Årets Förtjänstfulla Diabetologiska
Avhandling 1998 - Abstract
Umeå Universitet Medical dissertation.
New Series No 552 - ISSN 0346-6612
From the Departments of Medicine and Nutritional Research,
Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden
LIFESTYLE AND HEALTH
The role of the insulin resistance syndrome in cardiovascular
disease and diabetes. The effects of lifestyle intervention.
Bernt Lindahl, Department of Medicine, University Hospital, S-90185
Umeå, Sweden.
The association between insulin resistance and a cluster
of cardiovascular risk factors is now well documented. The risk factors
comprised in the insulin resistance syndrome (IRS) are obesity (especially
of the upper body type), dyslipidemia with high triglyceride and low
HDL-cholesterol levels, hypertension, and a low fibrinolytic activity.
Sometimes the syndrome also includes impaired glucose tolerance (IGT).
IGT probably represents an intermediate stage in the development towards
type 2 diabetes. The mechanisms by which cardiovascular disease is related
to insulin resistance are not fully understood. One leading hypothesis
focuses on the role of hemostasis in general and especially the association
with disturbed fibrinolytic activity. Much evidence supports that the
adverse behaviors of modern society, expressed as poor dietary habits,
a sedentary lifestyle and high levels of stress, result in the insulin
resistance syndrome.
By using data from the health surveys of the northern
Sweden MONICA project (n=758) and the Västerbotten Intervention Study
(n=22060), the prevalence of the insulin resistance syndrome and of
impaired glucose tolerance in the population was determined. In a nested
case-control study, the association between high proinsulin levels and
a first acute myocardial infarction was tested. In two lifestyle intervention
trials (one uncontrolled and one randomized) specific behavioral modification
techniques were used to achieve long-term lifestyle changes.
High levels of fasting plasma insulin were associated
with the presence of several cardiovascular risk factors (body mass
index, waist-hip ratio, blood pressure and triglycerides) to low levels
of HDL-cholesterol and disturbed fibrinolysis. The studied risk factors
clustered as described in the insulin resistance syndrome in about 20
% of the total population. Increased levels of proinsulin, the propeptide
of insulin, was significantly associated with subsequent myocardial
infarction. The relative risk of having an acute myocardial infarction
was three times higher among individuals with high level of proinsulin
compared to those with low levels.
The effect of lifestyle intervention on insulin resistance
and obesity was evaluated in two clinical trials with an average weight
reduction of five kilograms and an improved physical fitness measured
by an increased oxygen consumption of 10-30 %. In both trials, when
comparing pre- and postintervention periods, the cardiovascular risk
factor profile was improved with a decrease in fasting insulin. In the
randomized study, fibrinolysis improved.
The conclusion is that the insulin resistance syndrome
which affects about 20 % of the population in a modern society,can be
treated by a comprehensive behavioral intervention program which decreases
long-term cardiovascular risk.
Key words:
insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance
syndrome, impaired glucose tolerance, lifestyle, behavior, epidemiology.
Original papers
This thesis is based on the following papers:
I. Lindahl B, Asplund K and Hallmans G. High serum insulin, insulin
resistance and their associations with cardiovascular risk factors.
The Northern Sweden MONICA population study. J Intern Med 1993; 234:
263-270.
II. Lindahl B, Asplund K, Eliasson M and Evrin P-E. Insulin resistance
syndrome and fibrinolytic activity: The Northern Sweden MONICA study.
Int J Epidemiol 1996; 25: 291-299.
III. Lindahl B, Weinehall L, Asplund K and Hallmans G. Screening
for impaired glucose tolerance. Results from a population-based study
of glucose tolerance in 21,057 individuals (accepted Diabetes Care)
IV. Lindahl B, Dinesen B, Eliasson M, Røder M, Jansson J-H, Huhtasaari
F, and Hallmans G. High proinsulin concentration precedes acute myocardial
infarction in a non-diabetic population. Metabolism 1999; 48: 1197-1202.
V. Lindahl B, Nilsson TK, Asplund K and Hallmans G. Intense non-
pharmacological intervention in subjects with multiple cardiovascular
risk factors: Decreased fasting insulin levels but only minor effect
on plasma plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) activity. Metabolism
1998; 47: 384-390.
VI. Lindahl B, Nilsson TK, Jansson J-H, Asplund K and Hallmans
G. Improved fibrinolysis by intense lifestyle intervention. A randomized
trial in subjects with impaired glucose tolerance. J Intern Med 1999;
246: 105-112.