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The state of prediabetes is characterized by an increase in insulin resistance and a decrease in pancreatic beta cell function. The prestage of type 2 diabetes mellitus can be identified by an impaired glucose tolerance and/or by an impaired fasting blood sugar. Apart from weight loss and increase in physical activity, the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus can also be prevented by dietary changes. A low-fat diet with a dietary fiber intake of more than 30g/d was shown to represent an effective preventive approach. A high-fiber diet has many positive effects on the physical health status. In addition to positive effects in the gastrointestinal tract it has an obvious potential to support weight reduction and to improve disturbances of carbohydrate and fat metabolism. At the present state of knowledge, insoluble dietary fibers as found in whole grain cereal products are considered to be especially effective in the prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus. A high intake of fruits and vegetables as well as pulses also exerts health-promoting properties. A high-fiber diet also plays an important role in the prevention of obesity and coronary heart diseases.
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PMID:The importance and effect of dietary fiber in diabetes prevention with particular consideration of whole grain products. 1784 78

Metabolic syndrome is characterized by abnormal glucose levels, central obesity, hypertension, elevated triglycerides, and low HDL cholesterol. This article reviews available data regarding the impact of lifestyle modification and drug therapies on the progression to diabetes in high risk individuals, such as those with hypertension, dyslipidemia, obesity, and prediabetes. Lifestyle and pharmacological interventions may alter metabolic parameters and impact progression to diabetes. However, the cost-effectiveness of these interventions are unclear.
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PMID:Prevention of diabetes development in those with the metabolic syndrome. 1796 11

Type 2 diabetes is widespread and its prevalence is increasing rapidly. In the US alone, approximately 41 million individuals have prediabetes, placing them at high risk for the development of diabetes. The pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes involves inadequate insulin secretion and resistance to the action of insulin. Suggestive data link insulin resistance and accompanying hyperglycemia to an excess of abdominal adipose tissue, a link that appears to be mediated partially by adipocyte secretion of multiple adipokines that mediate inflammation, thrombosis, atherogenesis, hypertension, and insulin resistance. The adipokine adiponectin has reduced expression in obesity and appears to be protective against the development of type 2 diabetes. Current recommendations to prevent type 2 diabetes center on lifestyle modifications, such as diet and exercise. Clinical trials have established the efficacy of lifestyle intervention, as well as pharmacologic interventions that target glycemic control or fat metabolism. However, diabetes did develop in a substantial percentage of individuals who received intensive intervention in these trials. Thus there is an unmet need for additional strategies in high-risk individuals. Recent data suggest thiazolidinediones and blockade of the endocannabinoid system represent novel therapeutic approaches that may be used for the prevention of diabetes.
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PMID:The burden of type 2 diabetes: strategies to prevent or delay onset. 1796 81

Impaired glucose tolerance and impaired fasting glucose represent two potentially reversible prediabetes conditions. Previous reports from various regions across the globe indicate that both conditions may be relatively common in obese children and adolescents. The major factor driving the development of compromised glucose metabolism in obese youth is severe insulin resistance. This severe insulin resistance has been strongly associated with specific patterns of lipid partitioning. Severe obesity along with continued weight gain, specifically in obese youth belonging to ethnic minorities, have been shown to be associated with deterioration of glucose tolerance over short periods of time. As obesity-related insulin resistance in the pediatric age-group is associated with the development of altered glucose metabolism and other elements of the metabolic syndrome, severely obese youth are a high-risk group for the development of type 2 diabetes and may benefit most from preventive interventions such as environmental changes that promote increased physical activity.
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PMID:Impaired glucose tolerance and risk factors for progression to type 2 diabetes in youth. 1799 Nov 35

The growing prevalence of Type 2 diabetes with its high morbidity and excess mortality is imposing a heavy burden on healthcare systems. Because of the magnitude of the problem, obviating diabetes has been a long-standing dream. In the last decade, a number of intervention strategies have been shown to be effective for the prevention of diabetes in high-risk populations with prediabetes. Seven studies have now confirmed that lifestyle modifications, including weight-reducing diets and exercise programs, are very effective in precluding or delaying Type 2 diabetes in high-risk populations with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). Two major trials are the Diabetes Prevention Study (n = 522) from Finland and the Diabetes Prevention Program (n = 3234) from the US. Both studies have shown that intensive lifestyle intervention could reduce the progression of IGT to diabetes by 58%. Furthermore, four currently-available drugs have been established as being effective in preventing diabetes in subjects with prediabetes. The Diabetes Prevention Program revealed that metformin 850 mg b.i.d. reduced the risk of diabetes by 31%. The STOP-NIDDM (Study To Prevent Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus) trial (n = 1429) showed that acarbose 100 mg t.i.d. with meals decreased the incidence of diabetes by 36% when the diagnosis was based on 2 oral glucose tolerance tests. The XENDOS (Xenical in the Prevention of Diabetes in Obese Subjects) study examined the use of orlistat, an antiobesity drug, as an adjunct to an intensive lifestyle modification program in obese non-diabetic subjects. Orlistat treatment resulted in a 37% decline in the development of diabetes. More recently, the DREAM (Diabetes Reduction Assessment with Ramipril and Rosiglitazone Medication) study (n = 5269) demonstrated that rosiglitazone at 8 mg once/day in subjects with prediabetes (IGT and/or impaired fasting glucose) was effective in reducing the risk of diabetes by 60%. It can be concluded that Type 2 diabetes can be prevented or delayed through lifestyle modifications and/or pharmacologic interventions. This is a fact.
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PMID:Prevention of Type 2 diabetes: fact or fiction? 1803 59

Metabolic syndrome describes the human condition characterized by the presence of coexisting traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as hypertension, dyslipidemia, glucose intolerance, and obesity, in addition to nontraditional cardiovascular disease risk factors, such as inflammatory processes and abnormalities of the blood coagulation system. Although the specific etiology for metabolic syndrome is not known, insulin resistance--a clinical state in which a normal or elevated insulin concentration reflects an impaired biological response--is present and is considered a key pathophysiologic abnormality. As such, metabolic syndrome can be considered to be a prediabetic state and contributes greatly to increased morbidity and mortality in humans. Given the public health significance of metabolic syndrome, successful strategies are direly needed to intervene in its development. As such, nutritional supplementation with botanicals that effectively address pathogenic mechanisms, combined with the acceptance and widespread use of botanical supplements by the general public, represents an attractive, novel, and potentially effective approach to the problem. Thus, the overall goal of our botanical research center is to comprehensively evaluate botanicals in addressing the pathophysiologic mechanisms that lead to the development of insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome. Currently, each of the 3 research projects evaluates a specific botanical [Russian tarragon (Artemisia dracunculus L), shilianhua (Sinocrassula indica), and grape (Vitus vinifera) anthocyanins] and assesses the effect on pathogenic mechanisms leading to the development of insulin resistance. With the completion of our research, we anticipate a better understanding of the cellular mechanisms by which insulin resistance develops and the role of botanicals in modulating the progression to metabolic syndrome.
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PMID:Botanicals and the metabolic syndrome. 1825 43

During recent years, evidence supporting the vital role of physical activity in the prevention and treatment of diabetes has been accumulating. Physical activity is recognized to produce multiple general and diabetes-specific health benefits. Yet despite the multitude of benefits, many people are physically inactive. As the prevalence of overweight and obesity, prediabetes, and type 2 diabetes has continued to rise at an alarming rate, physical inactivity has become an urgent public health concern. The purpose of this article is to review the physical activity/exercise research in diabetes and summarize the current exercise recommendations. This information can be used by clinicians to make safe and effective recommendations for integrating physical activity/exercise into self-management plans for individuals with diabetes or at risk for its development.
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PMID:Role of physical activity in diabetes management and prevention. 1835 49

The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) and Look AHEAD (Action for Health in Diabetes) trials are long-term randomized clinical trials that have the potential to direct diabetes care and medical nutrition therapy for obesity, prediabetes, and type 2 diabetes both now and in the future. This article summarizes and compares the important evidence-based results of these diabetes and obesity clinical trials and reviews the similarities and differences in lifestyle interventions that were designed for these trials. Although there were many similarities in the features of the DPP and Look AHEAD interventions, the Look AHEAD lifestyle intervention was more ambitious in several ways: higher individual weight-loss goals, lower calorie and fat-gram targets based on initial body weight, more intensive intervention frequency, combining closed group and individual session format, and use of more structured nutrition intervention strategies from the outset, including meal replacements, structured menus, and combined fat and calorie counting. Evidence, knowledge, and insights gained from working on these clinical trials will be very important in determining the strategies, methods, and approaches needed to make sure that the results of these trials will be fully applied in real-world practice settings for obesity, prediabetes, and type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:Implications of the diabetes prevention program and Look AHEAD clinical trials for lifestyle interventions. 1835 60

Prediabetes [impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and/or impaired fasting glucose (IFG)] is a major risk factor for T2DM as well as for cardiovascular disease and mortality. In the present study, the platelet aggregation and fibrinogen levels were investigated in prediabetic subjects who had no confounding factors such as hypertension, obesity or dyslipidemia. Thirty-nine subjects with prediabetes (24 IFG and 15 IGT) and age, sex and BMI matched 36 healthy controls were enrolled. Platelet aggregation, fibrinogen and hsCRP levels, HOMA-IR and HOMA-beta indexes were determined. Platelet aggregation induced by collagen, epinephrine or ADP was not different (p=0.93, p=0.90 and p=0.29, respectively) between two groups, whereas fibrinogen levels were significantly higher (p=0.006) in the prediabetics when compared to controls. hsCRP levels, HOMA-IR and HOMA-beta indexes in the two groups were not different. The power of the study was calculated according to the results and established as 0.97 for collagen, 0.95 for epinephrine and 0.83 for ADP. Despite the high plasma fibrinogen levels, the platelet aggregation in prediabetics was not different when compared to healthy controls. These data suggest that platelet aggregation may not be involved in the mechanism of prothrombotic state in prediabetic state.
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PMID:Platelet aggregation is not enhanced in patients with prediabetes. 1848 75

The most relevant novelties in the area of cardiovascular disease in kidney transplant can be divided into various aspects. The most noteworthy findings with regard to pretransplant cardiovascular evaluation were that patients who had a cardiovascular event before transplant are at greater risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality posttransplant, the echocardiogram can predict kidney transplant patient survival better than coronary angiography, and the result of coronary angiography is not prognostic in diabetic patients. On the other hand, many of the published studies focused on obesity as a cardiovascular risk factor. Although some results are contradictory, it seems that obesity adversely affects graft and patient survival, especially in more extreme situations. Various studies have also been published that stress the high prevalence of prediabetes and diabetes in first year after transplant, with the consequent need to perform the oral glucose tolerance test in nondiabetic patients. With regard to intermediate markers of target-organ damage, the progressive importance of measuring carotid intima-media thickness and coronary calcifications in the follow-up of kidney transplant patients with high cardiovascular risk should be stressed. The most relevant novelties in the area of therapeutic interventions are those related to the effect of different immunosuppressants on cardiovascular risk factors and the effect of hypolidemic agents (statins, ezetimibe, fish oil) on the course of the kidney graft and kidney transplant patient.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular mortality in kidney transplatation]. 1884 17


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