Reaven G M
Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Diabetologia. 1995 Jan;38(1):3-13. doi: 10.1007/BF02369347.
Considerations of the pathophysiology of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) usually focus on the respective roles of the so-called triumvirate-beta cell, muscle and liver [1]. Often overlooked in this context is the role of the adipose tissue, and attention is usually addressed to consideration of studies in which isolated adipocytes were used as a surrogate for muscle in studies of insulin action. The goal of this presentation will be to develop a radically different hypothesis, and marshal evidence that it is the loss of normal regulation of adipose tissue that plays the central role in both the hyperglycaemia and the dyslipidaemia that characterizes patients with NIDDM.
对非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)病理生理学的考量通常聚焦于所谓的三角关系——β细胞、肌肉和肝脏各自所起的作用[1]。在这种背景下,脂肪组织的作用常常被忽视,而且注意力通常集中在那些在胰岛素作用研究中使用分离的脂肪细胞作为肌肉替代物的研究考量上。本报告的目的是提出一个截然不同的假说,并整理证据表明,脂肪组织正常调节功能的丧失在NIDDM患者的高血糖症和血脂异常中起核心作用。