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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Keywords Dietary fibre ; thiamine ; thiamine deficiency ; glucose tolerance test ; sex ; insulin resistance ; human
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Epidemiologic studies have shown an association between the intake of dietary fibres and 2-h glucose values. Food rich in dietary fibres is often also rich in thiamine. Animal studies have shown that thiamine deficiency can induce glucose intolerance. Our aim was to investigate the association between fibre consumption and thiamine intake on the one hand and glucose tolerance on the other hand. We used data from the Hoorn Study, a study of glucose tolerance among 1008 men and 1188 women, aged 50–75 years, without diabetes. In linear regression analyses, fibre intake was inversely associated with fasting glucose. There was also an inverse association between fibre intake and 2-h glucose but it disappeared for the greater part after adjustment for fasting glucose. Fibre intake appeared to be strongly correlated with thiamine intake, and this correlation explained the remaining part of the association between fibre intake and 2-h glucose. Thiamine intake appeared to have a strong and relevant association with 2-h glucose, which was independent of fibre intake and fasting glucose. This association was borderline after adjustment for potential confounders. In women, but not in men, the effect of thiamine intake on 2-h glucose seemed to be modified by fibre intake, independent of potential confounders. In conclusion, part of the association between fibre intake and glucose tolerance is possibly attributable to concomitant thiamine intake. [Diabetologia (1998) 41: 1168–1175]
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Keywords Aging ; baroreflex ; Type II diabetes mellitus ; cardiovascular disease ; glucose intolerance ; heart-rate variability ; hypertension ; lifestyle ; autonomic nervous system ; obesity.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Aims/hypothesis. Currently, three categories of measures are used to assess cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction: measures of the Ewing-test, measures of heart-rate variability, and measures of baroreflex sensitivity. We studied the determinants of these measures obtained from cardiovascular autonomic function tests in the Hoorn Study. Methods. The study group (n = 631) consisted of a glucose-tolerance-stratified sample from a 50- to 75-year-old group of people. Cardiac cycle duration (RR interval) and continuous finger arterial pressure were measured under three conditions: during (a) spontaneous breathing, (b) six deep breaths over one minute, and (c) an active change in position from lying to standing. From these readings, ten measures of autonomic function were assessed (three Ewing, six heart-rate variability and one baroreflex sensitivity). As possible determinants we considered age, sex, glucose tolerance, cardiovascular disease, use of anti-hypertensive drugs, anthropometric factors, metabolic factors and lifestyle factors. Results. Multivariate analysis showed that eight of ten cardiovascular autonomic function measures were most strongly associated with glucose tolerance. Furthermore, measures were moderately associated with age, sex, waist-to-hip ratio, use of anti-hypertensive drugs, and insulin. The measures were weakly associated with coronary artery disease but not with lipids. The strongest determinants seemed to differ between subjects with and without diabetes: in the non-diabetic subjects the most strongly associated were age and use of anti-hypertensive drugs and in subjects with diabetes, insulin. No consistent differences in association between the three categories of measures were observed. Conclusion/interpretation. The strongest determinants of autonomic function were age, presence of diabetes and use of anti-hypertensive drugs. [Diabetologia (2000) 43: 561–570]
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Impaired glucose tolerance ; non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus ; glucose tolerance test ; proinsulin ; specific insulin ; beta-cell function ; insulin resistance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The aims of the present study were to observe the natural history of impaired glucose tolerance and to identify predictors for development of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). A survey of glucose tolerance was conducted in subjects aged 50–74 years, randomly selected from the registry of the middle-sized town of Hoorn in the Netherlands. Based on the mean values of two oral glucose tolerance tests subjects were classified in categories of glucose tolerance according to the World Health Organization criteria. All subjects with impaired glucose tolerance (n=224) were invited to participate in the present study, in which 70% (n=158) were subsequently enrolled. During follow-up subjects underwent a repeated paired oral glucose tolerance test. The mean follow-up time was 24 months (range 12–36 months). The cumulative incidence of NIDDM was 28.5% (95% confidence interval 15–42%). Age, sex, and anthropometric and metabolic characteristics at baseline were analysed simultaneously as potential predictors of conversion to NIDDM using multiple logistic regression. The initial 2-h post-load plasma glucose levels and the fasting proinsulin levels were significantly (p〈0.05) related to the incidence of NIDDM. Anthropometric characteristics, the 2-h post-load specific insulin levels and the fasting proinsulin/fasting insulin ratio were not related to the incidence of NIDDM. These results suggest that beta-cell dysfunction rather than insulin resistance plays the most important role in the future development of diabetes in a high-risk Caucasian population.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Intra-individual variation ; glucose ; specific insulin ; proinsulin ; oral glucose tolerance test ; reproducibility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We studied the intra-individual variation in plasma glucose, specific serum insulin and serum pro-insulin concentrations, measured by two 75-g oral glucose tolerance tests in an age, sex, and glucose tolerance stratified random sample from a 50–74-year-old Caucasian population without a history of diabetes mellitus. The intra-individual variation was assessed by the standard deviation of the test-retest differences (SDdif). For subjects with normal (n=246), impaired glucose tolerance (n=198), and newly detected diabetes (n=80) classified at the first test, the following (SDdif/median level of individual average scores) were found: fasting glucose: 0.4/5.4, 0.5/5.9 and 0.7/7.2 mmol/l; 2-h glucose: 1.3/5.6, 1.8/8.5 and 2.3/12.8 mmol/l; fasting insulin: 23/76, 32/89 and 30/ 116 pmol/l; 2-h insulin: 190/303, 278/553 and 304/626 pmol/l; fasting proinsulin: 4/8, 6/13 and 9/18 pmol/l; 2-h proinsulin: 19/49, 23/84 and 33/90 pmol/l, respectively. In both glucose, proinsulin and insulin concentrations the total intra-individual variation was predominantly determined by biological variation, whereas analytical variation made only a minor contribution. The SDdif can easily be interpreted, as 95% of the random test-retest differences will be less than 2 · SDdif, or in terms of percentage, less than (2 · SDdif/median level of individual average scores) · 100. Therefore, for subjects with normal glucose tolerance, 95% of the random test-retest differences will be less than 15% (fasting glucose), 46% (2-h glucose), 61% (fasting insulin), 125% (2-h insulin), 100% (fasting proinsulin) and 78% (2-h proinsulin) of the median value of the individual average scores. No substantial independent association of either age, gender or obesity with the intra-individual variation in glucose, proinsulin, or insulin concentrations was found.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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