The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
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J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. · Aug 2000
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialEffect of long-term treatment with metformin added to hypocaloric diet on body composition, fat distribution, and androgen and insulin levels in abdominally obese women with and without the polycystic ovary syndrome.
Abdominal obesity and hyperinsulinemia play a key role in the development of the polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Dietary-induced weight loss and the administration of insulin-lowering drugs, such as metformin, are usually followed by improved hyperandrogenism and related clinical abnormalities. This study was carried out to evaluate the effects of combined hypocaloric diet and metformin on body weight, fat distribution, the glucose-insulin system, and hormones in a group of 20 obese PCOS women [body mass index (BMI) > 28 kg/m2] with the abdominal phenotype (waist to hip ratio >0.80), and an appropriate control group of 20 obese women who were comparable for age and pattern of body fat distribution but without PCOS. ⋯ Neither metformin or placebo significantly modified the levels of LH, FSH, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, and progesterone in any group, whereas testosterone concentrations decreased only in PCOS women treated with metformin. SHBG concentrations remained unchanged in all PCOS women; whereas in the control group, they significantly increased after both metformin and placebo. Leptin levels decreased only during metformin treatment in both PCOS and control groups. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. · Aug 2000
Prevalence of primary aldosteronism among Asian hypertensive patients in Singapore.
Recent studies using the ratio of plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC) to PRA as the screening test for primary aldosteronism in hypertensive populations suggested that the prevalence may be as high as 5-15%, with well over half of the subjects having normal serum potassium concentrations. Despite an increasing clinical awareness of this entity, many clinicians are reluctant to consider routine screening for primary aldosteronism in essential hypertensive patients because there are few community-based prevalence studies of primary aldosteronism in different populations. Furthermore, genetic and environmental differences may affect the prevalence and presentation of primary aldosteronism in distinct populations. ⋯ Subtype evaluation with adrenal CT scan and adrenal vein sampling indicated that half of the patients with primary aldosteronism may have had potentially curable unilateral adrenal adenoma. Our data suggest that primary aldosteronism occurs in at least 5% of the adult Asian hypertensive population, and approximately half of these individuals may have potentially curable, unilateral, aldosterone-producing adrenal adenoma. Our findings also confirm the poor predictive value of hypokalemia in both the diagnosis and the exclusion of primary aldosteronism.