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Query: UMLS:C0948265 (
metabolic syndrome
)
24,271
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Despite major advances in understanding monogenic causes of
morbid obesity
, the complex genetic and environmental etiology of idiopathic
metabolic syndrome
remains poorly understood. One hypothesis suggests that similarities between the metabolic disease of plasma glucocorticoid excess (Cushing's syndrome) and idiopathic
metabolic syndrome
results from increased glucocorticoid reamplification within adipose tissue by 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11beta-HSD-1). Indeed, 11beta-HSD-1 is now a major therapeutic target. Because much supporting evidence for a role of adipose 11beta-HSD-1 comes from transgenic or obese rodents with single-gene mutations, we investigated whether the predicted traits of
metabolic syndrome
and glucocorticoid metabolism were coassociated in a unique polygenic model of obesity developed by long-term selection for divergent fat mass (Fat and Lean mice with 23 vs. 4% fat as body weight, respectively). Fat mice exhibited an insulin-resistant
metabolic syndrome
including fatty liver and hypertension. Unexpectedly, Fat mice had a marked intra-adipose (11beta-HSD-1) and plasma glucocorticoid deficiency but higher liver glucocorticoid action. Furthermore, metabolic disease was exacerbated only in Fat mice when challenged with exogenous glucocorticoids or a high-fat diet. Our data suggest that idiopathic
metabolic syndrome
might associate with such a novel pattern of glucocorticoid action and sensitivity in humans, with implications for tissue-specific therapeutic targeting of 11beta-HSD-1.
...
PMID:A polygenic model of the metabolic syndrome with reduced circulating and intra-adipose glucocorticoid action. 1630 51
In patients with craniopharyngioma, pituitary failure and often lifelong hormone replacement therapy, persisting ophthalmological problems with impaired vision, cranial nerve palsies, and psychoneurological deficits will lead to a persisting impairment in quality of life and social competence. Some patients completely depend on assistance. To prevent this, a major goal is an early diagnosis and limitation of operative radicality to minimize postoperative complications. Surgery in centers with special expertise is mandatory. Radiotherapeutical strategies are relatively safe and improve the outcome and recurrence-free survival after incomplete surgical resection or after local recurrence. Multidisciplinary concepts and prospective data acquisition are desirable with regard to therapy and outcome in patients with craniopharyngioma. Problems in the follow-up period are the development of atherosclerotic complications and
metabolic syndrome
as a consequence of occasionally excessive obesity, which may impair the long-term survival of the patients. Cause and progression of these complications are not fully understood, therapeutical strategies for the
morbid obesity
are not available. Only interdisciplinary co-operation will help to develop and evaluate therapeutical concepts for the management of this rare disease.
...
PMID:[CranioNet -- an interdisciplinary strategy for craniopharyngioma]. 1660 3
Metabolic syndrome
(MS) is a risk condition for the development of systemic atherosclerotic disease.
Morbid obesity
is a state of insulin resistance (IR) associated with visceral fat accumulation, which is involved in the development of MS. In severe obesity, conservative therapies promote an improvement of MS, but weight regain is frequent, whereas bariatric surgery promotes a more significant and sustained weight loss. Bariatric surgery is recommended for patients with unsatisfactory response to clinical treatment and with IMC > 40 kg/m(2) or > 35 in case of co-morbidities. In those cases, surgical risk must be acceptable and patients submitted to surgery must be informed about complications and postoperative care. Prevention, improvement and reversion of diabetes (DM2) (70 to 90% of cases) are seen in several bariatric surgery modalities. Disabsorptive are more efficient than restrictive procedures in terms of weight reduction and insulin sensitivity improvement, but chronic complications, such as malnutrition, are also more frequent. Vertical gastroplasty with jejunoileal derivation is a mixed surgery in which the restrictive component predominates. In this modality, reversion of DM2 is due to an increase in insulin sensitivity associated with improved beta cell function. Reversion of MS and its manifestations after bariatric surgery are associated with reduction of cardiovascular mortality and, thus, in severe obesity cases, MS can be considered a surgical condition.
...
PMID:[Does bariatric surgery cure the metabolic syndrome?]. 1676 6
Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a rare developmental disorder with the cardinal features of abdominal obesity, retinopathy, polydactyly, cognitive impairment, renal and cardiac anomalies, hypertension, and diabetes. BBS is genetically heterogeneous, with nine genes identified to date and evidence for additional loci. In this study, we performed mutation analysis of the coding and conserved regions of BBS1, BBS2, BBS4, and BBS6 in 48 French Caucasian individuals. Among the 36 variants identified, 12 were selected and genotyped in 1,943 French-Caucasian case subjects and 1,299 French-Caucasian nonobese nondiabetic control subjects. Variants in BBS2, BBS4, and BBS6 showed evidence of association with common obesity in an age-dependent manner, the BBS2 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) being associated with common adult obesity (P = 0.0005) and the BBS4 and BBS6 SNPs being associated with common early-onset childhood obesity (P = 0.0003) and common adult
morbid obesity
(0.0003 < P < 0.007). The association of the BBS4 rs7178130 variant was found to be supported by transmission disequilibrium testing (P = 0.006). The BBS6 variants also showed nominal evidence of association with quantitative components of the
metabolic syndrome
(e.g., dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia), a complication previously described in BBS patients. In summary, our preliminary data suggest that variations at BBS genes are associated with risk of common obesity.
...
PMID:Bardet-Biedl syndrome gene variants are associated with both childhood and adult common obesity in French Caucasians. 1700 56
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is linked to the
metabolic syndrome
. The aim of the present study is to determine the effect of the
metabolic syndrome
on left ventricular (LV) geometry and function using as a model patients with NAFLD. Thirty-eight patients with NAFLD, less than 55 years of age and with a normal exercise test, were compared with an age and sex-matched control group. Patients with diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and body mass index>40 were excluded. A complete echocardiographic study including tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) was performed. The following parameters were assessed by echo Doppler: peak velocities of early (E) and late (A) diastolic filling, E/A ratio, flow propagation velocity (Vp). Using TDI early diastolic velocity (E'), and systolic velocity (S') of mitral annulus were obtained. The patients with NAFLD had a significantly higher body mass index (31.4+/-5 vs. 26.4+/-4 kg/m, P=0.01), higher glucose (100.6+/-13 vs. 83.0+/-10 mg/dL, P=0.01), and triglyceride levels (126.5+/-44 vs. 206.5+/-67 mg/dL, P<0.001). Increased thickness of the intraventricular septum, posterior wall (11.03+/-2.2 vs. 8.9+/-2.9 mm, P=0.001; 8.5+/-1.7 vs. 9.7+/-2.3 mm, P=0.04), and larger LV mass and LV mass/height (160.7+/-58.7 vs.115.3+/-35.4 g, P=0.001 and 92.6+/-29.5 vs. 69.2+/-19.8 g/m, P=0.001, respectively) were found in NAFLD group. LV systolic function was similar in both groups. Patients with NAFLD had a lower E (73.6+/-11.0 vs. 86.4+/-20.0 cm/s, P<0.006) and E/A ratio (1.0+/-0.3 vs. 1.76+/-0.8 P<0.0001). Moreover, the Vp and the E' on TDI were significantly lower compared with the control group (49.0+/-9.7 vs. 74.7+/-18.4 cm/s, P<0.0001 and 10.3+/-2.0 vs. 13.8+/-1.7 cm/s, P<0.0001, respectively). On multivariate analysis the E' on TDI was the only independent parameter associated with NAFLD. In conclusion, patients with NAFLD in the absence of
morbid obesity
, hypertension, and diabetes have mildly altered LV geometry and early features of left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. Early diastolic velocity on TDI was found to be the only index that could identify the patients with NAFLD and
metabolic syndrome
.
...
PMID:Cardiac abnormalities as a new manifestation of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: echocardiographic and tissue Doppler imaging assessment. 1706 17
Abdominal -- and not peripheral -- obesity induces insulin resistance.
Morbid obesity
is not always accompanied by either diabetes mellitus or
metabolic syndrome
. Development of
morbid obesity
can require appropriate insulin secretion and recruitment of small insulin-sensitive adipocytes, able to store fatty acids. These fatty acids are therefore not stored in ectopic sites (muscle, liver, islets of Langerhans), and neither insulin resistance nor glucolipid toxicity develops and causes insulin deficiency. This explains the relative rarity of diabetes in
morbid obesity
. Patients with
morbid obesity
are at greater risk of developing mechanical complications (e.g. cardiac, pulmonary, or locomotor system, or sleep apnea) than metabolic complications or cardiovascular heart disease.
...
PMID:[Obesity, immune resistance and metabolic complications: what morbid obesity can teach the doctor]. 1745 53
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is an emerging clinical entity. There is limited data on NAFLD from India. The objective of this article was to review all the published literature on NAFLD from India. The epidemiological studies including prevalence ofNAFLD amongst special groups like in those with unexplained rise in transaminases, diabetes mellitus and cryptogenic cirrhosis, studies on pathogenesis including insulin resistance, iron abnormalities, and studies available for the treatment of such patients have been reviewed. In addition some of the differences between Indian patients and those from the West have been highlighted. Available literature show that majority of Indian patients with NAFLD have overweight or obesity as per Asian Pacific criteria even though they do not have the kind of
morbid obesity
as seen in patients from the West. Other differences between Indian patients and those from the West include less of
metabolic syndrome
including its components like diabetes mellitus and hypertension, less of iron abnormalities and HFE gene mutations and mild histological disease at presentation in Indian patients. More data is required to substantiate these findings and to prove if NAFLD patients in India are different at presentation.
...
PMID:Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in India--is it different? 1754 90
The prevalence of overweight has increased sharply since the 1980s, with
morbid obesity
rising at an even higher rate. Comorbidities related to adiposity now consume almost 10% of all US health care dollars. Unfortunately, overweight children already demonstrate elevations in cardiovascular risk factors. These children are extremely likely to remain obese in adulthood and are likely to progress to diabetes and heart and kidney diseases. It is not surprising, therefore, that the diagnosis of the
metabolic syndrome
is being made with increasing frequency in American adolescents. The authors show that noninvasive methods are now available to measure target organ damage related to obesity and the
metabolic syndrome
in children. They explore the data linking the cardiovascular risk factors that cluster as the
metabolic syndrome
to early subclinical atherosclerotic change such as left ventricular hypertrophy, carotid intima-media thickness, vascular function abnormalities, and microalbuminuria. Evidence for the benefits of treatment and guidelines for the assessment for target organ damage in children are provided.
...
PMID:Noninvasive assessment of target organ injury in children with the metabolic syndrome. 1767 7
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.
...
PMID:Impaired glucose tolerance and risk factors for progression to type 2 diabetes in youth. 1799 Nov 35
The mortality of patients with
morbid obesity
is 2 to 12 times higher according to age, comorbidities and the degree of obesity. Surgical treatment has proved to be the only type of treatment that has led to favorable long-term results. We present the therapeutic strategy used in a 39 year old obese patient with BMI=39.8 kg/sqm type 2 diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, severe hypercholesterolemia, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and
metabolic syndrome
. The patient underwent laparoscopic gastric banding with adjustable silicon band.
...
PMID:Minimally invasive surgical treatment of morbid obesity in patients with specific comorbidities. A case report. 1819 32
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