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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Insulin resistance and glucose intolerance are common features of
polycystic ovary syndrome
(
PCOS
). We have investigated the effect of glucose on the fractional glucose disappearance in patients with
PCOS
and in age- and weight-matched control subjects. The minimal model method as applied to a frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test was employed. The insulin sensitivity index (Si) and glucose effectiveness (SG) were calculated with the MINMOD program. Testosterone, androstenedione and free testosterone concentrations were significantly higher in
PCOS
subjects. Glucose-induced glucose clearance (SG) and insulin sensitivity were significantly lower in
PCOS
subjects than controls [SG: 2.7 +/- 0.3 versus 1.8 +/- 0.1 x 100/min; P less than 0.01; Si: 133.4 +/- 20.0 versus 65.6 +/- 6.4/min (nmol/ml)]. Six
PCOS
women had an SG value within the normal range (greater than 2.0 x 100/min) but had a similar Si to that found in
PCOS
women with abnormal SG. We suggest that independent alterations in both glucose- and insulin-mediated glucose uptake occur in patients with
PCOS
. The underlying disturbance in glucose effectiveness may be similar to that found in familial
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Impaired glucose effectiveness in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome. 143 Jan 29
In one third of patients who suffered an infarction
NIDDM
and arterial hypertension are present. In the absolute majority of patients with IHD, as apparent from the IRI and C-peptide response after a glucose load, hyperinsulinism is present. The blood sugar response can have the character of diabetes or of impaired glucose tolerance, the curve may be very flat or normal while the IRI and C-peptide response are excessive. Hyperinsulinism has a hypersecretory origin as suggested by the concurrently elevated C-peptide level but also reduced insulin utilization in the liver and peripheral target organs. Hyperinsulinism is thus a regular associated phenomenon of IHD and is a special risk factor independent on hyperglycaemia and associates with the other main risk factors of IHD such as arterial hypertension, HPLP (android obesity), hyperglycaemia (
NIDDM
) and hirsutism as a manifestation of a hyperandrogenic state in the female organism with the syndrome of
polycystic ovaries
. Hyperinsulinism plays an indirect role in the pathogenesis of coronary syndrome via the main risk factors (5H syndrome--hyperinsulinism, hypertension, HPLP, hyperglycaemia, hirsutism) and also directly by its action on endothelial paracrine mechanism of the coronary circulation where in the early stage vasoconstrictor factors predominate (endothelin-1, PGF2-alpha) over physiological vasodilatating factors (EDRF-NO, PGE2, PGI2) and this leads then to functional spasms. It seems that also the coronary X syndrome develops very frequently on the background of the hormonal metabolic X syndrome or the 5H syndrome.
...
PMID:[Hyperinsulinism and the coronary syndrome]. 149 68
Insulin resistance (prereceptor, receptor, postreceptor) is a complex phenomenon. It penetrates into the clinical picture via hyperinsulinism as impaired glucose tolerance, or
NIDDM
, as hyperlipoproteinaemia, arterial hypertension and hirsutism in women (syndrome 5H) associated with the
polycystic ovary syndrome
or the HAIR-AN syndrome. Based on a group of their 480 patients with
NIDDM
, 108 women with hirsutism, 320 patients with myocardial infarction and the results of the national cardiovascular programme the authors estimate the prevalence of the 5H syndrome as follows: in the general population 5-10%, in patients with arterial hypertension 15-30%, in NDDM 65-90%, in hirsutic women 10-20% and in patients with myocardial infarction 30-50%. These figures could be, however, substantially higher if as the criterion the IRI response was taken or that of C-peptide in OGTT or the results of the hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp. The clinical 5H syndrome is a phenomenon of latent insulin resistance perceived late by doctors and patients.
...
PMID:[Clinical manifestations of insulin resistance. The hormonal-metabolic syndrome X (5H), its prevalence and impact on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. I]. 150 12
The authors analyze mechanism by which hyperinsulinism causes
NIDDM
, hypertension, hyperlipoproteinaemia and hirsutism (5H syndrome). They demonstrate on a group of their 100 patients with
NIDDM
and arterial hypertension that, as compared with matched pairs without arterial hypertension, they have significantly higher levels of C-peptide and less favourable parameters of dyslipoproteinaemia. Hirsutism occurs in 10-15% of the adult female population, but in 18.4% women with
NIDDM
. However, in a group of 48 hirsutic women with
NIDDM
they did not find, as compared with matched pairs (i.e. women with
NIDDM
of analogous age, BMI and BP) significantly higher C-peptide and lipid levels. According to the authors congenital insulin resistance modified by numerous endogenous and exogenous factors is eventually manifested in the phenotype, in particular via hyperinsulinism as
NIDDM
, hypertension, associated with dyslipoproteinaemia and obesity which then, as the main risk factors, condition a high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Although hirsutism and the
polycystic ovary syndrome
are associated with hyperinsulinism, their interrelation is probably less close and thus has not such a negative impact on national health.
...
PMID:[Hyperinsulinism as a major etiopathogenic link with arterial hypertension, hyperlipoproteinemia and hirsutism. II]. 150 13
Published "normal" values of some hormones have an excessively wide range and unequal mean values because the material on which these values are based is from subjects suffering from different diseases which only apparently are not associated with the investigated hormone, or else the specimens are obtained under non-standard conditions (malnutrition, stress, alcohol etc.). This wide range of normal values may hide incipient pathological processes and is not suitable even as control group. The investigation is based on the assessment of insulin, growth hormone (GH), cortisol, thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) in a group of blood donors. The assembled results were compared with two other groups of blood donors and a group of obese subjects. The following findings were assembled: We recommend to lower the upper borderline of "normal" insulinaemia from the recommended value of 26 to 20 i.u./l, as the original range may comprise milder forms of hyperinsulinism which is recently assumed to participate in the genesis of
type 2 diabetes
, hypertension, coronary ischemia and
polycystic ovaries
. Elevated normal values of serum insulin may be obtained also from blood donors who usually have breakfast before the blood is collected. The wide range of cortisolaemia is due to the diurnal rhythm. The basal value is raised by a declining blood sugar level, alcohol, obesity and of course, varying forms of stress. The upper range of cortisolaemia at 8 a.m. should not be beyond the range of 140-690 nmol/l. GH secretion is governed by an individual 3.5-hour cycle as well as changes of the blood sugar level, e. g. during the OGTT: the declining blood sugar level raises the GH level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Factors affecting normal levels of insulin, cortisol, STH, thyroxine and triiodothyronine]. 226 67
62 cases of
polycystic ovary syndrome
(
PCO
) were reviewed with regards to their clinical and endocrine features. The subgroup of patients with acanthosis nigricans (AN) was further studied in detail. The prevalence of the syndrome was significantly higher in the Indian (35.5% of cases). Obesity, AN, hirsutism,
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
) and raised level of serum testosterone were present in 77.1%, 74%, 79%, 21% and 48% of the cases respectively. Patients with AN was associated with higher body mass index, serum testosterone level, and prevalence of hirsutism and
NIDDM
than patients without AN. These observations are in keeping with the hypothesis that hyperinsulinemia may be of importance in the pathogenesis of a sub-group of
PCO
associated with insulin resistant states.
...
PMID:Clinical and endocrine profiles of 62 Malaysian women with polycystic ovary syndrome. 252 38
The author summarizes mechanisms by which insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinism are manifested in the clinical picture. He divides the mechanisms into prereceptor, receptor and postreceptor mechanisms. The latter dominate in the population quantitatively and thus also by their impact because they create the so-called 5H syndrome (association of hyperinsulinism with hyperglycaemia (
NIDDM
), hyperlipoproteinaemia, hypertension, hirsutism and the
polycystic ovary syndrome
) or the so-called hormonal metabolic syndrome X, lethal tetrad, metabolic syndrome, syndrome of insulin resistance). The term syndrome X does not appear suitable as it is frequently mistaken for coronary X syndrome which probably is also conditioned by hyperinsulinism, for the hormonal metabolic X syndrome and probably also fot the "fragile X syndrome" in genetics. The 5H syndrome is caused by a postreceptor disorder of insulin efficiency for which so far the molecular basis and dominating organ site have not yet been defined adequately. Hyperinsulinism is conceived as an insulin resistance compensating phenomenon. In its development participates, however, in addition to compensatory hypersecretion also impaired insulin utilization (liver, muscles) and an impaired primary secretory response caused probably by a disorder of blood sugar control (glucokinase, GLUT 2). This is suggested by the frequently inadequate response of the blood sugar level, IRI and C-peptide during the oral glucose tolerance test (OGGT). A hyperinsulinaemic response may be encountered when the blood sugar curve is normal, flat, in impaired glucose tolerance and in diabetes. Thus OGGT alone is not suited for the early detection of the 5H syndrome unless concurrently the IRI and C-peptide response is recorded.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical manifestations of the insulin resistance syndrome. The hormonal-metabolic syndrome X, the 5H syndrome and their etiopathogenesis]. 772 46
Hyperandrogenemia may be the most common endocrinopathy in women, affecting up to 10% of all women and as many as 30% of certain subgroups. Women with
polycystic ovary syndrome
have a unique disorder of insulin action and are at increased risk to develop
NIDDM
.
NIDDM
in women with
PCOS
has earlier age of onset than it does in the general population. Insulin-induced receptor autophosphorylation is diminished in 50% of
PCOS
women.
PCOS
may be a disease of abnormal protein tyrosine kinase receptor signaling. IGF-I and IGF-II play an important role in regulating ovarian androgen production via receptors.
...
PMID:[Polycystic ovary syndrome: a disorder of insulin action and an increased risk for onset of non-insulin-dependent diabetes]. 875 5
Insulin resistance, defined as a diminished effect of a given dose of insulin on glucose homeostasis, is a highly prevalent feature of women with
PCOS
. Insulin resistance in
PCOS
is closely associated with an increase in truncal-abdominal fat mass, elevated free fatty acid levels, increased androgens, particularly free testosterone through reduced SHBG levels, and anovulation. The causes for insulin resistance in
PCOS
are still unknown. One line of evidence suggests that an increase in truncal-abdominal fat mass and subsequently increased free fatty acid levels induce insulin resistance in women with
PCOS
. Increased effects of corticosteroids and a relative reduction in oestrogen and progesterone seem to be involved in the aberrant body fat distribution. Conversely, there are also results supporting primary, genetic target cell defects as a cause of insulin resistance in
PCOS
. An explanation for these seemingly contradictory results could be that the group of women with
PCOS
is heterogeneous with respect to the primary event in carbohydrate/insulin disturbances. Also insulin secretion in
PCOS
is characterized by heterogeneity. At one end of the spectrum is a large subgroup of mainly obese women with reduced insulin secretion, which appears to result from failure of the beta cells to compensate for insulin resistance in susceptible women, resulting in glucose intolerance and
NIDDM
. In the insulin-resistant patients with normal glucose tolerance, most of the hyperinsulinaemia is probably due to secondarily increased insulin secretion and decreased insulin degradation. However, a component of the increased first-phase insulin release is not due to measurable insulin resistance. Notably, this is also found in lean women with normal insulin sensitivity, and is not reversed after weight reduction, in contrast to the findings for insulin resistance. The implications of this enhanced insulin release are not fully clear, but it may tentatively be associated with carbohydrate craving and subsequently increased risks for development of obesity and insulin resistance. It may represent a primary disturbance of insulin secretion in
PCOS
or may be associated with the perturbed steroid balance in anovulation. The insulin-androgen connection in
PCOS
appears to be amplified by several different mechanisms, notably in both directions, the initiating event probably varying between individuals. Thus insulin increases the biological availability of potent steroids, primarily testosterone, through the suppression of SHBG synthesis. Insulin is also involved as a progonadotrophin in ovarian steroidogenesis, with the possible net result of interfering with ovulation and/or increasing ovarian androgen production in states of hyperinsulinaemia. Conversely, testosterone may indirectly contribute to insulin resistance through facilitating free fatty acid release from abdominal fat, but perhaps also through direct muscular effects at higher serum levels. It seems likely that this constitution, presumably genetic, would provide evolutionary advantages in times of limited nutrition, given the energy-saving effects of insulin resistance. Hypothetically, hyperinsulinaemia (primary) could provide a stimulus to ensure intake of nourishment, but unlimited food supplies could in some cases initiate a vicious 'anabolic' circle, in which several of the proposed amplifying mechanisms between insulin and androgens--in both directions--could take part.
...
PMID:Disturbances in insulin secretion and sensitivity in women with the polycystic ovary syndrome. 877 46
Hyperandrogenism is characterized clinically by hirsutism, acne, androgens-dependent alopecia and elevated serum concentrations of androgens (testosterone and androstenedione).
Polycystic ovary syndrome
is the most frequent cause of hyperandrogenism. Nevertheless, the differential diagnosis includes androgen-secreting tumors of the ovary or adrenal gland. Although rare, it is important to consider this diagnosis in patients with serum testosterone concentrations greater than 7 nmol/l. A 35-year-old woman who presented with hirsutism, amenorrhea and acanthosis nigricans is described. The endocrine abnormalities included a serum testosterone concentration of 9 nmol/l and overt
type II diabetes mellitus
. Imaging studies, including magnetic resonance imaging and Doppler ultrasonography, did not disclose a secreting tumor. After cyproterone acetate was prescribed the serum testosterone concentration returned to normal. The recent application of modern, high-resolution diagnostic ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging enabled a morphologically based diagnosis in a case of severe hyperandrogenism, with no need for invasive procedures. The therapeutic response to antiandrogens is reassuring.
...
PMID:A case of severe hyperandrogenism, acanthosis nigricans and over diabetes: the use of non-invasive methods for diagnosis, pathogenesis and management. 891 63
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