Is insulin resistance the cause of the metabolic syndrome?
- 1 January 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Annals of Medicine
- Vol. 38 (1) , 42-51
- https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890500415358
Abstract
Following up on original descriptions of clustering of cardiovascular risk factors (chiefly, glucose intolerance, dyslipidaemia and hypertension) around the presence of insulin resistance, the metabolic syndrome has recently been upgraded to the status of a disease entity with an inherent predictive value for cardiovascular disease. In pathophysiological terms, insulin resistance (of glucose metabolism) and the attendant compensatory hyperinsulinaemia are causally related to each of glucose intolerance, dyslipidaemia, high blood pressure and vascular dysfunction. The physiological mechanisms are concisely reviewed here. However, insulin resistance/hyperinsulinaemia alone is insufficient to cause these abnormalities, for which other pathogenic factors (e.g. ss-cell dysfunction for glucose intolerance) are required. The metabolic syndrome, on the other hand, has evolved from a set of statistical associations believed to carry an excess of cardiovascular risk. In the various existing definitions, a mixture of physical, metabolic and clinical variables have been used on grounds of predictive value or practical ease. These variables belong to different phenotypes, which are upstream, intermediate and proximal, respectively, in their relation to clinical disease. The resulting 'syndromes' usually lack a cogent conceptual structure, may reflect the particular data set from which they are extracted and may be of limited applicability. While overt diabetes, clinical hypertension and frank dyslipidaemia are often present together in the same patient, a subclinical syndrome with a distinct, probable aetiology and a proven power as a risk indicator remains to be identified.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Increased Fat Mass Compensates for Insulin Resistance in Abdominal Obesity and Type 2 DiabetesDiabetes, 2005
- Insulin-Mediated Hepatic Glucose Uptake Is Impaired in Type 2 Diabetes: Evidence for a Relationship with Glycemic ControlJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2003
- Influence of obesity and type 2 diabetes on gluconeogenesis and glucose output in humans: a quantitative study.Diabetes, 2000
- How to measure insulin sensitivityJournal Of Hypertension, 1998
- Cardiac and skeletal muscle insulin resistance in patients with coronary heart disease. A study with positron emission tomography.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1996
- Transmembrane glucose transport in skeletal muscle of patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1993
- Differential effects of insulin and hyperglycemia on intracellular glucose disposition in humansMetabolism, 1989
- Role of Insulin Resistance in Human DiseaseDiabetes, 1988
- Metabolic basis of obesity and noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitusDiabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, 1988
- Regulation of Splanchnic and Peripheral Glucose Uptake by Insulin and Hyperglycemia in ManDiabetes, 1983