Published 2016
| Version v1
Publication
Serum Leptin and Adiponectin Concentration in Type 2 Diabetes Patients in the Short and Long Term Following Biliopancreatic Diversion.
Contributors
Description
A deranged adipokine system is implicated in obesity and in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and the lack of remission of T2DM after bariatric surgery could be also accounted for by the postoperative persistence of this condition.
METHODS:
Thirty T2DM patients undergoing biliopancreatic diversion (BPD) with a wide range of baseline body mass index (BMI) were evaluated prior to and at 1 and 5 years following BPD. Besides the usual clinical evaluations, acute insulin response (AIR) to intravenous glucose load as a parameter of insulin secretion and the serum leptin and adiponectin concentration were measured throughout the follow-up period in all patients.
RESULTS:
A long-term T2DM remission was observed in 21 patients (70 %). Serum leptin level reduced at the first year and remained substantially unchanged at a long term in both the remitter and non-remitter patients, while following the operation, a progressive significant increase of serum adiponectin level was observed only in remitter patients (from 9.2 to 12.3 μg/mL at 1 year and to 15.18 μg/mL at 5 years in the remitters and from 8.8 to 8.75 μg/mL at 1 year and to 11.8 μg/mL at 5 years in the non-remitters). Serum leptin mean values were positively associated with the BMI ones both prior to and following BPD (p < 0.005), while serum adiponectin values were positively related (p < 0.04) to the postoperative AIR data.
CONCLUSIONS:
The improvement of the pattern of cytokine production, as evidenced by postoperative rise in serum adiponectin concentration, might play a role in T2DM remission after bariatric surgery.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/838222
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/838222
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE