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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) is commonly associated with hypertriglyceridaemia, low serum HDL-cholesterol concentrations, hypertension,
obesity
and accelerated atherosclerosis (metabolic syndrome X). Since a similar dyslipidaemia occurs with the acute-phase response, we investigated whether elevated acute-phase/stress reactants (the innate immune system's response to environmental stress) and their major cytokine mediator (interleukin-6, IL-6) are associated with NIDDM and
syndrome X
, and may thus provide a unifying pathophysiological mechanism for these conditions. Two groups of Caucasian subjects with NIDDM were studied. Those with any 4 or 5 features of
syndrome X
(n = 19) were compared with a group with 0 or 1 feature of
syndrome X
(n = 25) but similar age, sex distribution, diabetes duration, glycaemic control and diabetes treatment. Healthy non-diabetic subjects of comparable age and sex acted as controls. Overnight urinary albumin excretion rate, a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, was also assayed in subjects to assess its relationship to the acute-phase response. Serum sialic acid was confirmed as a marker of the acute-phase response since serum concentrations were significantly related to established acute-phase proteins such as alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (r = 0.82, p < 0.0001). There was a significant graded increase of serum sialic acid, alpha-1 acid glycoprotein, IL-6 and urinary albumin excretion rate amongst the three groups, with the lowest levels in non-diabetic subjects, intermediate levels in NIDDM patients without
syndrome X
and highest levels in NIDDM patients with
syndrome X
. C-reactive protein and cortisol levels were also higher in
syndrome X
-positive compared to X-negative patients and serum amyloid A was higher in both diabetic groups than in the control group. We conclude that NIDDM is associated with an elevated acute-phase response, particularly in those with features of
syndrome X
. Abnormalities of the innate immune system may be a contributor to the hypertriglyceridaemia, low HDL cholesterol, hypertension, glucose intolerance, insulin resistance and accelerated atherosclerosis of NIDDM. Microalbuminuria may be a component of the acute-phase response.
...
PMID:NIDDM as a disease of the innate immune system: association of acute-phase reactants and interleukin-6 with metabolic syndrome X. 2212 8
The term
syndrome X
has been applied to the association of hypertension, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), android
obesity
, insulin resistance, and dyslipidemia. In this paper, based on population samples from Tecumseh, Michigan, and Hiroshima, Japan, characterized by persons > or = 40 years of age, we examine the validity of regarding this constellation of traits as a true syndrome, i.e., an array of traits with a single, unifying pathophysiology underlying its components. Data were not available on insulin resistance and dyslipidemia, and
obesity
was expressed as body mass index (BMI) without the division into android and non-android types. The four ethnic-gender data sets were analyzed on the basis of two age classes, age > or = 40 years and age > or = 50 years, and two
obesity
classes, BMI > or = 27 and > or = 30. A simple chi 2 test of goodness-of-fit under a model of independence revealed non-random associations between hypertension, NIDDM, and BMI which were in part attributable to an excess of persons with all three traits. However, when the four data sets were subjected to separate log-linear analyses of the three-way association tables, none of the three-factor interaction terms (i.e.,
syndrome X
) was significant. High significance was, however, observed in the two-factor interaction term for BMI*hypertension. It is concluded that the significant association between these three traits is driven by the BMI*hypertension interaction, and there is no evidence in these data sets of a significant role for a
syndrome X
. Genet.
...
PMID:Syndrome X: is it for real? 952 8
The sympathoadrenal system plays an important role in the regulation of metabolic and cardiovascular activity. With respect to carbohydrate metabolism, specifically, catecholamines affect both insulin secretion and insulin action. Alterations in sympathoadrenal system function have been suggested to contribute to the constellation of disorders referred to as
syndrome X
(
obesity
, hypertension, NIDDM, and dyslipoproteinemia). The origin of any such abnormalities in sympathoadrenal function is unknown. The sympathoadrenal system, like other parts of the mammalian nervous system, is susceptible to environmental influences during development. Although these neurological alterations in rats are particularly prominent during the postpartum period, they are also apparent during intrauterine life. Moreover, the effects of these early environmental factors last well into adulthood and may represent permanent alterations in sympathetic nervous system behavior. Although the impact of maternal diabetes on sympathetic neural development has not been examined extensively, limited data available indicate that maternal diabetes may affect sympathetic nervous system development in the offspring. Although the full impact of maternal diabetes on neurological development in the offspring is unknown, given the myriad effects of the sympathoadrenal system on mammalian physiology, lasting changes in autonomic nervous system function may have potentially profound consequences for metabolic and cardiovascular regulation in adulthood.
...
PMID:Effects of fetal and neonatal environment on sympathetic nervous system development. 970 44
In insulin resistant subjects with android
obesity
the leptin levels are, as compared with non-obese subjects, elevated in proportion to their BMI, WHR and their percentage of body fat. Generally independent on
obesity
, leptin levels are significantly higher in women than in men as in women the percentage of adipose tissue is higher. After administration of 2 mg nicotine in Nicorette chewing gum to 36 android obese non-smokers the elevated baseline values of leptin did not change and thus the observation that cigarettes suppress hunger or that smoking promotes weight reduction is untrue or else this effect is not mediated by nicotine stimulation of leptin secretion or formation in adipose tissue, leptin being the adipose tissue hormone which controls food intake, the sensation of satiety and via neuropeptide Y also other hypothalamic functions such as muscular and sexual activity, gonadoliberin output, thermoregulation etc. Leptin thus offers no alibi to smokers. Conversely smoking in android obese hyperinsulinaemic hyperleptinaemic subjects with
syndrome X
(5H) potentiates significantly the risk of cardiovascular death.
...
PMID:[The effects of nicotine on leptin levels in patients with android obesity]. 975 Apr 63
During the past decade, the potential implications of insulin resistance were recognised by clinicians ranging from endocrinologists to cardiologists. Central to this expanding interest is Reaven's hypothesis that tissue resistance to the effects of insulin is a factor linking various metabolic disorders and coronary heart disease. This review critically describes the different approaches for the evaluation of insulin sensitivity in vivo. Qualities and limitations of several investigative techniques are discussed, such as anthropometric indexes, basal biological indexes, insulin suppression tests and insulin tolerance tests. The two most widely used methods for quantifying insulin sensitivity are the euglycaemic hyperinsulinaemic clamp and the intravenous glucose tolerance test with minimal model analysis. Insulin resistance occurs in many aetiologically diverse human disorders. Genetic syndromes with extreme insulin resistance are very uncommon. Insulin resistance is frequently associated with
obesity
, type 2 diabetes and essential hypertension. The insulin resistance syndrome called
syndrome X
includes impaired insulin-mediated glucose uptake, impaired glucose tolerance, hyperinsulinaemia, hypertension, dyslipidaemia and haemostatic disorders. Finally, the clinical significance of high values of insulin sensitivity is discussed.
...
PMID:[In vivo evaluation of insulin sensitivity and clinical applications]. 975 76
Leptin levels in subjects with android
obesity
with the insulin resistance syndrome (
syndrome X
, 5H) are in general elevated, as compared with non-obese subjects and correlate with the BMI, with the percentage of body fat, WHR, IRI levels and sex (they are higher in women), as it is the case in the general population. In the elevated leptin level in syndrome 5H (association of hyperinsulinism, hyperglycaemia-NIDDM, hyperlipoproteinaemia with android
obesity
, arterial hypertension and hirsutism in females with the polycystic ovaries syndrome) participate in a significant way also elevated basal IRI and cortisol levels as well as an elevated postprandial IRI response during oGTT despite the fact that leptin and endothelin-1 levels do not rise significantly during oGTT despite hyperinsulinaemia. Leptin levels were however higher in men (liminally significant in women) with an hyperinsulinaemic response during oGTT, as compared with probands with a normal insulin response. Optimal insulin and glucocorticoid levels are the prerequisite for a rise of leptin because proadipocytes in vitro begin to produce leptin as soon as insulin is added to the medium and this effect is trebled, if cortisol is added. It appears that the insulin and leptin resistance in syndrome 5H are parallel phenomena which potentiate each other. Elevated insulin and cortisol levels maintain elevated leptin levels which in turn enhances the insulin resistance in muscles and at the same time has an impact on the IRI response to postprandial hyperglycaemia. In the background of this insulin and leptin resistance in the majority of subjects with the 5H syndrome there is apparently no actual molecular defect of the hormone and its receptors in target tissues but a possible defect in mechanisms of postreceptor transduction of the hormonal signal. In the hormonal resistance participate moreover also two general and non-specific mechanisms such as: 1. increased consumption or uptake of hormonal receptors by elevated levels of the appropriate hormone ("down regulation" phenomenon), 2. disorders of paracrine endothelial mechanisms of the vascular wall which determine via the control of the inflow in the regional microcirculation the availability of insulin, leptin and metabolic substrates to target tissues. Impaired vasodilatation reserves and the development of paradoxical vascular spasms in response to stimuli which normally cause vasodilatation (strain, administration of acetylcholine, histamine, ATP etc.) are constant, associated phenomena in hyperlipoproteinaemias, arterial hypertension and in type 2 diabetics. These phenomena are the syndrome of insulin resistance and syndrome 5H-X resp. Endothelin-1 levels assessed in the systemic circulation are however due to their short biological half-life and the paracrine action of endothelin-1 not sensitive markers of endothelial dysfunction in
syndrome X
.
...
PMID:[Relation between levels of leptin, insulin and cortisol in persons with the 5H (X) syndrome]. 982 79
Death from myocardial infarction was a rare clinical entity at the beginning of this century, but with an ageing population it is poised to become the most common cause of death worldwide. Ample epidemiological evidence confirms the clinical impression that cardiovascular risk factors--hypertension, glucose intolerance, dyslipidaemia,
obesity
--tend to 'cluster' in individual patients. This metabolic syndrome, or '
Syndrome X
', which is thought to be underpinned by decreased insulin sensitivity, was first described in 1966 by Camus and popularized by Reaven in 1988. The enthusiasm and interest generated have led to the elucidation of some details concerning the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and coronary artery disease but have done little to change treatments or outcomes. Meanwhile, a global epidemic of Type 2 diabetes mellitus is said to be on the horizon- and it has been calculated that by the year 2230, 100% of the adult United States population will be obese.
...
PMID:The metabolic syndrome: overeating, inactivity, poor compliance or 'dud' advice? 982 66
Increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system may be a critical factor in the development of impaired insulin secretion and insulin resistance. We studied the chronic effects of sympathetic inhibition with moxonidine on glucose metabolism in the spontaneously hypertensive genetically obese rat (SHROB). This unique animal model closely resembles human
syndrome X
, expressing insulin resistance, genetic
obesity
, spontaneous hypertension, and hyperlipoproteinemia. Moxonidine, a selective imidazoline receptor agonist, was administered to lean spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR) and SHROBs for 90 days in food at 8 mg/kg/day and significantly reduced mean blood pressure. Moxonidine treatment reduced fasting insulin levels by 71% in SHROB and lowered plasma free fatty acids by 25%. In SHR, moxonidine treatment decreased free fatty acids by 17% compared with controls. During an oral glucose tolerance test, blood glucose levels in moxonidine-treated SHROB were reduced relative to untreated controls from 60 min onwards. Insulin secretion was facilitated at 30 min (83% greater) and 60 min (67% greater) postchallenge compared with control SHROB. In skeletal muscle, moxonidine treatment increased the expression of the insulin receptor beta subunit by 19% in SHROB but was without effect in SHR. The level of insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) protein was decreased by 60% in control SHROB compared with lean SHR. Moxonidine treatment enhanced the expression and insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of IRS-1 protein in skeletal muscle in SHROB by 74 and 27%, respectively, and in SHR by 40 and 56%, respectively. Moxonidine increased the levels of expression of IRS-1 protein in liver in SHR by 275% and in SHROB by 260%. These findings indicate that chronic inhibition of sympathetic activity with moxonidine therapy can lower free fatty acids and significantly improve insulin secretion, glucose disposal, and expression of key insulin signaling intermediates in an animal model of obese hypertension.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of antihyperglycemic effects of moxonidine in the obese spontaneously hypertensive Koletsky rat (SHROB). 986 64
Insulin resistance, characterized by reduced responsiveness to normal circulating levels of insulin, leads to hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia resulting in a deadly quartet of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus,
obesity
, hypertension and dyslipidemia These complications, also referred to as '
Syndrome X
' have been associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease. A number of non-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions are available for prevention and treatment of insulin resistance. However, introduction of thiazolidinediones, the new orally active class of drug, has proved to be a major breakthrough in this field. These agents have been shown to reduce insulin resistance by a novel mechanism of action. By interacting with a family of nuclear receptors known as peroxisome proliferator activated receptors thiazolidinediones are thought to enhance the actions of insulin, thereby increasing insulin dependent glucose disposal and reducing hepatic glucose output. A series of animal and clinical studies in patients with impaired Glucose Tolerance and NIDDM have demonstrated the safety and effect of various thiazolidinediones including ciglitazone, pioglitazone and troglitazone. Thus, thiazolidinediones by unlocking insulin resistance act as a key to glycemic control and hence are likely to prove a useful and rational therapy in NIDDM and possibly other disorders resulting from insulin resistance.
...
PMID:Thiazolidinediones--the new insulin enhancers. 1005 51
Syndrome X
is used to describe a constellation of factors that lead to coronary heart disease (CHD): hypertension, hyperinsulinemia, impaired glucose tolerance, and an abnormality in lipid metabolism. We investigated the relationship between serum levels of C-peptide immunoreactivity (CPR) and diabetic complications in 256 patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus. The serum level of CPR was measured by radioimmunoassay (RIA). Diabetic patients were divided into 3 groups according to the serum level of CPR as follows: low CPR (n = 19, <0.7 ng/ml), normal CPR (n = 174, 0.7 to 2.2 ng/ml) and high CPR (n = 63, >2.2 ng/ml). The body mass index (BMI) and the serum level of triglycerides were significantly higher in the high CPR group (P < 0.05, respectively) compared with normal CPR group. The prevalence of hypertension was significantly higher in the high CPR group than in the other 2 groups (low CPR: 16%, normal CPR: 28%, high CPR: 38%). The frequency of the number of patients receiving insulin therapy was greater in the low CPR group than in the other 2 groups, (low CPR: 58%, normal CPR: 15%, high CPR: 11%). The serum CPR level was significantly lower in patients with than without proliferative retinopathy or macroalbuminuria. Our conclusion is that the present data suggest that an increased serum level of CPR is associated with
obesity
, elevated serum triglycerides, and hypertension in patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus. A low CPR level leading to hyperglycemia is associated with the progression of diabetic microangiopathies, such as retinopathy and nephropathy.
...
PMID:Relation between the serum level of C-peptide and risk factors for coronary heart disease and diabetic microangiopathy in patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus. 1007 54
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