Our results demonstrate a 28.3% prevalence of PCOS in overweight and obese women from Spain, which is markedly increased compared with the 5.5% prevalence of PCOS in lean women of our country. Therefore, PCOS must be routinely ruled out in overweight and obese premenopausal women seeking advice for weight loss.
Physiologic combinations of L-thyroxine plus liothyronine do not offer any objective advantage over l-thyroxine alone, yet patients prefer combination treatment.
Obesity-associated gonadal dysfunction is among the most prevalent comorbidities in patients with severe obesity and should be ruled out routinely during their initial diagnostic workup. Considering the excellent response regarding both PCOS and MOSH, bariatric surgery should be offered to severely obese patients presenting with obesity-associated gonadal dysfunction.
Low-grade chronic inflammation is involved in the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome and atherosclerosis, and serum levels of inflammatory cytokines are useful cardiovascular risk markers. We have studied serum IL-18 concentrations in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), focusing on its relationship with obesity and indexes of insulin resistance. Sixty consecutive women with PCOS and 34 healthy women were recruited. Serum levels of IL-18 and lipid and hormone profiles were measured. The insulin sensitivity index was calculated from glucose and insulin concentrations during an oral glucose tolerance test. Data were submitted to a multivariate general linear model introducing age as a covariate. Serum IL-18 levels were increased in PCOS patients compared with controls (P = 0.031) and in obese women compared with lean women (P = 0.018). No interaction between PCOS and obesity was found, suggesting that the influence of PCOS on serum IL-18 concentrations studied here was not different in lean women compared with obese women and that the influence of obesity on serum IL-18 concentrations was the same in the PCOS and control groups. Serum IL-18 levels correlated, after logarithmic transformation, with body mass index (r = 0.38; P < 0.0002), waist-to-hip ratio (r = 0.33; P < 0.001), and total testosterone levels (r = 0.24; P < 0.02), and inversely with the insulin sensitivity index (r = -0.23; P < 0.03). In conclusion, PCOS and obesity induce an increase in serum IL-18 levels, which are also associated with several indexes of global and visceral adiposity and with insulin resistance.
The differences in the gene expression profiles in visceral adipose tissue of PCOS patients compared with nonhyperandrogenic women involve multiple genes related to several biological pathways, suggesting that the involvement of abdominal obesity in the pathogenesis of PCOS is more ample than previously thought and is not restricted to the induction of insulin resistance.
PCOS patients present with hypoadiponectinaemia, in relation with abdominal adiposity and hyperandrogenism. Our present results suggest that hyperandrogenism and abdominal obesity, by reducing the serum levels of the insulin sensitizer adipokine adiponectin, might contribute to the insulin resistance of PCOS.
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