Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of INsulin Sensitivity on Cardiovascular Risk Markers During 10-20 Years of FOllow-up
The purpose of this study is to identify risk factors for insulin resistance and to investigate the influence of insulin sensitivity on development of cardiovascular risk markers like blood pressure, heart rate, body build (weight, BMI, waist-hip ratio, skinfold thickness), reduced insulin sensitivity, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidaemia, and sympathoadrenal activity or manifest cardiovascular disease among young men during 10-20 years.
In 1988 Reaven described a syndrome designed "syndrome X" based on the clustering of
resistance to insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, hyperinsulinaemia, hyperglycaemia, increased
triglycerides, decreased high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and high blood pressure
and proposed insulin resistance as the common feature and the aetiology of the syndrome.
Later obesity and the sympathetic nervous system have been proposed as pathogenic factors of
the metabolic syndrome, and still major controversy exists regarding its precise aetiology
and different definitions of metabolic syndrome are also discussed.
Insulin resistance is a growing epidemic concern in both industrialized and developing
countries. It is one of the components of the metabolic syndrome, and plays an important role
in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes. In view of the predicted increase in the number of
diabetic patients during the coming decades, further information about risk factors and
pathophysiology of diabetes are of utmost importance for early detection and possible
prevention and early treatment from both a medical and a financial perspective. Our research
group has for decades studied the pathophysiology of insulin resistance, hypertension,
sympathoadrenal hyperreactivity and dyslipidaemia. We have also recently finished a long-term
follow up study of subjects based on their cardiovascular and sympathetic responses to mental
stress.
During 1991-2002 healthy young men recruited from the military enlistments in the
Oslo/Akershus area were examined at Center of Cardiovascular and Renal Research, Division of
Medicine, Oslo University Hospital, Ullevål. Young, healthy men, mean age of 21, were
examined using the hyperinsulinaemic isoglycaemic glucose clamp technique, which is the gold
standard to assess insulin sensitivity. The present study aims to re-examine these subjects
in order to investigate the influence of insulin sensitivity on development of cardiovascular
risk factors and diabetes. We therefore have a unique opportunity to perform a true,
long-term follow-up study of a homogenous sample of subjects of same race and gender which
may provide new insights into various pathophysiological mechanisms in diabetes and
cardiovascular disease including elucidating the connections between insulin resistance,
changes in parameters of body build, blood pressure and sympathetic over-activity. Clarifying
these mechanisms are of direct importance for the entire population. There has to our
knowledge not been any previous long-term follow-up on subjects based on their insulin
resistance measured with this gold standard technique.
We now want to re-examine the same subject to investigate the influence of insulin
sensitivity on development of cardiovascular risk factors like blood pressure, heart rate,
body build (weight, BMI, waist-hip ration, skinfold thickness), reduced insulin sensitivity,
diabetes mellitus, dyslipidaemia, and sympathoadrenal activity or manifest cardiovascular
disease among young men during 10-20 years of follow-up.
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