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The most common and clinically important complication in adults with diabetes is cardiovascular disease (CVD), which includes coronary heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, and stroke. Both type 2 diabetes and the insulin resistance syndrome are associated with a marked increase in the risk for CVD. The metabolic syndrome and the closely related insulin resistance syndrome have recently been recognized as important disorders, each being associated with an increase in CVD risk even in the absence of glucose intolerance. Given the significant public health burden of CVD, risk reduction has emerged as a significant clinical challenge for most practitioners. Diabetes and the insulin resistance syndrome are closely related disorders, with insulin resistance being more than a key pathogenic defect in type 2 diabetes. Even in the absence of glucose intolerance, these 2 disorders are both associated with a number of distinct pathologic findings, including hypertension, atherogenic dyslipidemia, a prothrombotic environment, and significant vascular and hemodynamic abnormalities that result from endothelial cell dysfunction. Insulin resistance is now recognized to be closely associated with the development of each of these risk factors. This article uses a case-based approach to discuss the unique features of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes considered to be key contributors to CVD risk. A systematic approach to both evaluation and management is proposed, with priority given to therapies of demonstrated clinical benefit. Because of its critical and central role in the development of many CVD risk factors, targeted treatment of insulin resistance will also be discussed as such therapy may prove to be a critical component of care in years to come.
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PMID:The metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease: understanding the role of insulin resistance. 1251 Jul 88

Diabetes mellitus is a complex metabolic syndrome with significant effects on the systemic and cerebral vasculature. The incidence and severity of ischaemic stroke are increased by the presence of diabetes, and outcome from stroke is poorer. More than one third of patients admitted with acute stroke are hyperglycaemic at presentation. Reasons for the altered prognosis in diabetes associated stroke are multifactorial. A direct influence of hyperglycaemia at the time of ischaemia is likely to be important. The use of novel methods to delineate stroke topography and pathophysiology such as MR spectroscopy, diffusion and perfusion weighted MRI appear helpful in delineating the effects of hyperglycaemia on stroke pathophysiology. Randomised clinical trials to determine optimal management for patients with hyperglycaemia following stroke are ongoing. Such trials will determine if aggressive control of acute hyperglycaemia following stroke has similar benefits to that observed following acute myocardial infarction. Clinicians responsible for stroke patients should be aware of the importance of adequate glycaemic control in both primary and secondary prevention of stroke.
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PMID:The influence of diabetes mellitus and hyperglycaemia on stroke incidence and outcome. 1260 69

The prevalence of marked obesity is increasing rapidly among adults and has more than doubled in 10 years. Sixty-one percent of the adult population of the United States is overweight or obese. Americans are the fattest people on earth. Paradoxically these increases in the numbers of persons who are obese or overweight have occurred during recent years when Americans have been preoccupied with numerous dietary programs, diet products, weight control, health clubs, home exercise equipment, and physical fitness videos, each "guaranteed" to bring rapid results. Overweight and obesity are also world problems. The World Health Organization estimates that 1 billion people around the world are now overweight or obese. Westernization of diets has been part of the problem. Fruits, vegetables, and whole grains are being replaced by readily accessible foods high in saturated fat, sugar, and refined carbohydrates. Since class 3 obesity (morbid or extreme obesity) is associated with the most severe health complications, the incidence of hypertension, stroke, heart disease, diabetes, and peripheral vascular disease will increase substantially in the future. Recently, obesity alone has been implicated in the development of cardiac hypertrophy and CHF. The metabolic syndrome associated with abdominal obesity, which includes insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and elevated CRP levels, identifies subjects who have an increase in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Twenty to 25% of the adult population in the United States have the metabolic syndrome, and in some older groups this prevalence approaches 50%. The prevalence of overweight children in the United States has also been increasing dramatically, especially among non-Hispanic blacks and Mexican-American adolescents. Overweight children usually become overweight adults. Atherosclerosis begins in childhood. The degree of atherosclerotic changes in children and young adults can be correlated with the presence of the same risk factors seen in adults. As health providers, our direction is obvious!
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PMID:Obesity and the metabolic syndrome. 1262 76

Between January 1993 and December 2001, we employed percutaneous cardiopulmonary support (PCPS) in 35 patients. PCPS was used for postcardiotomy in 25 of these patients who could not be weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) because of severe cardiogenic shock. In the other 10 patients, PCPS was used for a non-surgical disease. Twenty-nine patients (82.9%) were weaned from PCPS, and 28 (80.0%) survived. The other 7 patients (20.0%) died due to postoperative complications. The causes of death were multiple organ failure (MOF) due to wound bleeding, low cardiac output syndrome (LOS), myonephropathic metabolic syndrome (MNMS) with severe lower limbs ischemia, cerebrovascular accident (CVA), and sepsis. The first cause for the complications was postoperative sustained severe heart failure. To improve the survival rate, it was necessary to prevent bleeding and begin PCPS at an earlier stage.
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PMID:Clinical effects of percutaneous cardiopulmonary support in severe heart failure: early results and analysis of complications. 1273 87

The recent focus on emerging cardiovascular risk factors, such as C-reactive protein, homocysteine, and small, dense low-density lipoprotein (LDL), may give the false impression that the current approach to the assessment of cardiovascular disease risk fails to identify a large section of the high-risk population. On the contrary, the new guidelines of the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP ATP III) propose classifying an enormous number of individuals, including people with any form of atherosclerotic disease, diabetes, and a combination of major risk factors, into the category of high risk (>20% likelihood of a major coronary event or stroke in 10 years). Considering the widespread prevalence of the metabolic syndrome-a high-risk condition characterized by mild hypertension, mild dyslipidemia, hyperglycemia, and visceral obesity-we may be faced with the challenge of implementing aggressive risk reduction therapies in as much as 30% of the adult US population. From the point of view of risk assessment, a practical approach is to follow the NCEP guidelines (ie, place patients with diabetes and those with atherosclerotic complications in the highest risk category), apply the Framingham calculation to determine risk in people with common risk factors, and initiate early intervention in people who have familial hypercholesterolemia (LDL cholesterol >200 mg/dL) or a family history of early cardiovascular disease. The emerging risk factors may be useful for further stratifying risk in individuals with intermediate risk and the presence of risk factors not included in the Framingham calculation.
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PMID:A practical approach to risk assessment to prevent coronary artery disease and its complications. 1286 51

The term metabolic syndrome refers to a virulent and lethal group of atherosclerotic risk factors, including dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, obesity, and hypertension. This syndrome affects some 47 million people in the United States, placing them at increased risk for coronary artery disease (CAD). Particularly prominent as a risk factor for development of heart disease is central obesity. Immediate treatment of the metabolic syndrome is essential because these patients quickly develop diabetes, CAD, and stroke. Treatment is a multifactorial process and includes diet, exercise, and pharmacologic therapy. The latter consists of statins, fibrates, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and thiazolidinediones, all of which can decrease the risk and incidence of CAD.
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PMID:Diagnosis, prevention, and intervention for the metabolic syndrome. 1286 53

Using statins to treat older men and women with coronary artery disease (CAD) and hypercholesterolemia reduces the risk of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, coronary events, coronary revascularization, stroke, Intermittent claudication, and congestive heart failure. The target serum low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol level is < 100 mg in older patients with CAD, prior stroke, peripheral arterial disease, extracranial carotid arterial disease, abdominal aortic aneurysm, diabetes meilitus, and the metabolic syndrome. Statins are also effective in reducing cardiovascular events in older persons with hypercholesterolemia without cardiovascular disease. Consider using statins in older persons without cardiovascular disease but with a serum LDL cholesterol > or = 130 mg/dL, or a serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol < 50 mg/dL. Data from the Heart Protection Study favor treating patients at high risk for vascular events with statins regardless of age or initial serum lipids.
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PMID:Hypercholesterolemia. The evidence supports use of statins. 1293 49

Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has prolonged many patients' lives, but many cardiac sequelae of HIV are not affected by HAART and continue to develop even with treatment. In addition, HAART itself causes in a high proportion of patients a metabolic syndrome, characterized by lipodystrophy/lipoatrophy, dyslipidemia and insulin resistance that may be associated with an increase in coronary artery disease and stroke. Careful cardiovascular evaluation in the course of HIV disease can identify cardiac complications early enough to treat. All HIV-infected patients are candidates for antiretroviral therapy and patients already under treatment should undergo an assessment that includes the evaluation of the cardiovascular risk according to the available guidelines.
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PMID:Highly active antiretroviral therapy and the cardiovascular system: the heart of the matter. 1462 56

Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a common disorder associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke. As it is strongly associated with known cardiovascular risk factors, including obesity, insulin resistance, and dyslipidemia, OSA is an independent risk factor for hypertension. Although the association between OSA and the metabolic syndrome tends to confound studies of the independent effects of OSA on vascular disease, recent evidences from basic science to epidemiological and clinical studies suggest that OSA may add worsening pathophysiological conditions to obesity. OSA contributes to the imbalance between vasodilators and vasoconstrictors, in particular through oxidative stress-dependent catabolism of nitric oxide, increased sympathetic nerve activity, enhanced renin-angiotensin system activity and endothelin synthesis. Additionally, several recent studies suggest that OSA may be a circumstance favouring central and vascular resistance to leptin. The beneficial effects of this hormone in normal subjects, are lost during endothelial dysfunction and OSA. Moreover, high leptin concentrations, within a range observed during OSA, display adverse effects on endothelial function and vascular physiology. Through of a yet unknown mechanism, OSA per se accounts for part of the elevated serum leptin concentration reported in patients. The current standard treatment for OSA-nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)-eliminates apnoea and the ensuing acute hemodynamic changes during sleep. Accordingly, vasopressor mediators and leptin concentration are shifted toward normal values by CPAP. Thus, in addition to this effective therapy, evaluation of specific strategies targeting leptin sensitivity and vasopressor mediators may open novel perspectives for treatment of OSA and its associated end-organ damages.
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PMID:[Effect of sleep apnea syndrome on the vascular endothelium]. 1464 10

BACKGROUND AND THERAPY: The metabolic syndrome comprises a virulent and lethal group of atherosclerotic risk factors, including dyslipidemia, obesity, systemic hypertension and insulin resistance. The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome has continuously grown in industrialized and developing countries during the last decades, and affects tens of millions of people in Germany and Europe. Particularly prominent as a risk factor for the development of insulin resistance is central obesity, which is causally involved in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in addition to genetic predisposition. The metabolic syndrome can easily be diagnosed in clinical practice (guidelines of the WHO and ATP III panel), and immediate treatment of the metabolic syndrome is mandatory because those patients are at increased risk to develop overt diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease and stroke. The high risk for cardiovascular diseases is supported by findings that the risk for myocardial infarction in patients with insulin resistance is as high as the risk of patients after their first myocardial infarction. Intentional weight reduction reduces abdominal obesity and beneficially modulates all features of the metabolic syndrome, while the benefits of aerobic exercise training are discussed controversially. Thus, weight reduction causally undoes essential features of the metabolic syndrome, but effects are often not enduring. Therefore, the treatment of cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension and dislipidemia is essential. Of note, antihypertensive treatment is more effective than tight glucose control to reduce cardiovascular events. Diuretics, ACE-inhibitors and angiotensin II type 1 receptor antagonists are suggested as first line therapeutics. However, at least two antihypertensives are usually necessary to achieve the suggested goals of blood pressure reduction. In conclusion, the prevalence of the metabolic syndrome is continuously growing. Due to its adverse impact on cardiovascular disease, early detection and aggressive treatment is mandatory to ensure longlasting benefits for affected patients.
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PMID:[Arterial hypertension and metabolic syndrome]. 1468 1


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