| Literature DB >> 30788044 |
María M Adeva-Andany1, Eva Ameneiros-Rodríguez2, Carlos Fernández-Fernández2, Alberto Domínguez-Montero2, Raquel Funcasta-Calderón2.
Abstract
Insulin resistance is associated with subclinical vascular disease that is not justified by conventional cardiovascular risk factors, such as smoking or hypercholesterolemia. Vascular injury associated to insulin resistance involves functional and structural damage to the arterial wall that includes impaired vasodilation in response to chemical mediators, reduced distensibility of the arterial wall (arterial stiffness), vascular calcification, and increased thickness of the arterial wall. Vascular dysfunction associated to insulin resistance is present in asymptomatic subjects and predisposes to cardiovascular diseases, such as heart failure, ischemic heart disease, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease. Structural and functional vascular disease associated to insulin resistance is highly predictive of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Its pathogenic mechanisms remain undefined. Prospective studies have demonstrated that animal protein consumption increases the risk of developing cardiovascular disease and predisposes to type 2 diabetes (T2D) whereas vegetable protein intake has the opposite effect. Vascular disease linked to insulin resistance begins to occur early in life. Children and adolescents with insulin resistance show an injured arterial system compared with youth free of insulin resistance, suggesting that insulin resistance plays a crucial role in the development of initial vascular damage. Prevention of the vascular dysfunction related to insulin resistance should begin early in life. Before the clinical onset of T2D, asymptomatic subjects endure a long period of time characterized by insulin resistance. Latent vascular dysfunction begins to develop during this phase, so that patients with T2D are at increased cardiovascular risk long before the diagnosis of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Animal protein; Arterial elasticity; Arterial stiffness; Cardiovascular risk; Diabetes; Insulin resistance; Intima-media thickness; Vascular calcification; Vegetable protein
Year: 2019 PMID: 30788044 PMCID: PMC6379732 DOI: 10.4239/wjd.v10.i2.63
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Diabetes ISSN: 1948-9358
Figure 1A simplified proposed mechanism underlying vascular disease associated with insulin resistance.
Figure 2Pathophysiological changes associated with insulin resistance-mediated vascular disease.
Figure 3Cardiovascular disease associated to arterial stiffness.
Studies that find an independent association between insulin resistance and subclinical arterial stiffness unexplained by classic cardiovascular risk factors
| Salomaa et al[ | African American and Caucasian | IGT | Arterial compliance, Young’s elastic modulus |
| Henry et al[ | General population | IGT | Arterial compliance |
| Shin et al[ | Healthy Chinese subjects | IGT | Brachial-ankle PWV |
| Liye et al[ | IGT versus normal glucose tolerance | IGT, serum adiponectin levels | Brachial artery PWV |
| Giltay et al[ | Healthy subjects | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | Carotid-femoral PWV |
| Vyssoulis et al[ | Patients with hypertension | IGT | Carotid-femoral PWV |
| Sengstock et al[ | Patients with hypertension | Frequently sampled IV tolerance test | Aortic PWV, pulse pressure |
| Kasayama et al[ | Healthy adults | HOMA | Brachial-ankle PWV |
| Park et al[ | Postmenopausal women | HOMA-IR | Aortic and peripheral PWV |
| Maple-Brown et al[ | Indigenous Australians | HOMA-IR | Augmentation index |
| Scuteri et al[ | Family history of diabetes | HOMA-IR | Carotid-femoral PWV |
| Sakuragi et al[ | Prepubescent children | HOMA-IR | Carotid-femoral PWV |
| Whincup et al[ | British children | HOMA-IR | Brachial artery distensibility |
| Gungor et al[ | Children and adolescents | HOMA-IR | Aortic PWV |
| Iannuzzi et al[ | Children and adolescents | HOMA-IR | Aortic PWV |
| Tomsa et al[ | Adolescents | Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp | Augmentation index |
IGT: Impaired glucose tolerance; PWV: Pulse-wave velocity; HOMA: Homeostasis model assessment; HOMA-IR: Homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance.
Studies that find an independent association between the clinical expression of insulin resistance and subclinical arterial stiffness unexplained by classic cardiovascular risk factors
| Mackey et al[ | Elderly | Metabolic syndrome | Aortic pulse-wave velocity |
| Salomaa et al[ | General population | Metabolic syndrome | Arterial compliance, Young’s elastic modulus |
| Hyperinsulinemia | |||
| Scuteri et al[ | Healthy subjects | Metabolic syndrome | Carotid artery stiffness |
| Van-Popele et al[ | Women | Metabolic syndrome | Carotid artery stiffness |
| Obesity | |||
| Dyslipemia | |||
| Tomiyama et al[ | Healthy subjects | Metabolic syndrome | Brachial-ankle pulse-wave velocity |
| Systolic hypertension | |||
| Maple-Brown et al[ | Indigenous versus European Australians | Metabolic syndrome | Augmentation index, pulse-wave velocity |
| Whincup et al[ | British children | Metabolic syndrome | Brachial artery distensibility |
| Obesity | |||
| Hyperinsulinemia | |||
| Xi et al[ | Chinese children | Metabolic syndrome | Brachial artery distensibility |
| Ianuzzi et al[ | Obese children | Metabolic syndrome | Carotid artery stiffness |
| Hopkins et al[ | Relatives of patients with type 2 diabetes | Metabolic syndrome | Aortic pulse-wave velocity |
| Juonala et al[ | Children | Metabolic syndrome | Carotid artery stiffness |
| Hyperinsulinemia | |||
| Zebekakis et al[ | General population | Obesity | Carotid, femoral, and brachial arteries stiffness |
| Maple-Brown et al[ | Indigenous versus European Australians | Obesity | Augmentation index |
| Greenfield et al[ | Female twins | Abdominal obesity | Augmentation index |
| Sakuragi et al[ | Children | Obesity | Brachial artery distensibility |
| Dyslipemia | |||
| Hyperinsulinemia | |||
| Gungor et al[ | Adolescents and young adults | Obesity | Aortic pulse-wave velocity |
| Jourdan et al[ | Dyslipemia | ||
| Urbina et al[ | |||
| Kappus et al[ | |||
| Wildman et al[ | Young and older adults | Obesity | Aortic pulse-wave velocity |
| Iannuzzi et al[ | Systolic hypertension | Aortic pulse-wave velocity | |
| Kasayama et al[ | Dyslipemia | ||
| Ceceija et al[ | Hyperinsulinemia | ||
| Urbina et al[ | Triglyceride/HDL-c | Aortic pulse-wave velocity |
Studies that find an independent association between insulin resistance and subclinical vascular calcification or increased intima-media thickness of the arterial wall unexplained by traditional cardiovascular risk factors
| Laakso et al[ | Healthy subjects | Euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp | Increased carotid IMT |
| Agewall et al[ | Healthy men | Euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp | Increased carotid wall thickness |
| Howard et al[ | Healthy Caucasians | Frequently sampled IV glucose tolerance test | Increased carotid IMT |
| Bertoni et al[ | Multiethnic healthy subjects | HOMA-IR | Increased carotid IMT, elevated coronary calcium |
| Rajala et al[ | Healthy subjects | Insulin sensitivity check index | Increased carotid IMT |
| Iannuzzi et al[ | Obese children | HOMA-IR | Increased carotid IMT |
| Ryder et al[ | Healthy children | Euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp | Increased carotid IMT |
| Arad et al[ | Healthy subjects | HOMA-IR | Elevated coronary calcium score |
| Ong et al[ | Healthy subjects | HOMA-IR | Elevated coronary calcium score |
| Meigs et al[ | Healthy subjects | Glucose tolerance tests | Coronary artery calcification |
| Dabelea et al[ | Healthy and type 1 diabetes children | Glucose disposal rate | Coronary artery calcification |
| Reilly et al[ | Family history of cardiovascular disease | HOMA-IR | Coronary artery calcification |
| Qasim et al[ | Family history of cardiovascular disease | HOMA-IR | Coronary artery calcification |
| Young et al[ | Patients with coronary artery disease | Glucose tolerance test | Coronary artery calcification |
| Shinozaki et al[ | Family history of cardiovascular disease | Glucose tolerance test | Coronary artery calcification |
HOMA-IR: Homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance; IMT: Intima-media thickness.