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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The rising prevalence of obesity is accompanied by an increasing number of patients with the metabolic complications of obesity. The major complications come under the heading of the metabolic syndrome. This syndrome is characterized by plasma lipid disorders (atherogenic dyslipidemia), raised blood pressure, elevated plasma glucose, and a prothrombotic state. The clinical consequences of the metabolic syndrome are coronary heart disease and stroke,
type 2 diabetes
and its complications, fatty liver, cholesterol gallstones, and possibly some forms of
cancer
. At the heart of the metabolic syndrome is insulin resistance, which represents a generalized derangement in metabolic processes. Obesity is the predominant factor leading to insulin resistance, although other factors play a role. The mechanistic link between insulin resistance and the metabolic syndrome is complex. The relationship is modulated by yet other factors, such as physical activity, body fat distribution, hormones, and a person's genetic polymorphic architecture. A better understanding of the molecular basis of this relationship is needed to suggest new targets for prevention and treatment of the complications of obesity. In addition, understanding at the clinical level will lead to improved management of these complications.
...
PMID:Metabolic complications of obesity. 1118 17
A 59-year-old man with a 30-year history of
type 2 diabetes
mellitus presented with fatigue, confusion, and weight loss over a 3-month period. He was found to be hypercalcemic (11.8 mg/dL) and dehydrated, and his hypercalcemia improved with intravenous fluids. While in the hospital, he developed hyponatremia, hypoglycemia, and hypotension. He was found to have a subnormal cortisol level of 2.3 microg/dL at baseline, which increased to only 5.6 microg/dL 60 minutes after a 250-microg corticotropin intravenous stimulation test. The patient developed pneumonia and adult respiratory distress syndrome and died of an acute myocardial infarction. During the autopsy, he was found to have lymphocytic hypophysitis with a severe reduction in corticotropin-producing anterior pituitary cells. No
malignancy
was identified at autopsy. He is the first male patient to be described in the literature who presented with hypercalcemia caused by lymphocytic hypophysitis.
...
PMID:Lymphocytic hypophysitis in a man presenting with hypercalcemia. 1126
The increase in obesity worldwide will have an important impact on the global incidence of cardiovascular disease,
type 2 diabetes
mellitus,
cancer
, osteoarthritis, work disability, and sleep apnea. Obesity has a more pronounced impact on morbidity than on mortality. Disability due to obesity-related cardiovascular diseases will increase particularly in industrialized countries, as patients survive cardiovascular diseases in these countries more often than in nonindustrialized countries. Disability due to obesity-related
type 2 diabetes
will increase particularly in industrializing countries, as insulin supply is usually insufficient in these countries. As a result, in these countries, an increase in disabling nephropathy, arteriosclerosis, neuropathy, and retinopathy is expected. Increases in the prevalence of obesity will potentially lead to an increase in the number of years that subjects suffer from obesity-related morbidity and disability. A 1% increase in the prevalence of obesity in such countries as India and China leads to 20 million additional cases of obesity. Prevention programs will stem the obesity epidemic more efficiently than weight-loss programs. However, only a few prevention programs have been developed or implemented, and the success rates reported to date have been low. Obesity prevention programs should be high on the scientific and political agenda in both industrialized and industrializing countries.
...
PMID:The public health impact of obesity. 1127 26
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are nuclear hormone receptors, initially described as molecular targets for synthetic compounds that induce peroxisome proliferation. PPARgamma is the best characterized of the PPARs. The heterodimer of PPARgamma with the retinoid X receptor (RXR) plays a crucial role in adipogenesis and insulin sensitization. The RXR/PPARgamma heterodimer furthermore has been reported to have important immunomodulatory activities and to affect cell proliferation/differentiation pathways in various
malignancies
. PPARgamma is activated by a number of naturally occurring fatty acid derivatives and by several synthetic compounds, including the thiazolidinediones and L-tyrosine-based insulin sensitizers. This review gives an overview of the pleiotropic functions of PPARgamma and discusses the wide-ranging medical implications that modulation of PPARgamma activity might have for various diseases, ranging from obesity and
type 2 diabetes
to
cancer
and inflammation.
...
PMID:The pleiotropic functions of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma. 1132 1
It is not known whether obesity increases the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) simply because it promotes cirrhosis, a general risk factor for HCC, or via some other mechanism that operates independently of cirrhosis. If the latter occurs, then hepatocyte hyperplasia, an early event during the neoplastic process, might begin before liver cirrhosis develops. Genetically obese, leptin-deficient ob/ob mice are models for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), a type of liver disease that is strongly associated with obesity and
type 2 diabetes
. Similar to obese, diabetic patients, ob/ob mice have an increased incidence of HCC. However, unlike humans with NAFLD, they rarely, if ever, develop cirrhosis spontaneously. To determine whether the noncirrhotic livers of ob/ob mice with NAFLD exhibit hepatocyte hyperplasia, parameters of proliferation and apoptosis were compared in adult ob/ob mice and their healthy litter mates. Adult ob/ob mice have an increase in liver mass relative to body mass. This hepatomegaly cannot be explained solely by lipid accumulation and is accompanied by significant increases in hepatocyte proliferative activity (as evidenced by increased Erk activation, cell-cycle related gene expression, bromodeoxyuridine incorporation, and hepatic DNA content) with concomitant inhibition of hepatocyte apoptosis (as evidenced by decreased numbers of apoptotic hepatocytes, induction of several antiapoptotic mechanisms, and decreased activation of procaspase 3). Thus, liver hyperplasia is evident at the earliest stage of NAFLD in ob/ob mice, which supports the concept that obesity-related metabolic abnormalities, rather than cirrhosis, initiate the hepatic neoplastic process during obesity.
Cancer
Res 2001 Jul 01
PMID:Hepatic hyperplasia in noncirrhotic fatty livers: is obesity-related hepatic steatosis a premalignant condition? 1143 35
The poor prognosis of pancreatic carcinoma seems mainly due to the late symptoms onset. Age, cigarette smoking, family history of pancreatic carcinoma, chronic pancreatitis, a history of previous
malignancy
, new onset of diabetes mellitus without family history or overweight, and secondary failure to oral antidiabetic agents in a long standing
type 2 diabetes
mellitus are the hitherto identified risk factors. In consideration of the increasing availability of endoscopic ultrasonography--the most accurate examination in the diagnosis of small pancreatic masses--a perspective multicentric screening study on subjects with some of these risk factors may be justified at this time.
...
PMID:[Early diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma]. 1143 20
The nutritional situation of Latin America is changing rapidly from one characterized by underweight and stunting to one where chronic diseases such as
cancer
, cardiovascular disease, and
type 2 diabetes
are increasingly prevalent. In Chile, under-nutrition has virtually disappeared, but rising obesity rates and risk factors for chronic diseases indicate the need to modify existing programs and emphasize prevention of diet-related chronic diseases.
...
PMID:Nutrition transition in Latin America: the case of Chile. 1144 93
Increasing evidence indicates that individuals with
type 2 diabetes
(diabetes) are at elevated risk for several common human
malignancies
, including cancers of the colon, breast, endometrium, pancreas, and liver. In particular, the consistent positive results reported by prospective investigations make it unlikely that methodologic issues, occult tumors, or chance results could explain the findings. Since diabetes and impaired fasting glucose together affect >25% of Americans above age 50, even a moderate etiologic association (e.g., relative risk = 1.5) would explain >10% of involved
malignancies
. Laboratory studies have suggested biologically plausible mechanisms. Insulin, for example, is typically at high levels during the development and early stages of diabetes. Activation of the insulin receptor by its ligand, or cross-activation of the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor, has been shown to be mitogenic and promote tumorigenesis in various model systems. A "unifying concept," in fact, holds that hyperinsulinemia may underlie the
cancer
associations of several additional risk factors, including high waist circumference, visceral fat, waist-to-hip ratio, body mass index, sedentary lifestyle, and energy intake. In this review, we assess current evidence regarding the relation of
type 2 diabetes
with
cancer
, and evaluate the findings in terms of well-accepted criteria for establishing causality.
...
PMID:The relation of type 2 diabetes and cancer. 1147 33
The current study was initiated to evaluate the ability of insulin resistance to predict a variety of age-related diseases. Baseline measurements of insulin resistance and related variables were made between 1988-1995 in 208 apparently healthy, nonobese (body mass index < 30 kg/m2) individuals, who were then evaluated 4-11 yr later (mean +/- SEM = 6.3 +/- 0.2 yr) for the appearance of the following age-related diseases: hypertension, coronary heart disease, stroke,
cancer
, and
type 2 diabetes
. The effect of insulin resistance on the development of clinical events was evaluated by dividing the study group into tertiles of insulin resistance at baseline and comparing the events in these 3 groups. Clinical endpoints (n = 40) were identified in 37 individuals (18%) of those evaluated, including 12 with hypertension, 3 with hypertension +
type 2 diabetes
, 9 with
cancer
, 7 with coronary heart disease, 4 with stroke, and 2 with
type 2 diabetes
. Twenty-eight out of the total 40 clinical events were seen in 25 individuals (36%) in the most insulin-resistant tertile, with the other 12 occurring in the group with an intermediate degree of insulin resistance. Furthermore, insulin resistance was an independent predictor of all clinical events, using both multiple logistic regression and Cox's proportional hazards analysis. The fact that an age-related clinical event developed in approximately 1 out of 3 healthy individuals in the upper tertile of insulin resistance at baseline, followed for an average of 6 yr, whereas no clinical events were observed in the most insulin-sensitive tertile, should serve as a strong stimulus to further efforts to define the role of insulin resistance in the genesis of age-related diseases.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance as a predictor of age-related diseases. 1150 81
We describe the case of a 56-year-old man who had high aminotransferase levels and anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies. He underwent liver biopsy and biochemical screening to evaluate whether he would benefit from interferon (IFN) treatment. The patient was discharged with a diagnosis of HCV-related active chronic hepatitis, skin porphyria, and
type 2 diabetes
. On December 5, 1995, he began therapy with recombinant IFN-alpha at a dose of 3 MIU three times a week. He stopped this therapy in February 1996 because of asthenia, diplopia, headache, and anxiety. During IFN therapy, he had normal aminotransferase levels and no detectable HCV RNA, a condition that persists to the present. Between March and May 1996, the patient was admitted several times to a neurology clinic, where myasthenia gravis was diagnosed and treatment with pyridostigmine and cyclosporine was initiated. This case and others indicate that caution should be exercised in administering IFN because low doses can be correlated with myasthenia gravis in patients without
malignancies
.
...
PMID:Myasthenia gravis during low-dose IFN-alpha therapy for chronic hepatitis C. 1150 39
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