163 results match your criteria: "International Diabetes Institute[Affiliation]"
Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord
January 2001
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Objective: To use factor analysis to examine the putative role of leptin in the Metabolic Syndrome, and to define better the associations among observed variables and the identified factors.
Design: Factor analysis of cross-sectional data from a 1987 survey.
Subjects: Non-diabetic residents of Mauritius who participated in population-based surveys in 1987 and 1992 (1414 men and 1654 women).
Diabetes Care
September 2000
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Objective: To assess the independent and joint effects of the components of the metabolic syndrome, including leptin, which is a recently proposed addition to this syndrome, in predicting the cumulative incidence of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and diabetes among individuals with normal glucose tolerance.
Research Design And Methods: This prospective study involved 2,605 residents of Mauritius with normal glucose tolerance who were followed for 5 years for IGT or diabetes onset in relation to total and regional adiposity (BMI, waist-to-hip ratio [WHR]), fasting and 2-h 75-g oral glucose load glucose and insulin, total and HDL cholesterol, blood pressure, serum uric acid, triglyceride, and leptin levels.
Results: A multivariate logistic regression model adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity, and diabetes family history showed a significantly higher linear increase in risk of IGT and diabetes in association with the following variables only: fasting glucose (odds ratio 1.
BMJ
August 2000
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield 3162, Australia.
Objectives: To describe changes in the prevalence of cigarette smoking in the middle income country of Mauritius from 1987 to 1998, and to relate these changes to legislative and health promotion efforts over the same period.
Design: Questionnaire survey.
Setting: Mauritius, an island in the Indian Ocean with a population of about 1.
Diabetes Care
April 2000
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Two major reports have recently revised the classification of and diagnostic criteria for diabetes. Classification was previously based on the need for insulin (insulin-dependent or non-insulin-dependent), but this has become increasingly confusing. Now, the type of diabetes is determined by the etiological process rather than the treatment modality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetes Care
January 2000
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Objective: Impaired fasting glucose (IFG) has been recently introduced as a stage of abnormal carbohydrate metabolism, but the evidence on which its glucose limits (fasting plasma glucose [FPG] 6.1-6.9 mmol/l) are based is not strong.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
November 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Obesity and Type 2 diabetes are now major public health issues in developed nations and have reached epidemic proportions in many developing nations, as well as disadvantaged groups in developed countries, e.g., Mexican-Americans, African-Americans, and Australian Aborigines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Intern Med
March 2000
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
There are at present approximately 110 million people with diabetes in the world but this number will reach over 220 million by the year 2010, the majority of them with type 2 diabetes. Thus there is an urgent need for strategies to prevent the emerging global epidemic of type 2 diabetes to be implemented. Tackling diabetes must be part of an integrated program that addresses lifestyle related disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOccup Med (Lond)
September 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield, South Vic., Australia.
Radiofrequency (RF) electrocutions are uncommon. A case of electrocution at 196 MHz is presented partly because there are no previous reports with frequencies as high as this, and partly to assist in safety standard setting. A 53-year-old technician received two brief exposures to both hands of 2A current at 196 MHz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrugs
December 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
It has been increasingly recognised in recent years that type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes is part of a cluster of cardiovascular risk factors known as the metabolic syndrome, but also endorsed with such names as the deadly quartet, syndrome X and the insulin resistance syndrome. Atherosclerosis is the most common complication of type 2 diabetes among Europeans, and coronary artery, cerebrovascular and peripheral vascular disease are 2 to 5 times more common in people with this condition than in those without diabetes. These observations indicate that the treatment of type 2 diabetes requires agents that do more than simply lower blood glucose levels, and a therapy with both antihyperglycaemic effects and beneficial effects on dyslipidaemia, hypertension, obesity, hyperinsulinaemia and insulin resistance is likely to be most useful.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetologia
September 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Aims/hypothesis: The aim of this study was to examine the possible link between isolated post-challenge hyperglycaemia (2-h post-challenge plasma glucose >/= 11.1 mmol/l, and fasting plasma glucose < 7.0 mmol/l) and mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetologia
May 1999
International Diabetes Institute and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Diabetes Care
May 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Objective: For epidemiological purposes, it has now been recommended that a fasting plasma glucose value of 7.0 mmol/l can be used to diagnose diabetes, instead of a 2-h value of 11.1 mmol/l.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed J Aust
April 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, VIC.
Objective: To evaluate patterns of self-management, healthcare utilisation and screening for major complications among Tasmanians with insulin-treated diabetes.
Main Outcome Measures: Frequency of self-monitoring of blood glucose, health care utilisation and screening for diabetic complications.
Design And Setting: A questionnaire survey of 1517 people listed on the Tasmanian Diabetes Register in 1995-1997.
Diabetes Care
March 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Objective: To determine if impaired fasting glucose (IFG; fasting plasma glucose level 6.1-6.9 mmol/l) can predict future type 2 diabetes as accurately as does impaired glucose tolerance (IGT; 2-h plasma glucose level 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetes Care
March 1999
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Two major types of diabetes have been recognized since the late 1930s. However, in recent times there have been major changes in classification and understanding of these types, including improved knowledge of maturity-onset diabetes in the young, with the identification of mutations relating to impaired insulin secretion and the recognition of slow-onset type 1 diabetes in adults now designated as latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA). A major problem area in diabetes classification concerns cases of slowly progressive forms of type 1 and type 2 diabetes, particularly in adults aged 25-50 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetes Res Clin Pract
November 1998
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
The study of diabetic neuropathy has been primarily in Europids, despite the high prevalence of diabetes in other populations. We set out to ascertain the prevalence of diabetic neuropathy and its risk factors in the island nation of Mauritius. Population surveys were carried out in 1987 and 1992 in Mauritius to establish the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroreport
August 1998
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield, Vic, Australia.
The acute action of insulin on neurogenic flare was investigated using iontophoresis. Twenty-five patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and 25 age- and gender-matched controls were studied. Axon reflex vasodilatation was evoked by transdermal iontophoresis of acetylcholine (ACh) before and after skin treatment by the iontophoresis of insulin and measured using laser Doppler velocimetry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To investigate whether relative baseline leptin levels predict long-term changes in adiposity and/or its distribution.
Research Methods And Procedures: In a longitudinal study of 2888 nondiabetic Mauritians aged 25 years to 74 years who participated in population-based surveys in 1987 and 1992, changes in body mass index (BMI), waist/hip ratio (WHR), and waist circumference were compared between "hyperleptinemic," "normoleptinemic," and "hypoleptinemic" groups. "Relative leptin levels" were calculated as standardized residuals from the regression of log10 leptin on baseline BMI to provide a leptin measure independent of BMI.
Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord
February 1998
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Objective: It has been shown previously in smaller studies that fasting serum leptin and insulin concentrations are highly correlated, and insulin sensitive men have lower leptin levels than insulin resistant men matched for fat mass. We have examined the association between insulin resistance (assessed by fasting insulin) and leptin after controlling for overall and central adiposity in a population-based cohort.
Design: Leptin levels were compared across insulin resistance quartiles within three categories of obesity (tertiles of body mass index (BMI)).
Horm Metab Res
July 1997
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield South, Australia.
Int J Epidemiol
April 1997
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield, Victoria, Australia.
Background: Obesity and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) have increased in prevalence in Polynesian Western Samoans over the 13-year period 1978-1991, as the population undergoes an 'epidemiological transition'.
Methods: We therefore investigated changes in the frequency of dyslipidaemia over the same period in adults aged 25-74 years, and examined factors associated with dyslipidaemia in cross-sectional and longitudinal data. Subjects were drawn from three geographically defined locations representing different degrees of modernization.
J Diabetes Complications
July 1997
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield, Victoria, Australia.
Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) constitutes about 85% of all cases of diabetes in developed countries and it has now reached epidemic proportions in many developing nations, as well as disadvantaged groups in developed countries, e.g., Mexican- and African-Americans and Australian Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabet Med
March 1997
International Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Leptin's association with fasting insulin raises the possibility that hyperleptinaemia is an additional component of the Metabolic Syndrome, or perhaps underlies the syndrome. This population-based study of Western Samoans examined the relationship of serum leptin with insulin sensitivity assessed by Homeostatic Model Assessment (HOMA) and components of the Metabolic Syndrome. Two hundred and forty subjects (114 men, 126 women), aged 28-74 years, were drawn from a study conducted in 1991.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabet Med
February 1998
International Diabetes Institute, Caulfield South, Australia.
Prevention and control programmes are needed to stem the rising epidemic of diabetes and its complications. However, these will not occur unless governments and public health planners are aware of the potential problem. Using published prevalence rates for NIDDM in different populations, and the current and projected age distributions, worldwide prevalence of NIDDM was estimated for 1995 and 1997, and well as projections for 2000 and 2010.
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