Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans

Abstract Background The metabolic syndrome is associated with increased risk for both diabetes and coronary artery disease, which insulin resistance alone does not satisfactorily explain. We propose an additional and complementary underlying mechanism of glucocorticoid resistance. Results Using acanthosis nigricans (AN) and skin vasoconstrictor (SVC) response to topically applied beclomethasone dipropionate as markers of insulin and glucocorticoid resistance, respectively, we compared anthropometric, biochemical, pro-inflammatory markers and the SVC response in subjects with AN in two studies: STUDY 1 was used to compare subjects with AN (Grade 4, n = 32), with those without AN (n = 68) while STUDY 2 compared these responses among a cross-section of diabetic patients (n = 109) with varying grades of AN (grade 0, n = 30; grade 1, n = 24; grade 2, n = 18; grade 3, n = 25; grade 4, n = 12). Findings In both studies there was an inverse relationship between AN Grade 4 and the SVC response, (P andlt; 0.001). In STUDY 1, AN Grade 4 was associated with age, waist circumference, BMI, fasting blood glucose, plasma lipids and hs-CRP (P andlt; 0.05). SVC was an independent predictor of CRP and those with combined AN and a negative SVC response, CRP levels were highest. In Study 2 when the SVC response in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus with varying degrees of AN was studied, it showed that for any degree of AN, the SVC response is more likely to be negative and was independent of gender and ethnicity. Conclusion An absent SVC response represents a new biomarker for the metabolic syndrome and the exaggerated inflammatory response, which characterizes the metabolic syndrome, may be an outcome of deficient glucocorticoid action in vascular tissue.

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Main Authors: Teelucksingh, Surujpal, Jaimungal, Sarada, Pinto Pereira, Lexley, Seemungal, Terence, Nayak, Shivananda
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2012-03-30
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2840-11-31
http://hdl.handle.net/2139/12898
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-128982012-06-08T03:02:44Z Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans Teelucksingh, Surujpal Jaimungal, Sarada Pinto Pereira, Lexley Seemungal, Terence Nayak, Shivananda Abstract Background The metabolic syndrome is associated with increased risk for both diabetes and coronary artery disease, which insulin resistance alone does not satisfactorily explain. We propose an additional and complementary underlying mechanism of glucocorticoid resistance. Results Using acanthosis nigricans (AN) and skin vasoconstrictor (SVC) response to topically applied beclomethasone dipropionate as markers of insulin and glucocorticoid resistance, respectively, we compared anthropometric, biochemical, pro-inflammatory markers and the SVC response in subjects with AN in two studies: STUDY 1 was used to compare subjects with AN (Grade 4, n = 32), with those without AN (n = 68) while STUDY 2 compared these responses among a cross-section of diabetic patients (n = 109) with varying grades of AN (grade 0, n = 30; grade 1, n = 24; grade 2, n = 18; grade 3, n = 25; grade 4, n = 12). Findings In both studies there was an inverse relationship between AN Grade 4 and the SVC response, (P andlt; 0.001). In STUDY 1, AN Grade 4 was associated with age, waist circumference, BMI, fasting blood glucose, plasma lipids and hs-CRP (P andlt; 0.05). SVC was an independent predictor of CRP and those with combined AN and a negative SVC response, CRP levels were highest. In Study 2 when the SVC response in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus with varying degrees of AN was studied, it showed that for any degree of AN, the SVC response is more likely to be negative and was independent of gender and ethnicity. Conclusion An absent SVC response represents a new biomarker for the metabolic syndrome and the exaggerated inflammatory response, which characterizes the metabolic syndrome, may be an outcome of deficient glucocorticoid action in vascular tissue. Peer Reviewed 2012-06-07T11:14:34Z 2012-06-07T11:14:34Z 2012-03-30 2012-06-07T11:14:35Z Journal Article http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2840-11-31 Cardiovascular Diabetology. 2012 Mar 30;11(1):31 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/12898 en Surujpal Teelucksingh et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. text/xml application/pdf
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description Abstract Background The metabolic syndrome is associated with increased risk for both diabetes and coronary artery disease, which insulin resistance alone does not satisfactorily explain. We propose an additional and complementary underlying mechanism of glucocorticoid resistance. Results Using acanthosis nigricans (AN) and skin vasoconstrictor (SVC) response to topically applied beclomethasone dipropionate as markers of insulin and glucocorticoid resistance, respectively, we compared anthropometric, biochemical, pro-inflammatory markers and the SVC response in subjects with AN in two studies: STUDY 1 was used to compare subjects with AN (Grade 4, n = 32), with those without AN (n = 68) while STUDY 2 compared these responses among a cross-section of diabetic patients (n = 109) with varying grades of AN (grade 0, n = 30; grade 1, n = 24; grade 2, n = 18; grade 3, n = 25; grade 4, n = 12). Findings In both studies there was an inverse relationship between AN Grade 4 and the SVC response, (P andlt; 0.001). In STUDY 1, AN Grade 4 was associated with age, waist circumference, BMI, fasting blood glucose, plasma lipids and hs-CRP (P andlt; 0.05). SVC was an independent predictor of CRP and those with combined AN and a negative SVC response, CRP levels were highest. In Study 2 when the SVC response in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus with varying degrees of AN was studied, it showed that for any degree of AN, the SVC response is more likely to be negative and was independent of gender and ethnicity. Conclusion An absent SVC response represents a new biomarker for the metabolic syndrome and the exaggerated inflammatory response, which characterizes the metabolic syndrome, may be an outcome of deficient glucocorticoid action in vascular tissue.
format Journal Article
author Teelucksingh, Surujpal
Jaimungal, Sarada
Pinto Pereira, Lexley
Seemungal, Terence
Nayak, Shivananda
spellingShingle Teelucksingh, Surujpal
Jaimungal, Sarada
Pinto Pereira, Lexley
Seemungal, Terence
Nayak, Shivananda
Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
author_facet Teelucksingh, Surujpal
Jaimungal, Sarada
Pinto Pereira, Lexley
Seemungal, Terence
Nayak, Shivananda
author_sort Teelucksingh, Surujpal
title Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
title_short Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
title_full Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
title_fullStr Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
title_full_unstemmed Does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the Metabolic Syndrome? Studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
title_sort does insulin resistance co-exist with glucocorticoid resistance in the metabolic syndrome? studies comparing skin sensitivity to glucocorticoids in individuals with and without acanthosis nigricans
publishDate 2012-03-30
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2840-11-31
http://hdl.handle.net/2139/12898
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