| Literature DB >> 35128848 |
Hack-Lyoung Kim1, Jaehoon Chung2, Kyung-Jin Kim3, Hyun-Jin Kim4, Won-Woo Seo5, Ki-Hyun Jeon6, Iksung Cho7, Jin Joo Park6, Min-Ho Lee8, Jon Suh9, Sang-Yup Lim10, Seonghoon Choi11, Sang-Hyun Kim12.
Abstract
With the recent rapid increase in obesity worldwide, metabolic syndrome (MetS) has gained significant importance. MetS is a cluster of obesity-related cardiovascular risk factors including abdominal obesity, atherogenic dyslipidemia, high blood pressure and impaired glucose tolerance. MetS is highly prevalent and strongly associated with an increased risk of developing diabetes and cardiovascular disease, putting a great burden on human society. Therefore, it is very important to reduce MetS risk, which can improve patients' cardiovascular prognosis. The primary and most effective strategy to control each component of MetS is lifestyle change such as losing body weight, keeping regular exercise, adopting a healthy diet, quitting smoking and alcohol drinking in moderation. Many studies have shown that lifestyle modification has improved all components of MetS, and reduces the incidence of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Here, the Korean Society of CardioMetabolic Syndrome has summarized specific and practical methods of lifestyle modification in the management of MetS in the healthcare field.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohols; Diet; Exercise; Life style; Metabolic syndrome; Smoking
Year: 2022 PMID: 35128848 PMCID: PMC8819565 DOI: 10.4070/kcj.2021.0328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean Circ J ISSN: 1738-5520 Impact factor: 3.243
Diagnostic criteria of metabolic syndrome suggested by Korean Society of CardioMetabolic Syndrome
| Risk factor | Defining level |
|---|---|
| Central obesity | Waist circumference |
| Men ≥90 cm | |
| Women ≥85 cm | |
| Triglyceride | ≥150 mg/dL |
| High-density lipoprotein cholesterol | Men <40 mg/dL |
| Women <50 mg/dL | |
| Blood pressure | ≥130/≥85 mmHg or taking antihypertensive drugs |
| Fasting glucose | ≥100 mg/dL or taking antidiabetic drugs |
Metabolic syndrome is defined as having 3 or more of the 5 five risk factors shown in Table 1.
Figure 1Risk factors for MetS.
MetS = metabolic syndrome.
Summarization of lifestyle modification methods for MetS management
| Lifestyle modification | Specific recommendation |
|---|---|
| Weight control | • Reduce body weight by ~7% to 10% over a period of 6 to 12 months through exercise and diet control. |
| Smoking cessation | • Smoking cessation is strongly recommended. |
| • Exposure to second-hand smoke or e-cigarettes also should be avoided. | |
| Alcohol drinking in moderation | • Limit alcohol consumption to less than 4 drinks per day for men and less than 2 drinks for women. |
| Diet control | • Consume unsaturated fatty acids, and minimize trans-fat intake. |
| • Reduce carbohydrate and salt intake. | |
| • DASH diet is helpful in reducing blood pressure. | |
| Exercise and physical activity | • Regular aerobic exercise with 150–250 minutes of moderate intensity per week is recommended. |
| • Even better when strength training is combined. | |
| • Avoid sedentary lifestyle. | |
| Cognitive behavioral therapy | • Physicians build good doctor-patient relationship to gain trust and motivate patients to follow lifestyle modification well. |
DASH = The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; MetS = metabolic syndrome.