Affiliation:
1. National Research Mordovia State University, Mordovia, 430005, Russia
Abstract
Background and Aims:
Metabolic syndrome is a multifactorial pathophysiological process
with complicated homeostatic disorders that arise from various systematic metabolic defects.
Various theories underlie the development of metabolic syndrome but are fully not understood.
Methods:
Revising PubMed and Scopus literature data on metabolic syndrome pathogenesis and
management.
Results:
The most accepted hypothesis is that a cluster of risk factors combined to obtain a truly
metabolic syndrome. The pathophysiology of the metabolic syndrome depends on the underlying
development path due to insulin resistance or chronic inflammation and is usually combined with
neurohormonal disturbance. Meanwhile, these defects can be inherited via loss of function of certain
genes that lead to severe obesity, early diabetes, or severe insulin resistance (with or without
lipodystrophy). Chronic inflammation is also a driver of metabolic syndrome. Lifestyle is still the
therapy of choice in managing metabolic syndrome, but unfortunately, during the lockdown, most
people could not reserve a healthy regime; therefore, it can also be referred to as a pandemic with
COVID-19.
Conclusions:
This powerful illustration shows how defects in specific encoded proteins located
predominantly in the brain, pancreatic beta-cell, muscle, or fat give rise to these distinct components
of the metabolic syndrome. Primarily, obesity and its sequela are the initiators of metabolic
syndrome. The presence of metabolic syndrome increases the risk and severity of other pathologies'
emergence, even in non-related metabolic syndrome diseases such as COVID-19. The article
provides new insights into the pathogeneses and management of the metabolic syndrome.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
10 articles.
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