake and glycogen synthesis in the skeletal muscle of individuals with essential hypertension. In the
San
Antonio Heart Study, parental history of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) is associated with hyperinsulinemia and higher blood pressure and serum lipid levels in nondiabetic probands. In this biethnic population, however, hyperinsulinemia and NIDDM are more prevalent (approximately threefold) among Mexican-Americans than non-Hispanic whites, but hypertension is more prevalent among the latter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Essential hypertension: an insulin-resistant state. 169 27
An unfavorable body fat distribution is associated with many metabolic abnormalities including a high prevalence and incidence of noninsulin dependent diabetes mellitus and decreased high density lipoprotein cholesterol and increased triglyceride levels. One mechanism for the effect of body fat distribution on metabolic variables may be through sex hormones. We examined the relationship of body mass index (BMI), ratio of subscapular-to-triceps skinfold ratio (centrality index) and ratio of waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) to sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) (an in vivo measure of androgenicity) in 101 postmenopausal Mexican-American and non-Hispanic white women from the
San
Antonio Heart Study, a population based study of
diabetes
and cardiovascular disease. SHBG was significantly correlated with BMI (r = -0.440, P less than 0.001), WHR (r = -0.255, P less than 0.01) and centrality index (r = -0.210, P less than 0.05). In a multiple linear regression analysis, SHBG remained significantly associated with BMI (P less than 0.001) and WHR (P less than 0.05) but not with age, ethnicity or centrality index. This work suggests that in postmenopausal women overall adiposity and an unfavorable body fat distribution are associated with increased androgenicity as measured by a lower SHBG concentration. Our finding may help to explain the association of body fat distribution with
diabetes
and cardiovascular risk factors in older women.
...
PMID:Increased upper body and overall adiposity is associated with decreased sex hormone binding globulin in postmenopausal women. 189 24
Hyperinsulinaemia links non-insulin dependent diabetes (NIDDM), obesity, and hypertension, each an insulin-resistant state in its own right. Insulin resistance predicts the occurrence of NIDDM, and plays a major role in its pathogenesis. We tested the hypothesis that hyperinsulinaemia may also predict hypertension in a sample (n = 2905) of the mixed population of
San
Antonio, in which hyperinsulinaemia and NIDDM are more prevalent among Mexican-Americans than non-Hispanic whites. Whilst in the whole sample the hypertensives had significantly (P less than 0.001) higher plasma insulin concentrations than the normotensives, high blood pressure was significantly (P less than 0.01) more frequent among non-Hispanic whites than Mexican-Americans regardless of
diabetes
status. After adjusting for factors (age, sex, body mass, and body fat distribution) known to affect insulin levels, a direct relationship between post-glucose plasma insulin concentrations and prevalence of hypertension was still present in both ethnic groups. In Mexican-Americans, however, the standardized prevalence of hypertension was significantly (P less than 0.001) lower at any given insulin concentration. Post-glucose plasma glucose levels also were directly related to hypertension prevalence in both groups; again, the regression line was shifted downward and, furthermore, less steep (P less than 0.02) in Mexican-Americans, suggesting relative protection against the negative effect of hyperglycaemia on blood pressure. Dyslipidaemia (higher total cholesterol and triglyceride, and lower HDL-cholesterol concentrations) was strongly associated with hyperinsulinaemia and blood pressure in both ethnic groups. After adjusting for plasma insulin, only hypertriglyceridaemia was associated with high blood pressure, with no inter-ethnic difference.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:High blood pressure and insulin resistance: influence of ethnic background. 190 31
Evidence from migrant population studies and secular trend data indicates that environmental factors play a role in the etiology of non-insulin-dependent (type II)
diabetes
. These environmental factors appear to be concomitants of the process whereby traditional populations become "modernized" or "westernized" and include increased intake of total calories, fat, and sucrose, decreased intake of total and complex carbohydrates, including fiber, and decreased physical exercise. There also appears to be a "postmodernization" process, which we have characterized as the "descending limb of the curve." In Mexican Americans in
San
Antonio, the prevalence of type II
diabetes
declines with acculturation to the values, attitudes, and behaviors of "postmodernized" American society. However, examination of the dietary and exercise concomitants of this process revealed a mixed picture. There was some suggestion that Mexican-American women, although not men, had entered onto the descending limb of the curve. However, Native American genetic admixture in Mexican Americans also covaried with affluence and acculturation in such a way that the declining prevalence of
diabetes
could as easily be due to genetic factors as to environmental factors. The "pancreatic exhaustion" theory holds that resistance to insulin action is a principal lesion leading to hypersecretion of insulin, hyperinsulinemia, and eventual islet cell failure and clinical
diabetes
. This theory predicts that prediabetic subjects will be hyperinsulinemic. In conformity with this theory, we have shown that subgroups of the Mexican-American population, defined on the basis of family history of
diabetes
, who would be expected a priori to be enriched with prediabetic subjects, are hyperinsulinemic as predicted.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes
Care 1991 Jul
PMID:Genetic and environmental determinants of type II diabetes in Mexican Americans. Is there a "descending limb" to the modernization/diabetes relationship? 191 14
Mexican Americans have a threefold greater prevalence of non-insulin-dependent (type II)
diabetes mellitus
than non-Hispanic whites in the
San
Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of
diabetes
. In addition, Mexican-American diabetic subjects (n = 365) have greater fasting glycemia than non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects (P less than 0.001). Despite these findings, and despite a higher prevalence of microvascular complications among Mexican Americans, there does not appear to be a marked difference in prevalence of macrovascular complications between Mexican-American and non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects. Mexican-American diabetic subjects have only a moderate excess of peripheral vascular disease (as judged by ankle-arm blood pressure ratios) relative to non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects (sex-adjusted Mantel-Haenszel odds ratio 1.84, 95% confidence interval 0.75-4.49). Mexican-American diabetic subjects actually reported fewer myocardial infarctions than non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects (sex-adjusted Mantel-Haenszel odds ratio 0.73, 95% confidence interval 0.31-1.71). Duration was not associated with either peripheral vascular disease or myocardial infarction. Severity of glycemia was only mildly associated with presence of peripheral vascular disease and negatively associated with self-reported myocardial infarction. This latter finding may represent a survival bias in that more severe diabetic subjects have already died and are not ascertained in a prevalence study. The absence of an ethnic difference in the prevalence of macrovascular disease contrasts with our previous reports from the
San
Antonio Heart Study, in which the prevalence of both retinopathy and proteinuria was observed to be higher in Mexican-American diabetic subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes
Care 1991 Jul
PMID:Macrovascular complications in Mexican Americans with type II diabetes. 191 16
Diabetes
in pregnant Mexican-American women is a serious and expensive health problem. At the University of California,
San
Diego Medical Center, 44% of pregnant women are Mexican American. In the Diabetes in Pregnancy Clinic, only 7% of women with insulin-dependent
diabetes
are in this ethnic group compared with 66% of non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients and 51% of those with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). GDM is the most common complication of pregnancy in Mexican Americans with a prevalence approximately three times higher than that of whites (4.5 vs. 1.5%). Mexican-American obese GDM subjects had more frequent cesarean sections and were more likely to have complications of premature rupture of membranes and preterm labor (NS). Polycythemia and sepsis also occurred more often in their infants. Anthropometric measurements in infants of both lean and obese GDM subjects differed from those of infants of mothers without GDM. Infants of lean mothers with GDM were heavier and longer than those of lean mothers without GDM. In addition, they had increased waist-hip ratio and triceps and subscapular skin folds. Infants of obese mothers with GDM were heavier than those of lean mothers with GDM. Moreover, they were longer (P less than 0.04); had a higher body mass index (P less than 0.04); and larger waist and hip circumferences (P less than 0.03) and buccal (P less than 0.01), subscapular (P less than 0.01), and sum of skin-fold measurements (P less than 0.03). Our observations indicate that pregnant diabetic Mexican-American women have predominantly GDM and non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
. They represent a major public health problem because of increased maternal and neonatal morbidity.
Diabetes
Care 1991 Jul
PMID:Diabetes in pregnancy in Mexican Americans. 191 21
Mexican-American men experience reduced cardiovascular mortality compared with non-Hispanic white men. There is no corresponding ethnic difference in cardiovascular mortality in women. The difference in men could result either from a lower incidence of cardiovascular disease or a lower case fatality rate among Mexican-Americans. Although the incidence of cardiovascular disease in Mexican-Americans is unknown, we have collected data on prevalence of myocardial infarction in 5,148 individuals examined in the
San
Antonio Heart Study, a population-based survey of cardiovascular disease conducted between 1979 and 1988 in Mexican-Americans and non-Hispanic whites aged 25-64 years. Myocardial infarction was assessed by Minnesota-coded electrocardiograms and by a self-reported history of a physician-diagnosed heart attack. For both end points, the age-adjusted prevalence of myocardial infarction was lower in Mexican-American men than in non-Hispanic white men. After adjustment for age and
diabetes
status (present/absent), the odds of a myocardial infarction, as defined by either criterion, was approximately one third lower in Mexican-American men than in non-Hispanic white men (p = 0.06). In women, the prevalence of both myocardial infarction end points was slightly higher in Mexican-Americans than in non-Hispanic whites, although neither of these differences was significant. Although the ethnic differences in prevalence in this study were not statistically significant, their pattern parallels the pattern in the mortality due to cardiovascular diseases. Therefore, the results support the hypothesis that the reduced cardiovascular mortality rate observed in Mexican-American men reflects a lower incidence of myocardial infarction rather than a reduced case fatality rate because the latter would result in a higher prevalence.
...
PMID:Myocardial infarction in Mexican-Americans and non-Hispanic whites. The San Antonio Heart Study. 198 97
We evaluated the consistency of three questionnaire methods of assessing work and leisure activity in the rural biethnic population of the
San
Luis Valley
Diabetes
Study. A 7-d physical activity recall (PAR), a ranking of usual activity, and a history of usual participation in vigorous activity were used. Energy expenditure (kJ.kg-1.wk-1) (EE) was estimated from PAR. Subjects were 503 adults [49% non-Hispanic white (NHW), 51% Hispanic]. Physical activity at work rather than leisure-time activity largely determined total energy expenditure. Average EE at work increased with work rank for all subjects combined [mean EE (SEE) for rank 1 (low) = 324.2 (24.4), rank 4 (high) = 874.0 (102.1)] and within sex, ethnic, and occupational subgroups. Leisure EE increased with leisure rank only for NHW men and employed women. Similar patterns were observed in comparisons of PAR data with history of vigorous activity. Further development and validation of instruments appropriate for use across population subgroups are needed.
...
PMID:Physical-activity-assessment measures compared in a biethnic rural population: the San Luis Valley Diabetes Study. 200 58
Hyperinsulinemia has been demonstrated in Hispanics with normal glucose tolerance and in other populations at higher risk for non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM). We compared fasting and glucose-stimulated insulin and C-peptide levels in a community-based sample of 464 Hispanic and 676 non-Hispanic white adult residents of the
San
Luis Valley of Colorado. All subjects had normal glucose tolerance as confirmed by oral glucose tolerance testing interpreted with World Health Organization criteria. Mean fasting and 1- and 2-h post-glucose load insulin levels were significantly higher in Hispanics versus non-Hispanic whites (fasting 0.08 vs. 0.07 nM, P = 0.0026; 1 h 0.52 vs. 0.47 nM, P = 0.0129; 2 h 0.36 vs. 0.27 nM, P less than 0.0001), even after adjustment for age, sex, body mass index, waist-hip ratio, family history of
diabetes mellitus
, concurrent plasma glucose level, and fasting insulin level. Mean fasting and 1- and 2-h glucose-stimulated C-peptide levels in Hispanics also significantly exceeded those in non-Hispanic whites (fasting 0.58 vs. 0.54 nM, P = 0.0119; 1 h 2.72 vs. 2.46 nM, P less than 0.0001; 2 h 2.25 vs. 1.97 nM, P less than 0.0001). The C-peptide-insulin molar ratio was greater in non-Hispanic whites than Hispanics at all times measured. These findings confirm that Hispanics with normal glucose tolerance are hyperinsulinemic and that increased insulin secretion is at least partly responsible for this phenomenon. The lower levels of C-peptide compared with insulin in Hispanics suggest that the hyperinsulinemia seen in this ethnic group may be due in part to decreased hepatic insulin extraction.
Diabetes
1991 Apr
PMID:Higher insulin and C-peptide concentrations in Hispanic population at high risk for NIDDM. San Luis Valley Diabetes Study. 201 52
Many studies have shown an increased prevalence of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
(NIDDM) in individuals with an unfavorable body fat distribution, but there are still relatively few prospective studies on this topic. We present data on the 8-y incidence of NIDDM in Mexican-American men and women according to their degree of central adiposity, measured by the ratio of subscapular to triceps skinfold thicknesses. Subjects were initially enrolled in the
San
Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of
diabetes
in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. Sixteen of 254 initially nondiabetic men and 27 of 366 initially nondiabetic women developed
diabetes
. Central adiposity was more strongly associated with
diabetes
incidence in women than in men. After adjustment for overall adiposity (measured by body mass index), women in the highest and in the middle tertile of centrality had a significantly higher risk of
diabetes
than did women in the lowest tertile [odds ratio (OR) = 10.70, P = 0.008, highest vs lowest tertile, and OR = 8.55, P = 0.032, middle vs lowest tertile; for men OR = 3.70 and OR = 1.38, respectively].
...
PMID:Greater influence of central distribution of adipose tissue on incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes in women than men. 202 Nov 39
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