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The reported prevalence of type 2 diabetes among the Kuwaiti population varied from one source to another. This study was undertaken to define the magnitude of the problem and to suggest plans for future diabetic care. All type 2 Kuwaiti diabetic subjects registered and continuing to attend regularly in two health areas Mubarak Health Area (MHA) and Farwania Health Area (FHA)] were selected for the study. There were 3222 in MHA and 5114 in FHA among the Kuwaiti population aged 20 years and above, accounting for a total crude prevalence of 7.6% in both health areas and for a prevalence rate of 5.6% in MHA and 10.0% in FHA. The age-specific prevalence of type 2 diabetes in both areas combined rose from 2.639 per 100 population in the age group 20-39 years to 15.350% and 26.252% in the age groups 40-59 and 60 and above, respectively. The female to male ratio was 1.7, 1.6, 1.1, respectively, in MHA and 1.7, 2.0, 0.9 in FHA for the age groups 20-39, 40-59, and 60 and above. This study shows that type 2 diabetes is a major public health problem in Kuwait, with a female preponderance. Obesity is a characteristic feature of the population studied, with a mean body mass index of 31.8 +/- 6.3 and 28.5 +/- 5.1 in women and men, respectively. A positive family history of diabetes mellitus was reported in 63% of the diabetic subjects. There is a need to standardize methods of reporting and to plan a national screening survey.
Acta Diabetol 1996 Jul
PMID:Known type 2 diabetes mellitus among the Kuwaiti population. A prevalence study. 887 Aug 17

Polymorphic variation of genes encoding the glucose transporters glycoproteins (GLUT) may contribute to the genetic susceptibility to type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes. In this study we evaluated the allele and genotype frequencies of GLUT1 and GLUT4 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), revealed by digestion with XbaI for GLUT1 and KpnI for GLUT4, in Caucasian, Chinese, Japanese, Asian Indian and American black populations. No differences of the KpnI GLUT 4 RFLP were found between control and diabetic subjects in any ethnic group or when all data are combined. In contrast, positive results were found for the XbaI RFLP: (1) most ethnic groups showed an association of allele 1 with type 2 diabetes, and this association was maintained when all groups were analysed together; (2) after stratifying for sex and obesity, this association was significant only for overweight/obese women. This joint analysis suggests that GLUT1 polymorphism may contribute to susceptibility to type 2 diabetes in some populations, and especially in overweight/obese women.
Acta Diabetol 1996 Sep
PMID:Genetic contribution of polymorphism of the GLUT1 and GLUT4 genes to the susceptibility to type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in different populations. 890 24

A sample taken from a population (Maltese) with a high incidence of the metabolic complications of central obesity was studied to determine: (1) whether the standard Schofield equations adequately predict the basal metabolic rate (BMR) in this population; (2) whether the Maltese have a greater tendency for central obesity compared with other populations; (3) whether the distribution of body fat influences energy expenditure and fuel selection. Healthy women responding to a public advertisement were sampled randomly from the Maltese population. Correlation analysis and analysis of variance were used to study relationships between BMR and body composition. Anthropometric parameters (including body fat distribution indices, bioimpedance) and BMR were measured after an overnight fast. Six percent of the respondent were excluded because of recent illness, instability of diet or of body weight. Fifty subjects attended a clinic at the Medical School. The distribution of excess fat between central and peripheral areas in the Maltese population was similar to that reported for the British population. The Waist-hip ratio (WHR) reflected neither basal heat production (BMR) nor the contribution of fat oxidation to BMR. The Schofield equations systematically underestimated BMR by 5.4% +/- 0.86% (P < 0.05). The study suggests a limitation in using the Schofield equations for predicting BMR in the female Maltese population studied. It also suggests that the fat distribution between central and peripheral areas in this population has no effect on BMR.
Acta Diabetol 1996 Sep
PMID:Relationship between anthropometric indices of body fat distribution and basal energy metabolism in healthy Maltese women. 890 25

A reduction of postprandial thermogenesis has been described in obesity; insulin resistance and/or decreased sympathetic nervous system activity seem to play the major role in its pathogenesis. On the other hand, a normal energy expenditure during exercise has been reported. At present, the response and the role of catecholamines in energy metabolism during exercise in obesity have not been well clarified yet. The aim of this work was to study the metabolic and hormonal changes caused by intense exercise in obesity. Nine obese subjects and ten normal weight controls were submitted to exhaustive exercise on a cycloergometer. Blood glucose, free fatty acids (FFA), glycerol, lactate, beta-OH-butyrate, insulin, glucagon, plasma growth hormone (HGH), catecholamine plasma levels were assayed before and at the end of exercise, and after a recovery period. The energy cost of exercise was evaluated by indirect calorimetry. In our experiment muscular exercise did not provoke any change in blood glucose and FFA plasma levels in either of our groups. In the obese subjects the insulin plasma levels were higher than in the controls. Glucagon plasma levels did not change. The exercise responses of norepinephrine (NE) (4.28 +/- 0.74 vs 8.81 +/- 1.35 nmol/l; P < 0.01), epinephrine (E) (234.21 +/- 64.18 vs 560.51 +/- 83.38 pmol/l; P < 0.01) and plasma growth hormone (HGH) (134.84 +/- 58.97 vs 825.92 +/- 195.25 pmol/l; P < 0.01) were significantly lower in obese subjects. At the end of exercise, the thermic effect of exercise did not differ between obese and control subjects (0.335 +/- 0.038 vs 0.425 +/- 0.040 kJ/min x kg fat-free mass. Our findings indicate that an impaired counterregulatory hormone response to exercise exists in obese subjects. The thermic effect of exercise does not seem to be affected by either the reduced catecholamine response nor insulin resistance.
Acta Diabetol 1997 Aug
PMID:Impaired counterregulatory hormonal and metabolic response to exhaustive exercise in obese subjects. 932 66

Obesity is often accompanied by non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (type 2), arterial hypertension, and hyperlipidaemia. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether duration of obesity is a risk factor for the appearance of type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidaemia. We studied 760 obese subjects, 207 of whom had normal glucose tolerance, 125 impaired glucose tolerance, and 428 type 2 diabetes; in addition, 560 had hypertension and 315 had hyperlipidaemia. At univariate analysis, passing from normal through impaired glucose tolerance to type 2 diabetes there was a progressive increase of age and of duration of obesity, hypertension and hyperlipidaemia. Compared to subjects without hypertension, hypertensive subjects were older, had a longer duration of obesity, a greater body mass index (BMI, kg/m2), and more frequently a family history of hypertension; they also more frequently showed impaired glucose tolerance and type 2 diabetes and hyperlipidaemia. Compared to subjects without hyperlipidaemia, hyperlipidaemic subjects were older, had a longer duration of obesity, and more frequently showed impaired glucose tolerance and type 2 diabetes, and hypertension. Diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidaemia were highly associated, as up to 80% of subjects with type 2 diabetes had hypertension, and more than 80% of hyperlipidaemic subjects had hypertension. Type 2 diabetes was less frequent than hypertension and hyperlipidaemia during the first 10 years of obesity, and progressively increased thereafter; in contrast the frequency of hypertension and of hyperlipidaemia increased only after 30 years of obesity. In 359 subjects undergoing an oral glucose tolerance test (168 with simultaneous determination of insulin release), increasing durations of obesity were accompanied by an increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes, and in deterioration of glucose response, with no decrease in insulin release. At logistic regression analysis, age was a common risk factor for diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidaemia; duration of obesity and hyperlipidaemia were additional risk factors for diabetes; family history of hypertension, BMI and hyperlipidaemia were additional risk factors for hypertension, as were impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes, and hypertension for hyperlipidaemia. These data indicate that duration of obesity is a risk factor for type 2 diabetes, and emphasize the importance of preventing obesity in young subjects.
Acta Diabetol 1998 Oct
PMID:Duration of obesity is a risk factor for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, not for arterial hypertension or for hyperlipidaemia. 984 Apr 48

Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease which causes neurologic, cardiac, vascular, ocular and renal complications. The present study documented the prevalence of diabetes and associated risk factors in 1774 adults who were older than 30 years. An oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was conducted according to the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. Of the 1452 subjects, 58 (4%) had diagnosed diabetes, 41 (2.9%) undiagnosed diabetes and 130 (9%) had impaired glucose tolerance. The total glucose intolerance was 15. 9%. The prevalences of type 2 diabetes mellitus (9.7%-4.1%) were significantly different in low occupational and high occupational activity groups, respectively (P<0.0001). The prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus was 17.9% among the hypertensive group (P<0.0001). The prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus was higher in smokers (P<0.05). Patients with diagnosed diabetes, undiagnosed diabetes and IGT were older, more obese and have higher blood glucose values, triglyceride values, systolic and diastolic blood pressures than healthy subjects (P<0.001). We conclude that type 2 diabetes mellitus and IGT prevalences are quite high in the urban area of Kayseri, central Anatolia and multivariate analysis indicated that low occupational activity, low leisure activity, family history for diabetes, hypertension and obesity were significant independent risk factors for diabetes mellitus.
Acta Diabetol 1999 Jun
PMID:The prevalence and identification of risk factors for type 2 diabetes mellitus and impaired glucose tolerance in Kayseri, central Anatolia, Turkey. 1043 58

Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes is emerging as a leading chronic non-communicable disease among the adult Kuwaiti population. Based on the World Health Organization and similar reports the projected estimates for subjects suffering from type 2 diabetes by the years 2000 and 2010 show a striking tendency to high rates of the disease in our area. We report the prevalence rates of glucose intolerance among a relatively young adult Kuwaiti population below 50 years of age and the effect of implementing the recent 1997 American Diabetes Association diagnostic criteria on the frequency of type 2 diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance and impaired fasting glucose among this group. The overall prevalence rate for the three categories of glucose intolerance reached as high as 15.8% (95% CI, 14.2 to 17.4). Age, though all subjects were below 50 years, parental history of type 2 diabetes, diastolic blood pressure and serum triglycerides were found to be significant associated risk factors for the development of type 2 diabetes. Obesity was an apparent significant factor associated with the three forms of glucose intolerance (p < 0.001). Obesity and physical inactivity were documented in both non-diabetic and more so in diabetic Kuwaiti adults, which should form the basis of any immediate intervention programme. An integrated approach to the prevention of the described critical risk factors associated with type 2 diabetes is highly recommended in Kuwait. Research, focused on genetics of type 2 diabetes in the highly susceptible Kuwaiti population, should be planned.
Acta Diabetol 1999 Sep
PMID:Impact of the 1997 American Diabetes Association criteria on classification of glucose intolerance among Kuwaitis below 50 years of age. 1066 17

There are contrasting data about the relationship between obesity and macrovascular complications in type 2 diabetes mellitus, and it is not known if risk factors for coronary artery disease are different in normal weight and overweight or obese patients. All 2113 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus referring to the Diabetic Clinic of Asti were studied. Patients were divided into tertiles of body mass index, according to their sex (BMI < 26.9; >/= 26.9 and < 31.4; >/= 31.4 kg/m(2) for females and BMI < 25.7; >/= 25.7 and < 28.8; >/= 28.8 kg/m(2) for males). Age, BMI, duration of diabetes, blood pressure, HbA(1c) total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, and prevalence of insulin treatment and hypertension were higher in females, whereas exercise, alcohol intake, smoking habits and prevalence of dyslipidemia were higher in males. An increase in BMI was associated with an increase in HbA(1c), number of cigarettes/day, blood pressure, triglycerides, C-peptide, prevalence of hypertension and dyslipidemia, and with a decrease in age, duration of diabetes and HDL-cholesterol values. In spite of an apparently worse cardiovascular risk profile, females showed a 50% lower prevalence of CAD than males and the prevalence of CAD was not significantly different in obese compared to other BMI categories. Multiple logistic regression showed that risk factors for CAD were different in males and females and similar in the lower tertiles of BMI, while different in the highest. In obese females, risk factors for CAD were age, reduced HDL-cholesterol and increased HbA(1c) levels; in males they were years of smoking and duration of diabetes. These data suggest that in type 2 diabetes, risk factors for CAD are different in the two sexes and in patients with the highest BMI compared to the normal and overweight subjects; blood glucose control and duration of diabetes seem more important than conventional cardiovascular risk factors in obese patients.
Acta Diabetol 1999 Sep
PMID:Sex- and BMI-related differences in risk factors for coronary artery disease in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1066 19

The arcuate nucleus (AN) of the hypothalamus is a key area in which endocrine messages are relayed to the brain, while midbrain raphe nucleus (RN) is the source of brain serotonin. Both nuclei contribute to the central mechanism of energy homeostasis. This experiment aimed to determine the impact of AN and RN grafts on insulinemia and obesity in diabetic rats. AN and RN were dissected from 15-day (Fa/Fa) lean embryos and grafted separately or together into the third brain ventricle of obese (fa/fa) male Zucker rats. Histological analysis showed the functional maturity of grafts, which were vascularized, contained neurons reinnervating the periventricular hypothalamus and hypophysis, and expressed neuropeptide Y and enzymes for dopamine and serotonin synthesis. Three months after transplantation, the rats grafted with AN or RN had a lower body weight gain compared to sham-operated rats (19% and 17%, respectively). Rats grafted with AN together with RN gained significantly less body weight than rats grafted with AN or RN separately (31% vs. sham-operated rats), and showed a decreased plasma insulin concentration (132 +/- 33 microU/ml) vs. sham-operated rats (459 +/- 108 microU/ml, p < 0.05). A synergistic effect on alleviating obesity and insulinemia by double AN and RN grafts suggests that both these nuclei are functionally interrelated in maintaining energy homeostasis, and normal functioning of both nuclei is altered during obesity.
Acta Diabetol 2000
PMID:Synergistic effect of arcuate and raphe nuclei graft to alleviate insulinemia and obesity in Zucker rats. 1119 29

Neuromedin B has been shown to exert an inhibiting effect on food consumption in rats. The corresponding gene NMB maps to chromosome 15q22.3-q23, a region expected to contain a gene for the Bardet-Biedl syndrome type 4 (BBS4). Based on its map position and the putative function of the encoded peptide, NMB can be considered as a candidate gene both for BBS4 and the development of human obesity. To examine its involvement in these phenotypes, we determined the genomic structure of human NMB, and performed a mutation screen in its coding region. In genomic DNA of six BBS4 patients and in a large population sample, two sequence variants were detected: a g.253C-->A transversion creating a P73T substitution and a g.401G-->A silent mutation changing the stop codon TGA into stop codon TAA. A case-control study with 92 extremely obese patients and 94 underweight students revealed a significant association between the g.401G-->A polymorphism and body weight (adjustedp = 0.03), which was confirmed in a validation sample consisting of 95 extremely obese patients, and 95 normal weight and 48 underweight individuals (Mann-Whitney p = 0.02). These results suggest a contribution of NMB or a gene in its close vicinity to genetic weight control in humans.
Acta Diabetol 2000
PMID:Significant association between a silent polymorphism in the neuromedin B gene and body weight in German children and adolescents. 1119 34


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