Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0948265 (metabolic syndrome)
24,271 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients with metabolic syndrome represent a group with extensive cardiovascular risk factors for the development of atherosclerosis, which may be preceded by an impairment of endothelial function. Endothelial dysfunction is characterized by a reduced availability of bioactive nitric oxide, the principal mediator of endothelium-dependent vasodilation. In the present study we assessed NO synthesis in vivo by measuring the NO-related amino acids L-arginine and L-citrulline and in particular the stable intermediate compound N(omega)-hydroxy-L-arginine (L-NHA) in patients with metabolic syndrome by using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis. As a prerequisite to our study, we measured the amino acid concentrations in 31 healthy volunteers to investigate gender and age differences. To prove whether blood drawn from peripheral veins reflects plasma concentrations of the whole vessel system, several blood samples from different regions were obtained from patients undergoing elective left and right heart catheterization. In the latter group, no significant differences were noted among the plasma concentrations between the different sample sites. In healthy volunteers, there were no significant differences in plasma concentrations of any one specific amino acid between males and females or age groups. The main finding of the study is that the intermediate product of NO synthesis, L-NHA, is significantly reduced in the plasma samples of patients with a metabolic syndrome as compared with samples from healthy control subjects. The plasma concentrations of the NO precursor L-arginine and the end product of NO synthesis, L-citrulline, were unchanged. In conclusion, our results suggest that plasma levels of L-NHA are independent of age and gender and are not different at various locations within the vascular system. In a group of patients at high risk for the development of atherosclerosis, we found reduced plasma concentrations of L-NHA, either caused by a decreased endothelial NO synthase activity or caused by an increased breakdown of L-NHA by pathways independent of NO synthase, resulting in a reduced availability of L-NHA for NO synthesis.
...
PMID:Decreased plasma concentrations of L-hydroxy-arginine as a marker of reduced NO formation in patients with combined cardiovascular risk factors. 1081 Oct 58

An operative definition of the metabolic syndrome has been suggested by a working group associated with the World Health Organization in 1998. The aim of this study was to examine whether small, low density lipoprotein (LDL) particle size was associated with the metabolic syndrome and with subclinical atherosclerosis as measured by ultrasound in the carotid and femoral arteries. The study was performed in a population-based sample of clinically healthy men (N=391), all 58 years old and not undergoing any treatment with cardiovascular drugs. Exclusion criteria were cardiovascular or other clinically overt diseases or continuous medication with cardiovascular drugs. The results showed that subjects characterized by the metabolic syndrome (n=62) had a thicker mean intima-media complex (IMT) in both the carotid and femoral arteries (0.86 versus 0.77 mm, P:<0.001, and 1.03 versus 1. 00 mm, P:=0.022, respectively) and also lower mean values for LDL particle size (25.78 versus 26.80 nm, respectively, P:<0.001) compared with subjects with no risk factors (n=77). The group with the metabolic syndrome (n=62) also had higher mean values for serum cholesterol and heart rate. In the whole study group (N=391), there were significant but weak negative relationships between small LDL particle size, increasing IMT, and increasing cross-sectional intima-media area of the carotid and femoral arteries and also negative relationships between LDL particle size and plaque occurrence and size in the carotid and femoral arteries. In summary, this is the first large-scale study to demonstrate a relationship between the clustering of risk factors that constitute the metabolic syndrome and a small LDL particle size pattern and the occurrence of preclinical atherosclerosis in the carotid and femoral arteries, as assessed by the ultrasound technique, in healthy 58-year-old men recruited from the general population.
...
PMID:The metabolic syndrome, LDL particle size, and atherosclerosis: the Atherosclerosis and Insulin Resistance (AIR) study. 1097 61

Since obesity is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), the increasing prevalence and degree of obesity in all developed countries has the potential to significantly offset the current efforts to decrease CVD burden in our population. Obesity is pathogenetically related to several clinical and sub-clinical abnormalities that contribute to the development of atherosclerotic placks and their complication, leading to the onset of cardiovascular events. Obesity seems to interact with inheritable factors in determining the onset of insulin resistance, a metabolic abnormality that is responsible for altered glucose metabolism and predisposition to type 2 diabetes, but that also has a major role in the development of dyslipidemia, hypertension and many other sub-clinical abnormalities that contribute to the atherosclerotic process and onset of cardiovascular events. Inheritable factors seem to modulate the onset of type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, hypertension and various insulin resistance-related sub-clinical abnormalities, often in a clustering pattern that is commonly referred to as the "metabolic syndrome." Inheritable factors also are involved in the onset of CVD in a given population or individuals with various components of the metabolic syndrome. Intense research is currently undergoing to better understand the molecular mechanisms that could explain the relationship between environmental and inheritable factors that lead from obesity to atherosclerosis and cardiovascular event. The elucidation of these mechanisms will provide improved therapeutic strategies to reduce cardiovascular risk in the obese patients. However, effective therapeutic tools that control each of the known pathophysiological steps mediating CVD in obese patients are already available and should be used more aggressively. Patient education and coordinated approach of physicians, nurses and other health care providers in a multidisciplinary treatment of the obese patient is of fundamental importance to reduce CVD burden in our population.
...
PMID:Obesity and cardiovascular disease. Pathogenetic role of the metabolic syndrome and therapeutic implications. 1098 24

Hypertension arising during pregnancy remains one of the two most frequently-cited causes of maternal death in the UK. In some cases, pregnancy is unmasking underlying hypertension, which manifests itself in later life. Pregnant women who develop de novo proteinuric hypertension (pre-eclampsia, PE) can share many risk factors with patients with the metabolic syndrome, such as obesity, dyslipidaemia and insulin resistance. However, more than half the women who develop PE remain normotensive thereafter. There is a genetic component(s) to the disease, but it is most improbable that there is a 'PE gene'. Rather, there are factors such as genetically-determined thrombophilias which are predisposers but not prerequisites. Impaired placentation is a feature, with inadequate invasion of the spiral arteries by syncytiotrophoblast and poor remodelling. However, similar features are found in association with non-hypertensive fetal growth restriction. Prospective studies have suggested a hyperdynamic circulation in early pregnancy, with cardiac output only falling in established disease. Baroreflex sensitivity is decreased in normal pregnancy, and still further decreased in established PE. Activation of endothelial cell function antedates the clinical diagnosis, and has features in common with atherosclerosis. Dyslipidaemia is common in PE and, via oxidation of susceptible lipids, may contribute to endothelial activation. Oxidative 'stress' is increased in PE, perhaps through a variant of the hypoxia-reperfusion phenomenon in the developing intervillous spaces. Such early changes might then lead to the clinically-evident syndrome in susceptible women. PE is a protean, multisystem, multifactorial disease, the causes of which are only slightly less enigmatic than a decade ago.
...
PMID:Hypertension in pregnancy. 1109 61

Patients with type 2 diabetes (formerly known as non-insulin-resistant diabetes) have a significantly increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Once clinical cardiovascular disease develops, these patients have a poorer prognosis than normoglycemic patients. By inducing endothelial changes, hyperglycemia contributes directly to atherosclerosis. Type 2 diabetes is also associated with atherogenic dyslipidemias. This form of diabetes, or the precursor state of insulin resistance, commonly occurs as a metabolic syndrome (formerly known as syndrome X) consisting of hypertension, atherogenic dyslipidemia and a procoagulant state, in addition to the disorder of glucose metabolism. All cardiovascular risk factors except smoking are more prevalent in patients with type 2 diabetes. In addition to exercise, weight control, aspirin therapy and blood pressure control, therapy to modify lipid profiles is usually necessary. The choice of agent or combination of statin, bile acid sequestrant, fibric acid derivative and nicotinic acid depends on the lipid profile and characteristics of the individual patient.
...
PMID:Attenuating cardiovascular risk factors in patients with type 2 diabetes. 1114 70

In order to evaluate the clinical characteristics of metabolic syndrome, a screening procedure was performed and in a cohort of middle-aged (40-60 years) hyperinsulinaemic (fasting plasma insulin > 15 microU/ml) and/or postprandial [120 min after 75 g glucose load] insulin > 45 microU/ml) subjects (n = 91; men/women: 38/53; age mean +/- SD 47.6 +/- 4.3 years; body mass index: 34.6 +/- 4.9 kg/m2; waist-hip ratio: 0.92 +/- 0.07; actual blood pressure 146 +/- 16/87 +/- 9 mmHg; fasting insulin: 24.2 +/- 11.3 microU/ml; postprandial insulin 125.5 +/- 103.8 microU/ml; serum LDL-cholesterol: 3.73 +/- 1.09 mmol/l; HDL-cholesterol: 1.12 +/- 0.30 mmol/l; triglycerides: 2.97 +/- 2.38 mmol/l; uric acid 279 +/- 79 mumol/l) plasma fasting homocysteine, vitamin B12 and folic acid levels were simultaneously determined. The values were separately evaluated according to the stages of glucose tolerance (normal glucose tolerance [n = 47]; impaired glucose tolerance [n = 24] and diabetes mellitus [n = 20]). Laboratory normal values were determined in 47 healthy subjects (control group, age: 45.0 +/- 7.8 years, men/women: 19/28). There was no significant difference between hyperinsulinaemic and control subjects regarding plasma homocysteine (9.28 +/- 3.81 mumol/l vs. 9.63 +/- 2.70 mumol/l), folic acid (8.5 +/- 5.9 ng/ml vs. 7.5 +/- 2.1 ng/ml) and vitamin B12 levels (423 +/- 141 pg/ml vs. 356 +/- 121 pg/ml). Plasma homocysteine levels were significantly (p < 0.001) higher in hyperinsulinaemic men than women (11.34 +/- 4.72 mumol/l [n = 38] vs. 7.86 +/- 2.13 mumol/l [n = 53]). There was no significant difference between subgroups classified according to the stages of glucose tolerance in hyperinsulinaemic groups. Plasma homocysteine values exceeding the upper limit of normal range (> 12.45 mumol/l) were detected at a similar prevalence rate in control (4/47 = 8.5%) and in hyperinsulinaemic subjects (10/91 = 10.9%). A weak but statistically significant correlation was found between plasma homocysteine values and age of subjects (r = 0.222; p < 0.05) whereas a stronger correlation was documented between plasma homocysteine and serum creatinine values (r = 0.658; p < 0.001) in hyperinsulinaemic groups (n = 91). Plasma homocysteine values independently from the stages of glucose tolerance are not elevated in hyperinsulinaemic subjects. Hyperhomocysteinaemia is not a characteristic feature of hyperinsulinism suggesting that plasma homocysteine levels are of no considerable importance in the complex pathomechanism of atherosclerosis at early stages of metabolic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Plasma homocysteine levels in hyperinsulinemic patients]. 1124 22

Cardiovascular risk factors as well as morbidity and mortality from coronary heart disease among Turkish adults are herein reviewed. Lipids and lipoproteins are in focus, but other relevant risk factors are also discussed. Turks have distinctively low levels of total and high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, associated with high levels of hepatic lipase and fasting triglycerides. In addition, physical inactivity is common in both genders; close to 60% of men have the smoking habit, while obesity is common among Turkish women leading to a high prevalence of hypertension and diabetes in them. These factors probably account for the unanticipated fact that Turkish adults have the pattern of causes of death similar to a developed population, although the process of industrialization is ongoing, the structure of its population is young and overall cholesterol levels are comparatively low. The age-standardized coronary heart disease death rate is estimated to rank among the highest in Europe. The leading independent predictors of coronary events and death [systolic blood pressure, total/HDL-cholesterol ratio, followed by diabetes and (central) obesity] are related to the metabolic syndrome, estimated to prevail in 3-4% of adults aged 30 or over, and to underlie one-eighth of cases of coronary disease. Since several adverse factors exhibit a rising trend, primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease must assume a much higher priority in various issues in Turkey than it currently does.
Atherosclerosis 2001 May
PMID:Risk factors and cardiovascular disease in Turkey. 1168 77

The adipocyte fatty-acid-binding protein, aP2, has an important role in regulating systemic insulin resistance and lipid metabolism. Here we demonstrate that aP2 is also expressed in macrophages, has a significant role in their biological responses and contributes to the development of atherosclerosis. Apolipoprotein E (ApoE)-deficient mice also deficient for aP2 showed protection from atherosclerosis in the absence of significant differences in serum lipids or insulin sensitivity. aP2-deficient macrophages showed alterations in inflammatory cytokine production and a reduced ability to accumulate cholesterol esters when exposed to modified lipoproteins. Apoe-/- mice with Ap2+/+ adipocytes and Ap2-/- macrophages generated by bone-marrow transplantation showed a comparable reduction in atherosclerotic lesions to those with total aP2 deficiency, indicating an independent role for macrophage aP2 in atherogenesis. Through its distinct actions in adipocytes and macrophages, aP2 provides a link between features of the metabolic syndrome and could be a new therapeutic target for the prevention of atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Lack of macrophage fatty-acid-binding protein aP2 protects mice deficient in apolipoprotein E against atherosclerosis. 1138 7

Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a prevalent disease in Westernised society, and more than 50% of individuals with diabetes mellitus die from cardiovascular causes. The underlying metabolic defect of type 2 diabetes mellitus is a combination of insulin resistance and decreased secretion of insulin by pancreatic beta-cells. Insulin resistance commonly precedes the onset of type 2 diabetes mellitus and is usually associated with a metabolic syndrome including hypertension, dyslipidaemia and obesity. Treatment of known cardiovascular risk factors, including hyperglycaemia, dyslipidaemia, hypertension and smoking, plays a key role in delaying the onset and progression of coronary heart disease (CHD) and other forms of atherosclerosis in patients with diabetes mellitus. Sulphonylureas should be used with caution in patients with CHD but aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid), beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors play an important role in the medical management of patients with established coronary artery disease and diabetes mellitus. Patients with diabetes mellitus represent a higher risk group of patients after both percutaneous and surgical coronary revascularisation and the decision regarding the choice of revascularisation procedure should take into account angiographic characteristics, clinical status and patient preference. Patients presenting with diabetes mellitus and acute myocardial infarction should be considered for reperfusion therapy with either urgent thrombolytic therapy or primary percutaneous coronary intervention.
...
PMID:Optimisation of the management of patients with coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1139 41

Hypertension and diabetes are the basic risk factors of atherosclerosis and its complications. At present new associations are sought which will enable us to describe more satisfactorily the mutual relationship of hypertension, metabolic disorders and cardiovascular disease. One of the systems involved in all substantial physiological processes is the autonomic nervous system. Stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system by chronic stress causes in addition to an elevated pulse rate and cardiac minute output also activation of another important pressor mechanism--the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system plays a part also in the development of impaired glucose and lipid metabolism, which are very frequent in hypertonic subjects. Hyperinsulinaemia, hypertriglyceridaemia and reduced HDL-cholesterol concentration are associated with a decline of the insulin capacity to take up glucose and deposit glycogen and together with a raised blood pressure create the so-called metabolic syndrome of insulin resistance (syndrome X, Reaven's syndrome).
...
PMID:[Stress-induced hypertension and diabetes mellitus]. 1139 76


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>