Metabolic Syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

Define metabolic syndrome

A

Cluster of closely related metabolic disorders which increase the risk of developing T2DM and CVD when combining certain risk factors.

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2
Q

What are the certain risk factors?

A
  • Abdominal adiposity
  • Insulin resistance and IFG
  • Dyslipidemia
  • Hypertension
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3
Q

What is the true underlying metabolic problem in MetS?

A

Insulin resistance and impaired fasting blood glucose

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4
Q

What is required to make a diagnosis of MetS?

A

Requires the presence of central obesity (as determined by WC and ethnic specificity) plus the 2 out of 4 specific factors

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5
Q

In combination with central obesity, two out of which 4 factors must be present to make a diagnosis of MetS?

A
  • High plasma TG
  • Low plasma HDL
  • High BP
  • High fasted blood glucose or previously diagnosed with diabetes
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6
Q

High TG?

A

> /= 1.7 mmol/L

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7
Q

Low HDL men?Women?

A

Men <1.0

Women <1.3 mmol/L

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8
Q

High BP?

A

> /= 130 systolic or >/= 85 mmHg diastolic

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9
Q

High FBG?

A

> /= 5.6 mmol/L

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10
Q

Typically, how does MetS develop?

A

Energy intake in excess of energy needs, and overtime

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11
Q

MetS in the liver?

A
  • More hepatic glucose output due to lack of inhibition from the liver.
  • Increased gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis (glucotoxicity)
  • More glucose and FA uptake (greater dietary load) and more conversion to VLDL, NAFLD, heat disease
  • Less HDL
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12
Q

MetS in pancreas?

A

Pancreatic islet mass is increased as b-cell produce more insulin, followed by exhaustion

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13
Q

What is overt diabetes?

A

Late stage diabetes following b-cell destruction or exhaustion

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14
Q

MetS in adipose tissue?

A
  • Insulin resistance, and deceased glucose uptake

- Increased lipid uptake while lipolysis increases, increase FFA –> Liver and systemic lipotoxicity.

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15
Q

How is lepin affected in MetS?

A

Leptin increases proportionally with adipose tissue, but with resistance

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16
Q

Adiponectin in MetS? What is it associated with

A

Decreases, associated with more insulin sensitivity and main action is in the liver

17
Q

MetS in muscle tissue?

A

Less glucose uptake (contributes to glucotoxicity), more FFA uptake for a source of fuel

18
Q

MetS on gut-peptides?

A

-GLP-1 decreases
-Incretins decrease
Ultimately feedback to the brain and alter satiety signals

19
Q

We know that insulin resistance is the underlying metabolic problem in MetS, but what may explain the development of insulin resistance?

A

Systemic low-grade inflammation

20
Q

What produces systemic low-grade inflammation?

A

Produced from adipose tissue, stimulates pro-inflammatory cytokine which will be secreted into circulation - stimulates liver to produce inflammatory proteins (acute-phase, CRP)

21
Q

(T/F) Insulin resistance is the sole cause of MetS

A

False, although it is central

22
Q

(T/F) MetS can be diagnosed without insulin resistance

A

True , however insulin resistance is present in most cases

23
Q

What is the proposed mechanism of MetS and accumulation of visceral fat?

A
  • Visceral fat will increase FFA in liver.
  • Excess of absorbed nutrients will travel through the hepatic portal vein and drained directly into the hepatic bloodsteam –> more fat stored, more lipolysis
  • May cause NAFLD
24
Q

Proposed mechanism of inflammation and Mets?

A
  • There is inflammation occurring in the adipose tissue (likely due to macrophage activation and infiltration into the liver)
  • Many pro-inflammatory cytokines, located in the adipose tissue are linked to MetS
25
Q

What often acts together to produce MetS and increase cardiometabolic risk?

A

Insulin resistance, inflammation and increased lipolysis

26
Q

What is the ectopic fat storage hypothesis of insulin resistance>

A

Excess body fat and “spill-over” will cause lipid accumulation in hepatocytes, skeletal muscles, visceral adipocytes and heart INSTEAD of subcutaneous tissues

27
Q

What does the deposition of fat in non-subcutaneous tissues lead to?

A

-Insulin resistance, inflammation and altered functions

28
Q

What are the consequences of lipid accumulation in hepatocytes?

A

Hepatosteatosis (fatty liver or NAFLD) –> lead to an inflammation state, where fibrosis and cirrhosis will drive the formation of VLDL

29
Q

What are the consequences of lipid accumulation in muscle?

A

Myosteatosis (fat infiltration in muscle) –> Usually caused by a sedentary lifestyle or losing weight, where this may affect the quality of muscle, can cause insulin resistance

30
Q

How does insulin resistance result in dyslipidemia?

A

More lipolysis (as no longer inhibited by insulin) will result in more FFA brought to liver - and overproduction of VLDL. Increased CETP transfer to HDL and increased HDL uptake by liver - APO-A1 loss also occurs in the kidney

31
Q

Characteristic blood lipid profile of MetS?

A

Low HDL and high TG

32
Q

Does MetS confer a greater risk of CVD than any combination of its components?

A

Some clinicians believe that each components increases the risk additively or synergistically.

33
Q

What other evaluation algorithms should be used alongside MetS/

A

Framingham risk score, CANRISK

34
Q

What should MetS do?

A

Alert clinicians that the presence of 1 or more features should provoke the evaluation of other components.