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Query: UMLS:C0948265 (metabolic syndrome)
24,271 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a diagnosis made between late adolescence and the menopause in 5-10% of women. PCOS is a heterogeneous disorder of unknown etiology characterized by hyperandrogenic chronic anovulation. This syndrome consists of a diverse constellation of signs and symptoms, such as hirsutism, acne, acanthosis nigricans, obesity, menstrual irregularities, anovulation, and/or infertility. Features of the metabolic syndrome, including obesity, insulin resistance, and dyslipidemia, are common in this patient population. Recent insights into the pathophysiology of PCOS have shown insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia to play a substantial role. Insulin resistance is increasingly recognized as a chronic, low-level, inflammatory state. Recent studies show that serum levels of inflammatory mediators, such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-6, are increased in the insulin-resistant conditions of obesity and PCOS. The optimal modality for long-term treatment should have positive effects on androgen synthesis, sex hormone-binding globulin production, the lipid profile, insulin sensitivity, inflammatory mediators, and clinical symptoms including acne, hirsutism, and irregular menstrual cycles. Treatment with insulin-sensitizing agents is a relatively new therapeutic strategy in women with PCOS. Current research has shown that the use of diabetes mellitus management practices aimed at reducing insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia (such as weight reduction and the administration of oral antidiabetic drugs) can not only reverse testosterone and luteinizing hormone abnormalities and restore menstrual cycles, but can also improve glucose, insulin, proinflammatory cytokine, and lipid profiles.Clinical treatment with troglitazone, a member of the thiazolidinedione family, for the management of PCOS complications such as insulin resistance, hyperandrogenism, and anovulation was found to have beneficial effects; however, it was taken off the market over concerns of hepatotoxicity. Although troglitazone is no longer available in the US, numerous clinical trials have established the role of thiazolidinediones in the treatment of women with PCOS. Clinical data emerging regarding the utility of two of the newer, safer thiazolidinediones, pioglitazone and rosiglitazone, for this patient population, consistently demonstrate effective improvements of endocrine and ovulatory performance in women with PCOS. The benefit and importance of lifestyle modification and weight reduction, when it can be achieved, is still an important component in the long-term treatment of PCOS. Pharmacologic reduction in insulin levels using thiazolidinediones appears to offer another therapeutic modality for PCOS, which may ameliorate the progress of both hyperinsulinemia and hyperandrogenism. However, additional studies of patients so treated are necessary before these agents can be considered first-line treatment for PCOS. Convincing data from randomized controlled trials with sufficient power to detect both the benefits and risks of long-term treatment with thiazolidinediones in women with PCOS remain to be obtained.
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PMID:Thiazolidinediones for the therapeutic management of polycystic ovary syndrome : impact on metabolic and reproductive abnormalities. 1667 59

Much overlap is present between the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and the metabolic syndrome. This article reviews the existing data regarding the prevalence, characteristics, and treatment of the metabolic syndrome in women with PCOS. The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in PCOS is approximately 43-47%, a rate 2-fold higher than that for women in the general population. High body mass index and low serum HDL cholesterol are the most frequently occurring components of the metabolic syndrome in PCOS. The pathogenic link between the metabolic syndrome and PCOS is most likely insulin resistance. Therefore, the presence of the metabolic syndrome in PCOS suggests a greater degree of insulin resistance compared to PCOS without the metabolic syndrome. Obesity, atherogenic dyslipidemia, hypertension, impaired fasting glucose/impaired glucose tolerance, and vascular abnormalities are all common metabolic abnormalities present in PCOS. Lifestyle modification has proven benefit and pharmacological therapy with insulin-sensitizing agents has potential benefit in the treatment of the metabolic syndrome in women with PCOS.
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PMID:The metabolic syndrome in polycystic ovary syndrome. 1668 45

The Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) affects 6 to 10% of women of childbearing age. Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia are present in nearly all PCOS patients and play a central role in the development of both hyperandrogenism and metabolic syndrome (MS). MS occurs in approximately 43% of PCOS patients, raising the cardiovascular risk to up seven fold in these patients. Several serum, functional and structural markers of endothelial dysfunction and subclinical atherosclerosis were described in PCOS patients, even those young and non-obese. However, despite the fact that PCOS adversely affects the cardiovascular profile, long-term studies did not demonstrate a consistent raise in cardiovascular mortality, which seems to be more observed in the post-menopausal period. Recently, oral contraceptives are being substituted for insulin sensitizing agents (metformin and glitazones) in the PCOS treatment, due to their effects on insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk.
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PMID:[Polycystic ovary syndrome, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular risk and the role of insulin sensitizing agents]. 1793 74

Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine condition with reproductive and metabolic consequences, including anovulation, infertility and an increased prevalence of diabetes mellitus. Obesity, central obesity and insulin resistance are strongly implicated in its aetiology. Dietary weight loss is recommended as the primary treatment strategy; however, effective means of achieving and maintaining weight loss and reproductive and metabolic improvements are unknown. Lifestyle modification programmes with an emphasis on behavioural management and dietary and exercise interventions have been successful in the general population in reducing the risk of diabetes and the metabolic syndrome, and have had some initial success in improving fertility outcomes in PCOS. However, the literature on effective diet and exercise programmes for PCOS has been sparse, and structured advice for implementing components of lifestyle modification programmes should be assessed in this population.
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PMID:Effects of lifestyle modification in polycystic ovarian syndrome. 1679 Jan

The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is high across all age groups. Dyslipidemia, particularly a decreased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level, also is common in women with PCOS.
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PMID:Metabolic syndrome in women with polycystic ovary syndrome. 1679 77

The polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is one of the most common causes of infertility due to anovulation in women. The clinical features of PCOS are heterogeneous and may change throughout the lifespan, starting from adolescence to postmenopausal age. This is largely dependent on the influence of obesity and metabolic alterations, including an insulin-resistant state and the metabolic syndrome, which consistently affect most women with PCOS. Obesity does in fact have profound effects on both the pathophysiology and the clinical manifestation of PCOS, by different mechanisms leading to androgen excess and increased free androgen availability and to alterations of granulosa cell function and follicle development. Notably, simple obesity per se represents a functional hyperandrogenic state. These mechanisms involve early hormonal and metabolic factors during intrauterine life, leptin, insulin and the insulin growth factor system and, potentially, the endocannabinoid system. Compared with normal weight women with PCOS, those with obesity are characterised by a worsened hyperandrogenic and metabolic state, poorer menses and ovulatory performance and, ultimately, poorer pregnancy rates. The importance of obesity in the pathogenesis of PCOS is emphasised by the efficacy of lifestyle intervention and weight loss, not only on metabolic alterations but also on hyperandrogenism, ovulation and fertility. The increasing prevalence of obesity among adolescent and young women with PCOS may partly depend on the increasing worldwide epidemic of obesity, although this hypothesis should be supported by long-term prospective epidemiological trials. This may have great relevance in preventive medicine and offer the opportunity to expand our still limited knowledge of the genetic and environmental background favouring the development of the PCOS.
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PMID:The impact of obesity on reproduction in women with polycystic ovary syndrome. 1682 25

Insulin resistance is a state in which higher than normal concentrations of insulin are required for normal response. The most common underlying cause is central obesity, although primary insulin resistance in normal-weight individuals is also possible. Excess abdominal adipose tissue has been shown to release increased amounts of free fatty acids which directly affect insulin signalling, diminish glucose uptake in muscle, drive exaggerated triglyceride synthesis and induce gluconeogenesis in the liver. Other factors presumed to play the role in insulin resistance are tumour necrosis factor alpha, adiponectin, leptin, IL-6 and some other adipokines. Hyperinsulinaemia which accompanies insulin resistance may be implicated in the development of many pathological states, such as hypertension and hyperandrogenaemia. Insulin resistance underlies metabolic syndrome and is further associated with polycystic ovary syndrome and lipodystrophies. When beta-cells fail to secrete the excess insulin needed, diabetes mellitus type 2 emerges, which is, besides coronary heart disease, the main complication of insulin resistance and associated diseases.
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PMID:Molecular mechanisms of insulin resistance and associated diseases. 1695 1

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a heterogeneous syndrome that is characterized from oligo- or anovulation, clinical and/or biochemical signs of hyperandrogenism, and polycystic ovaries. Clinical expression is determined by genetic as well as environmental factors. Women with PCOS are a specific group of women which have several aspects of metabolic syndrome (MBS). Concomitantly MBS could be part of metabolic abnormalities present in PCOS. Stress has been linked to aggravate the metabolic abnormalities present in MBS. An interaction seems to exist between stress, environmental, as well as genetic factors, starting from the prenatal age and continuing to the adult life. This results in specific endocrinological and metabolic disorders which are shared by women with PCOS and women with MBS.
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PMID:Stress in women: metabolic syndrome and polycystic ovary syndrome. 1714 33

Until recently no universally accepted clinical definition existed for the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). What has emerged from research over the last 30 yr is a profound heterogeneity and ongoing speculation regarding etiology. The various symptoms and signs related to PCOS have now been extensively evaluated as to their possible contribution to the diagnosis. Consensus has been reached for the use of oligomenorrhea or amenorrhea, clinical or biochemical hyperandrogenism, and polycystic ovaries at ultrasound as key diagnostic criteria. Obesity, insulin resistance, and the so-called metabolic syndrome should be recognized as associated conditions that present long-term health risks for diagnosed PCOS cases. The way all these features need to be applied in the work up of the individual index patient is reviewed here.
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PMID:Diagnostic criteria for polycystic ovarian syndrome. 1718 86

The cardiovascular risk associated with the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) has recently attracted much interest. Women with PCOS are more likely to fulfill the diagnosis of the metabolic syndrome, a cluster of related cardiometabolic factors known to predict long-term risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. We review the literature pertaining to the link between the metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and PCOS. We focus on the influence of obesity and hyperandrogenemia, and on strategies for identifying cardiovascular risk in PCOS.
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PMID:Metabolic syndrome and cardiometabolic risk in PCOS. 1725 20


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