Diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The "common soil" hypothesis
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 44 (4) , 369-374
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.44.4.369
Abstract
Unlike classical microvascular complications, large-vessel atherosclerosis can precede the development of diabetes, suggesting that rather than atherosclerosis being a complication of diabetes, both conditions have common genetic and environmental antecedents, i.e., they spring from a ''common soil.'' It is now known that adverse environmental conditions, perhaps related to less-than-optimal nutrition, in fetal and early life are associated with an enhanced risk of both diabetes and cardiovascular disease many decades later. These same adverse environmental conditions are also associated with the development in adult life of abdominal obesity and the insulin-resistance syndrome (IRS). The IRS consists of glucose intolerance, hyperinsulinemia, dyslipidemia (high triglyceride and low high-density lipoprotein [HDL] cholesterol levels), and hypertension. Although the mechanism underlying this cluster is controversial, the statistical association is well established, All of the elements of the IBS have been documented as risk factors for type IH diabetes. Some, but not all, of these elements are also cardiovascular disease risk factors,in particular, hypertension and low HDL cholesterol. Other factors associated with the IRS that may enhance cardiovascular disease risk are plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 and small, dense low-density lipoprotein particles. Whether insulin itself is a risk factor remains controversial, but recent epidemiological evidence has been mostly negative. This question has marked clinical relevance because if the TRS enhances cardiovascular disease risk by virtue of its concomitant factors and not the hyperinsulinemia per se, this would tend to alleviate concerns that intensive insulin management of type II diabetic subjects could enhance the risk of large-vessel atherosclerosis. Clinical trials are urgently needed to settle this point.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variations in mortality by weight among 750,000 men and womenPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Slow Glucose Removal Rate and Hyperinsulinemia Precede the Development of Type II Diabetes in the Offspring of Diabetic ParentsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1990
- Increased Plasma Levels of a Rapid Inhibitor of Tissue Plasminogen Activator in Young Survivors of Myocardial InfarctionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Studies of low density lipoprotein molecular weight in human beings with coronary artery disease.Journal of Lipid Research, 1985
- Distribution of adipose tissue and risk of cardiovascular disease and death: a 12 year follow up of participants in the population study of women in Gothenburg, Sweden.BMJ, 1984
- Abdominal adipose tissue distribution, obesity, and risk of cardiovascular disease and death: 13 year follow up of participants in the study of men born in 1913.BMJ, 1984
- Obesity as an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease: a 26-year follow-up of participants in the Framingham Heart Study.Circulation, 1983
- The ten-year follow-up of the Bedford Survey (1962?1972): Glucose tolerance and diabetesDiabetologia, 1982
- Relationship of plasma insulin levels to the incidence of myocardial infarction and coronary heart disease mortality in a middle-aged populationDiabetologia, 1980
- Diabetes, Blood Lipids, and the Role of Obesity in Coronary Heart Disease Risk for WomenAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1977