Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6152009 Medicine 2014 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a common metabolic disorder characterized by chronic hyperglycemia. It is associated with reduced life expectancy owing to a greater risk of heart disease, stroke, peripheral neuropathy, renal disease, blindness and amputation. The best known predictors of increased diabetes risk are elevated fasting plasma glucose, abnormal glucose tolerance test, obesity and evidence of impaired insulin action. However, the mechanisms by which people with impaired fasting glucose and/or abnormal glucose tolerance 'progress' to overt T2DM are not completely understood. Moreover, T2DM is defined in a 'negative' sense (hyperglycemia not accounted for by autoimmune destruction of islet cells or other known causes). This has two potentially negative consequences - first, T2DM may actually encompass a heterogenous group of hyperglycaemic disorders with multiple different mechanisms; second, defining such a complex disease affecting many different metabolic pathways simply in terms of hyperglycaemia may oversimplify the nature of the condition. In this review, we explore some of the mechanisms suggested to underlie T2DM, and attempt to remind readers that hyperglycaemia is only one of its characteristics.
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