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Query: UMLS:C0311277 (abdominal obesity)
2,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Abdominal obesity is closely associated with risk factors for cardiocerebrovascular disease and NIDDM and the precipitation of these diseases. Together, they seem to constitute a metabolic syndrome where hyperinsulinaemia, insulin resistance, hyperlipidaemia, hypertension, visceral fat accumulation, cardiocerebrovascular disease and NIDDM are the individual constituents. The background to this syndrome might be a primary aberration expressing itself as an increased sensitivity of the hypothalamo-adrenal axis, and subsequent inhibition of sex steroid hormone secretions. This in turn will probably be followed by metabolic derangements, primarily peripheral insulin resistance, as well as by visceral fat accumulation by mechanisms which are partially visualized by recent work in the field. Visceral fat accumulation may then amplify the metabolic aberrations via hepatic effects of excessive concentrations of portal FFA, producing hyperproteinaemia, hyperglycaemia, hyperinsulinaemia and, perhaps, hypertension. The background to the central endocrine aberration remains more speculative, but factors leading to increased cortisol production, including specific stress reactions, tobacco smoking and alcohol may turn out to be important. The tentative conclusion provides a hypothesis for further work, and has recently obtained considerable support from further observations in humans in other than the endocrine and metabolic areas, as well as from studies in experimental animal models, where such factors can be studied under fully controlled conditions, which is not possible in humans for ethical reasons.
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PMID:Regional fat distribution--implications for type II diabetes. 133 83

The hypothesis that a causal relationship exists between insulin resistance and atherogenesis was first proposed over 23 years ago, and has given rise to a vast literature. Biological plausibility has been lent to the hypothesis by studies in which insulin has produced some effects in cell and tissue culture, and in vivo in arterial tissue, consistent with our understanding of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Clinical studies demonstrating a complex interrelationship between insulin resistance-hyperinsulinaemia and established risk factors for CHD--hypertension, hypertriglyceridaemia, low HDL cholesterol levels and abdominal obesity--are reviewed. A review of the studies examining an independent association between hyperinsulinaemia and coronary heart disease is presented. Cross-sectional studies in both the general population and diabetes support the relationship; however, prospective studies in the general population provide limited and inconsistent support for this hypothesis and highlight the confounding effects of blood pressure, dyslipidaemia and obesity on the effects of hyperinsulinaemia. In subjects with NIDDM and impaired glucose tolerance, prospective studies have not shown a deleterious effect of insulin treatment per se, nor have they consistently shown a significantly increased risk for those with higher endogenous insulin levels. The therapeutic implications of the evidence to date are less complex and involve weight reduction by diet and exercise, the lowering of elevated blood pressure with metabolically neutral agents, the judicious use of lipid lowering drugs and, in diabetes, the use of insulin where clinically indicated.
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PMID:Relationship between insulin resistance and coronary heart disease in diabetes mellitus and the general population: a critical appraisal. 830 14

Increased abdominal obesity has been related to lower insulin sensitivity (SI), independent of overall obesity, but it has been suggested that this relationship may be weaker in non-whites. In the Insulin Resistance and Atherosclerosis Study (IRAS), SI was estimated using a minimal model analysis of the frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test in 1,625 men and women aged 40-69 years. Subjects included African-Americans, Hispanics, and non-Hispanic whites from Oakland and Los Angeles, CA, San Antonio, TX, and the San Luis Valley, CO. Minimum waist circumference was significantly (P = 0.0001) associated with SI after adjusting for age, sex, height, BMI, glucose tolerance status, ethnicity, and clinic. This relationship was significantly (P = 0.0001) stronger in subjects with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) (beta = -0.030, P = 0.0001) than in those with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) (beta = -0.010, P = 0.02; NIDDM: beta = -0.013, P = 0.0001). There were no significant ethnic differences in effect size across the spectrum of glucose tolerance. Waist circumference was also positively related to fasting insulin, an indirect measure of insulin sensitivity, in NGT (P = 0.0001), IGT (P = 0.0003), and NIDDM (P = 0.0002). The waist-fasting insulin relationship was significantly weaker in African-Americans, relative to non-Hispanic whites, in NGT and IGT (tests of statistical interaction: P = 0.04 and P = 0.02, respectively). In general, these patterns were similar in models specifying waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), rather than waist circumference, as the independent variable. While some ethnic variability exists, a negative relationship between abdominal obesity and insulin sensitivity was confirmed for all three ethnic groups across the spectrum of glucose tolerance.
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PMID:Insulin sensitivity and abdominal obesity in African-American, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white men and women. The Insulin Resistance and Atherosclerosis Study. 886 60

Although a strong genetic susceptibility has been established for NIDDM and a maternal transmission of the disease predominates in some populations, a relationship between parental diabetes status and metabolic abnormalities in nondiabetic offspring has not been shown in humans. To address this question, we studied 2,152 first-degree relatives of patients with NIDDM (FH+) and 528 age- and weight-matched spouses without a family history of NIDDM (FH-) in Western Finland (the Botnia study). A subset of the subjects underwent a euglycemic insulin clamp combined with indirect calorimetry to measure insulin sensitivity and energy expenditure. Despite similar amounts of total body fat, persons with a family history of NIDDM had a greater waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) than spouses without a family history of diabetes (P < 0.003). They also had a decreased resting metabolic rate (P = 0.005), but this difference disappeared when adjusted for the difference in WHR. Insulin-stimulated glucose metabolism (P = 0.002), particularly nonoxidative glucose metabolism (P = 0.009), was reduced in FH+ compared with FH- subjects, and this difference remained after adjustment for WHR. A parental history of NIDDM influenced the insulin response to the oral glucose load, with male offspring of diabetic mothers showing the lowest insulin values (P = 0.011). Moreover, a parental effect was also observed on HDL and HDL2 cholesterol concentrations with female offspring of diabetic mothers showing lower values than female offspring of diabetic fathers (both P < 0.002). We conclude that abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, and decreased resting metabolic rate are characteristic features of first-degree relatives of patients with NIDDM and that the decrease in resting metabolic rate is partially related to the degree of abdominal obesity. A sex-specific paternal effect was observed on insulin and HDL cholesterol concentrations. Therefore, one has to consider the possibility of unprecedented maternal or paternal inheritance of different NIDDM phenotypes.
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PMID:Metabolic consequences of a family history of NIDDM (the Botnia study): evidence for sex-specific parental effects. 886 65

Abdominal obesity, particularly excess intraperitoneal fat, is considered to play a major role in causing insulin resistance and NIDDM. To determine if NIDDM patients accumulate excess intraperitoneal fat, and whether this contributes significantly to their insulin resistance, 31 men with mild NIDDM with a wide range of adiposity were compared with 39 nondiabetic, control subjects for insulin sensitivity (measured using euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp technique with [3-3H]glucose turnover) and total and regional adiposity (assessed by hydrodensitometry and by measuring subcutaneous abdominal, intraperitoneal, and retroperitoneal fat masses using magnetic resonance imaging [MRI], and truncal and peripheral skinfold thicknesses using calipers). MRI analysis revealed that intraperitoneal fat was not increased in NIDDM patients compared with control subjects; in both groups it averaged 11% of total body fat. NIDDM patients, however, had increased truncal-to-peripheral skinfolds thickness ratios. In NIDDM patients, as in control subjects, amounts of truncal subcutaneous fat showed a stronger correlation with glucose disposal rate than intraperitoneal or retroperitoneal fat; however, NIDDM patients were more insulin resistant at every level of total or regional adiposity. Further, no particular influence of excess intraperitoneal fat on hepatic insulin sensitivity was noted. We conclude that NIDDM patients do not have excess intraperitoneal fat, but that their fat distribution favors more truncal and less peripheral subcutaneous fat. Moreover, for each level of total and regional adiposity, NIDDM patients have a heightened state of insulin resistance.
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PMID:Relationship of generalized and regional adiposity to insulin sensitivity in men with NIDDM. 892 52

The recently described variant of the human beta3-adrenergic receptor (AR) gene located mainly in visceral adipocytes is associated with earlier onset of NIDDM, abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, and an increased capacity to gain weight. We investigated whether lipolysis in human omental adipocytes induced by a potent and selective human beta3-AR agonist (L-755,507) was affected by the Trp64Arg mutation of the beta3-adrenoceptor, using 18 omental fat samples obtained during total hysterectomy. The Trp64Arg mutation was determined by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. Arg64 homozygous (n = 4) had a lower median effective concentration (EC50) and lower responsiveness compared with wild-type (n = 8) (EC50: -6.55 +/- 0.21 vs. -7.53 +/- 0.35 log mol/l, P = 0.007; responsiveness: 3.48 +/- 0.32 vs. 5.76 +/- 0.36 micromol x 10(5) cells(-1) x 90 min(-1), P = 0.014, respectively), although there was no difference in lipolysis induced by isoproterenol or CGP12177. Trp64Arg heterozygous (n = 6) also had a significantly lower EC50 and lower responsiveness (EC50: -6.18 +/- 0.09 log mol/l; responsiveness: 4.17 +/- 0.33 micromol x 10(5) cells(-1) x 90 min(-1)). We concluded that the Trp64Arg mutation of the beta3-AR gene is associated with lower lipolytic activities.
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PMID:Trp64Arg mutation of beta3-adrenoceptor gene deteriorates lipolysis induced by beta3-adrenoceptor agonist in human omental adipocytes. 989 31