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Query: UMLS:C0948265 (
metabolic syndrome
)
24,271
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyperinsulinemia as a consequence of insulin resistance causes hyperandrogenemia in women. The objective was to review evidence for the converse situation, i.e. whether androgens adversely influence insulin action.
Androgen excess
could potentially contribute to the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS),
metabolic syndrome
/type 2 diabetes, and in obese peripubertal girls. An Entrez-PubMed search was conducted to identify studies addressing the relationship of androgens with
metabolic syndrome
/type 2 diabetes in women. Studies reporting outcomes of androgen administration, interventions to reduce androgen effects in hyperandrogenemic women, and basic studies investigating androgen effects on insulin target tissues were reviewed. Multiple studies showed associations between serum testosterone and insulin resistance or
metabolic syndrome
/type 2 diabetes risk in women, but their cross-sectional nature did not allow conclusions about causality. Androgen administration to healthy women was associated with development of insulin resistance. Intervention studies in women with hyperandrogenism were limited by small subject numbers and use of indirect methods for assessing insulin sensitivity. However, in three of the seven studies using euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamps, reduction of androgen levels or blockade of androgen action improved insulin sensitivity. Testosterone administration to female rats caused skeletal muscle insulin resistance. Testosterone induced insulin resistance in adipocytes of women in vitro. In conclusion, the metabolic consequences of androgen excess in women have been under-researched. Studies of long-term interventions that lower androgen levels or block androgen effects in young women with hyperandrogenism are needed to determine whether these might protect against
metabolic syndrome
/type 2 diabetes in later life.
...
PMID:Effects of androgens on insulin action in women: is androgen excess a component of female metabolic syndrome? 1861 51
Both prevalence and incidence of the
metabolic syndrome
is very high in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Obesity and visceral fat enlargement play a dominant role in determining the final phenotype of PCOS.
Androgen excess
and insulin resistance may be responsible for the development of all features of the
metabolic syndrome
. The major factors responsible for this association seem to be related to a triumvirate including androgen excess, insulin resistance and associated hyperinsulinemia, and obesity, particularly the abdominal-visceral phenotype. With respect to obesity, it can be suggested that the association may be bidirectional, in the sense that obesity can worsen the phenotype of PCOS when present and can also be responsible for the development of a secondary form of PCOS even in susceptible subjects. In spite of the strong association among a long list of cardiovascular risk factors, there is no evidence that women with PCOS may be affected by an increased risk for cardiovascular mortality. Future research should carry out a detailed investigation into the potential role of androgen excess in determining the insulin resistant state and, specifically, the very high risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:Metabolic Syndrome in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome. 2989 90
Androgen excess
is often associated with obesity states, at any age of life, because of changes in the pattern of secretion or metabolism of androgens and in their actions at the level of target tissues, particularly the adipose tissue.
Androgen excess
plays an important role in favouring the expansion of visceral fat, which characterize so-called visceral obesity. Moreover, there is evidence that the combination of androgen excess and obesity may favour the development of metabolic disorders, such as the
metabolic syndrome
and type 2 diabetes. In obese adolescent girls, androgen excess may also suggest the potential development of the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). A new hypothesis, based on long-term lifestyle intervention programs or bariatric surgery, supports the concept that a "PCOS secondary to obesity" may exist, as confirmed by the complete resolution of all features defining PCOS after considerable weight loss. Obesity can also develop after long-term exposure to chronic stress, which is characterized by increased activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and the sympathetic system combined with higher than normal androgen production rates in women. This increasingly observed condition, often underestimated, should be considered more carefully, not only in mature women but also in girls during adolescence. The presence of a hyperandrogenic state can also be detected in menopausal women, as a consequence of the rearrangement of the sex hormone balance which, in turn, may play some role in determining the development of both visceral adiposity and even obesity and, consequently, metabolic disorders. Undoubtedly, the recognition of the potential negative effects of androgen excess in obese women may open new therapeutic perspectives aimed at achieving a sustained weight loss and its maintenance for as long as possible.
...
PMID:Obesity and Androgens in Women. 3149 97