Preface
Page: i-ii (2)
Author: Débora Villaño, Javier Marhuenda and Cristina García Viguera
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010001
List of Contributors
Page: iii-v (3)
Author: Débora Villaño, Javier Marhuenda and Cristina García Viguera
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010002
Diabesity: Obesity And Type II Diabetes As A Real Health Problem In Developed Countries
Page: 1-19 (19)
Author: Karina Ramírez-Alarcón, Ana Maria Labraña, Montserrat Victoriano, Lorena Meléndez-Illanes and Miquel Martorell*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010003
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
is a multifactor disease resulting from the interaction of multiple genetic and
environmental factors, such as sedentary lifestyle and the diet of the individual. On the
other hand, diabetes mellitus is a complex metabolic disease that involves multiple
organ systems, and it is characterized by chronic hyperglycemia due to a defect in the
glycemic regulation as a result of insulin secretion, its actions or both. Combined, these
diseases provide the concept of diabesity, which is defined as the alloy of type II
diabetes and obesity, with or without associated risk factors. Obesity encourages
diabetes, and both diseases are considered two global epidemics of the modern age that
show no signs of decreasing their prevalence and contribute to cardiovascular diseases,
the leading cause of death worldwide. This chapter is aimed to characterize both
physiopathology and impact on health to understand their management and treatment.
Psychologic Factors of Obesity: The Relationship Between Obesity and the Choice of Foods?
Page: 20-33 (14)
Author: Jose María Xandri Graupera and Raquel Xandri Martínez*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010004
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
It is a fact that we eat because we are hungry. If there is an alteration in
balance (stimulus), there is a physiological activity (reaction) in a reverse relationship
to restore the initial homeostasis hunger/satiety. It is widely recognized that gustatory
and olfactory stimuli are transferred from the mother to the fetus through the amniotic
fluid. Many of the learnings about food and nutrition In the first two years of life are
produced here, which will shape my food preferences and dietary habits that are
followed until adulthood, a stage in which some authors have suggested that Obese
people show a tendency to salty flavors, as well as greater reactivity to external factors
that stimulate pleasure, being less sensitive to internal hunger/satiety signals. On the
other hand, the act of eating not only tries to cover a physiological requirement, but
other factors also play an essential role in the acquisition of certain eating patterns. The
psychological, social, and cultural aspects interrelate with each other and are key to
choosing a type of lifestyle. Various authors attribute the confluence of these factors as
causal agents of obesity directly, as well as the relevance of personality on food choice.
Specifically, neuroticism includes characteristics considered negative emotionality,
which influence the eating behaviors of the subjects. In short, sensory stimuli such as
smell and taste contribute to the individual choice of food preference, being the choice
of diet individually, and therefore, of modulation of appetite, and also, it seems clear
that the relationship between personality, emotions and eating pattern, directly affect
the tendency to the current obesity conditions.
Dietary Recommendations And Prevention Of Diabesity- Are The Current Guidelines Enough?
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Author: Masoodi Hedyeh, Barbour-Tuck Erin and Hassan Vatanparast*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010005
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Obesity is a chronic non-communicable condition. Rates of obesity have
risen globally over the last few decades, like the rates of comorbidities of obesity, such
as the clustering of metabolic risk factors, as seen in the condition diabesity. Given the
high prevalence and widespread nature of these chronic conditions, much effort has
been put towards lifestyle interventions, many of which target weight loss or
prevention of weight gain. Reducing weight and body fat remains a highly effective
treatment for mitigating the adverse health effects of obesity and reducing the risk of
related chronic diseases. There is a burgeoning cache of evidence suggesting that
certain macro and micronutrient intake, and diet composition and patterns may be more
or less effective at preventing diabesity. Several dietary interventions, such as the
Mediterranean diet and DASH diet, have proven to reduce obesity and the risk or
severity of obesity-related conditions such as insulin resistance, diabetes, and metabolic
syndrome. While these dietary patterns have similar elements to those of the
recommendations for general healthy eating, minor adjustments could be made to the
current guidelines to optimize the prevention of diabesity. Alternatively, a secondary
set of dietary information could be developed, specifically addressing dietary
requirements for people living with obesity and diabetes. This chapter will discuss
current dietary and nutritional guidelines, highlight similarities and differences between
countries and resources, and identify discrepancies and agreements between current
guidelines in nutritional epidemiology literature.
Adipokines, Possible Biomarkers and Therapeutic Targets in Obesity and Related Pathologies
Page: 58-77 (20)
Author: Fabiola Domínguez* and Ángel Alonso-Castro
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010006
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Obesity has reached epidemic proportions in Western society and is
increasing in the developing world. It is considered one of the main contributors to the
global burden of disability and chronic diseases, including autoimmune, inflammatory
and degenerative diseases. It has notably transformed the obsolete concept that white
adipose tissue (WAT) serves simply as an energy deposit. WAT is now recognized as
an endocrine organ, active and inflammatory, capable of producing a wide variety of
factors known as adipokines. These molecules participate in a wide variety of
physiological and physiopathological processes, regulating food intake, insulin
sensitivity, immunity and inflammation. Obese patients have chronic inflammation due
to the sustained production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in adipose tissue and higher
levels of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6 and C-reactive protein (CRP). Also,
within the subsets of adipose tissue pro-inflammatory macrophages (phenotype M1), it
has been shown that they replace anti-inflammatory macrophages (phenotype M2).
Adipose tissue also produces a large amount of adipokines that act as signaling
molecules, with a broad range of effects on many organ systems, including the lungs.
Therefore, a possible underlying physiopathological mechanism that explains the effect
of obesity on the severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection may be due to anomalies in the
production of adipokines by fatty tissue, contributing to the condition called a
“cytokine storm”, which characterizes the severe form of COVID 19. Also, expression
of the gene (SARS-CoV-2 receptor) is greater in visceral and subcutaneous adipose
tissue than in lung tissue, an important target affected by SARS-CoV-2 infection. This
suggests a mechanism by which excess adiposity may lead to greater severity of
infection in patients with COVID-19. The production of these adipokines and proinflammatory factors of adipose tissue, as well as its importance in the severity of
COVID-19, are analyzed in this chapter, proposing these cytokines as possible markers
of metabolic and immunological diseases.
Mediterranean Diet and Physical Activity for Reducing Meta-Inflammation in Diabesity
Page: 78-96 (19)
Author: Anna Raguzzini, Luca Massaro, Elisabetta Bernardi, Marco Bernardi and Ilaria Peluso*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010007
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
The term diabesity indicates the coexistence of both diabetes and obesity.
Meta-inflammation has been identified among the mechanisms that link obesity, type 2
diabetes (T2D) and diabesity-associated non-communicable diseases. Metabolic
endotoxemia is associated with oxidative stress, whereas Mediterranean diet (Med-diet)
and exercise improve antioxidant defence through a hormetic effect. Therefore, a
lifestyle intervention, including Med-diet and exercise, could be the better approach for
meta-inflammation in diabesity. Although other diets, including low-glycaemic index,
Paleolithic diet, high-protein and high-protein vegetarian diet improve glucose control,
Med-diet also has a positive impact on microbiota and body mass. However, some
concern still exists about the very-low-calorie ketogenic diet and high protein diet in
the long-term. It has also been shown that some plant-foods’ bioactive compounds
inhibit α-glucosidase or α-amylase, as well as the glucose transporters. Both exercise
and some phenolic compounds can increase glucose uptake in skeletal muscle and
reduce insulin resistance. Furthermore, the combination of Med-diet and physical
activity has a positive effect on body composition and could increase the transition
from metabolically unhealthy obesity to metabolically healthy obesity, reducing the
obesity-induced T2D.
New Phytochemical Compounds for Prevention or Reduction of Diabesity
Page: 97-123 (27)
Author: Nastasia Belc*, Tatiana Onisei, Luminița Catană, Monica Catană, Denisa Duță, Gabriel Mustățea, Florica Constantinescu and Claudia Moșoiu
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010008
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Towards the end of the last century, the researchshowed that several
vegetables and medicinal plants have hypoglycemic potential and therefore may exhibit
a positive effect in reducing hyperglycemia in the human body. In vitro and in vivo
studies support the antidiabetic effects of polyphenols extracted from berries, black
currants, raspberries, and strawberries fruits, out of which the most important are the
anthocyanins. Among anthocyanins, the most commonly identified in berries are
cyanidin, delfinidine, malvidin, pelargonidine, peonidine and petunidine.
Within this chapter, we present the importance of phenolic compounds in the diabetic
diet, two plants Helianthus tuberosus and Momordica charantia L. with beneficial
effects in the prevention of type 2 diabetes and their mechanisms of action. Also, the
market of food supplements currently existing in Romania is presented, along with the
products and their form of presentation.
Medicinal And Edible Plants And Their Bioactive Phytochemicals For The Prevention Or Reduction Of Diabesity
Page: 124-146 (23)
Author: Ignacio Migues and Horacio Heinzen*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010009
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
The change in the lifestyle of the world population towards a westernized
style has generated important effects on the metabolism of the population over the
years. These metabolic changes trigger negative effects on human health, one of these
effects is called Diabesity, a combination of symptoms related to diabetes and obesity.
Various ways have been sought to compensate for these negative effects,
pharmacologically and in folk medicine, but the focus points are the generation of new
habits of foods and/or medicinal plants consumption capable of reversing the negative
effects of Diabesity.
In this chapter, a series of medicinal and edible plants with reported activity on both
weight reduction and consumer glycemic levels are described. The origin of the use of
these foods is often based on the ancestral consumption of traditional medicines, which
awakened the interest in the scientific community as starting points for the
development of new functional foods to reduce the impact of Diabesity worldwide.
Microbiota and Diabesity: Relationship and New Perspectives for the Treatment of Obesity
Page: 147-170 (24)
Author: Nuria Salazar, Silvia Saturio, David Ríos-Covián, Alicja M. Nogacka, Sergio Ruíz-Saavedra, María Gómez-Martín, Miguel Gueimonde, Sonia González, Silvia Arboleya and Clara G. de los Reyes-Gavilán*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010010
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
Diabesity refers to the co-occurrence of diabetes and obesity. Obesity and
type 2 diabetes have been associated with unfavorable changes in the composition and
functionality of the intestinal microbiota (dysbiosis), accompanying glucose and lipids
metabolic alterations in the host. Moreover, an interrelationship seems to exist between
the chronic low-grade inflammation occurring in obesity/diabetes, with mood disorders
and early cognitive impairment, frequently associated with these pathologies. Focus on
the intestinal microbiota, as a target for developing/evaluating strategies to fight against
diabesity, constitutes a novel point of view in the management of this condition. Apart
from calorie restricted diets, with proven low efficacy in the long-term, recent studies
are focused on particular dietary components such as fatty acids, polyphenols,
probiotics and prebiotics and their effect on diabesity, mediated by the intestinal
microbiota. Medical treatments include the use of drugs with different mechanisms of
action, most of them showing effects on the gut microbiota. The use of bariatric
surgery is increasing in recent years for the treatment of severe obesity and favorable
changes in microbiota composition and its metabolites have been evidenced linked to
weight loss. Further studies are needed to elucidate whether changes in the microbiota
are a cause or consequence of diabesity
New Technologies Used for The Study of Diabesity and Related Pathologies. The Most Relevant Analytical Techniques and Laboratory Equipment
Page: 171-191 (21)
Author: Libia A. García-Flores*, Daniel Velázquez-Cortés, Jorge Iván Zurutuza-Lorméndez and Yi Huang
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010011
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
To tackle diabesity, medical research hopes that treatments will be
personalized, and to reach this objective, it will be necessary to develop new equipment
and analytic techniques. A proper assessment of diabesity requires blood glucose and
body composition monitoring. Although with the ongoing application of new
technologies, as in the case of the omics techniques, the possibilities for early diagnosis
and personalized treatments of diabesity patients are perhaps even closer than we think.
Today, the evaluation of diabesity is more accurate due to discovering novel
biomarkers and the rapid advances in gene expression profiling, epigenetics,
metabolomics, or microbiome analysis. It is, therefore, essential to keep up with the
new technologies used for the study of diabesity and its related pathologies
Approaching Actual Strategies and New Perspectives for the Prevention and Treatment of Diabesity
Page: 192-210 (19)
Author: Raúl Arcusa, Javier Marhuenda, Cristina García-Viguera and Débora Villaño*
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010012
PDF Price: $15
Abstract
In this Chapter, new strategies aimed to fight against Diabesity, from a
holistic point of view, will be reviewed. A psychological approach to this pathology is
needed, aiming to understand the factors behind the food choices of individuals, which
will help establish actions that modify the taste preferences of the population. A
pharmacological approach is necessary when nutritional or physical activity has failed,
or in the case of concomitant pathologies, and efforts are made to better mimic the
normal physiological fluctuations of insulin to avoid insulin peaks and the consequent
hypoglycemia. The current studies revised training exercise point to the aerobic
exercise, maintained over time, to improve glucose uptake and use by muscle cells.
Subject Index
Page: 211-218 (8)
Author: Débora Villaño, Javier Marhuenda and Cristina García Viguera
DOI: 10.2174/9789815039801122010013
Introduction
Diabesity refers to the linkage of both diabetes and obesity that results in the coexistence of these 2 conditions. Research has identified pathophysiological mechanisms revolving around insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia. Diabesity has important diagnostic and therapeutic implications. This book is a multidisciplinary review of diabesity. It highlights the various pharmacological methods of managing the condition. The book presents 10 chapters contributed by more than 40 experts from around the world. The review starts with an overview of diabesity and progressively describes the relationships of diabesity with the choice of diets and psychological factors. The chapters then cover the role of adipokines as therapeutic biomarkers before presenting research on medicinal and nutritional approaches to treat the condition. Modern approaches to diabesity treatment such as the use of new bioactive phytochemicals, mitigating meta-inflammation and laboratory techniques are also reviewed in the book. Diabesity: A Multidisciplinary Approach is a timely reference for clinicians (in endocrinology and family medicine subspecialties) and students of pharmacology and medicinal chemistry on the intricate relationship between diabetes and obesity.