Literature DB >> 16766431

Adipose tissue, insulin resistance and low-grade inflammation: implications for atherogenesis and the cardiovascular harm of estrogen plus progestogen therapy.

L B Tankó1, C Christiansen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To summarize recent findings providing mechanistic insight into why the relative presence of central to peripheral fat mass is a critical determinant of atherogenesis and why postmenopausal women with android obesity represent a risk population with increased susceptibility to the cardiovascular harm of estrogen plus progestin therapy (EPT).
METHODS: Review of own research and related literature in PubMed.
RESULTS: In postmenopausal women, android obesity characterized by excessive upper-body combined with relatively poorly developed lower-body fat mass is frequently associated with insulin resistance, low-grade inflammation, and early atherosclerosis. Underlying mechanisms involve disequilibrium between proinflammatory cytokines (high interleukin-6/C-reactive protein) and the anti-inflammatory adipokine (low adiponectin). Recent findings point out that women with abnormal glucose tolerance, a metabolic alteration closely linked to android adiposity, respond with increases in low-grade inflammation and accelerated atherogenesis to EPT that collectively may promote acute complications. We recently pointed out that a progestin could exert a dose-dependent inhibitory effect on circulating adiponectin. Thus, when EPT is prescribed to women with android obesity, further decreases in the protective adiponectin pool may become critical and act as a promoter of thromboembolic complications via its effects on plaque formation and stability. Since android obesity is associated with the highest levels of free estradiol, women with this phenotype might not be trivial candidates for EPT.
CONCLUSIONS: The herein summarized findings shed light on important interactions between sex steroids and body fat mass, with functional implications for cardiovascular risk. Since previous trials have not optimized the dose of the progestin for its effect on circulating adiponectin, utmost caution should be exercised in the prescription of available estrogen plus progestin therapies to women with android obesity and/or symptoms of the insulin resistance syndrome.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16766431     DOI: 10.1080/13697130600738765

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Climacteric        ISSN: 1369-7137            Impact factor:   3.005


  3 in total

1.  Effects of Estrogens on Adipokines and Glucose Homeostasis in Female Aromatase Knockout Mice.

Authors:  Michelle L Van Sinderen; Gregory R Steinberg; Sebastian B Jørgensen; Jane Honeyman; Jenny D Chow; Kerrie A Herridge; Amy L Winship; Evdokia Dimitriadis; Margaret E E Jones; Evan R Simpson; Wah Chin Boon
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-28       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 2.  Estrogen signaling in metabolic inflammation.

Authors:  Rosário Monteiro; Diana Teixeira; Conceição Calhau
Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2014-10-23       Impact factor: 4.711

3.  Main morbidities recorded in the women's international study of long duration oestrogen after menopause (WISDOM): a randomised controlled trial of hormone replacement therapy in postmenopausal women.

Authors:  Madge R Vickers; Alastair H MacLennan; Beverley Lawton; Deborah Ford; Jeannett Martin; Sarah K Meredith; Bianca L DeStavola; Sally Rose; Anthony Dowell; Helen C Wilkes; Janet H Darbyshire; Tom W Meade
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2007-07-11
  3 in total

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