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Metabolic Syndrome and Parkinson

Metabolic Syndrome (MetS) is a group of conditions that occur together that result in insulin resistance and increase the risk of heart disease, stroke and diabetes. According to a new study, MetS may be associated with Parkinson’s disease (PD).

While MetS can be prevented, controlled, treated and even reversed. It is not always easy to treat, since it is a cluster of five interrelated risk factors:

  1. high blood pressure
  2. high blood sugar (fasting glucose)
  3. high levels of triglycerides (a type of fat in your blood)
  4. low levels of HDL (the “good” cholesterol)
  5. a large waist circumference (over 40 inches for men and over 35 inches for women)

MetS is associated with developing a number of diseases, including heart disease, stroke, and type-2 diabetes. It is also associated with an increased all-cause mortality risk (meaning, dying from any cause). Additionally, there’s mounting evidence suggesting that oxidative stress is a major component of MetS-associated diseases – and Parkinson’s disease also has been shown to have a strong oxidative stress component. Thus, there may be shared disease pathways that could be targeted for future treatments and interventions.

A recently published study in the journal, PLOS Medicine, titled, “Metabolic syndrome and risk of Parkinson disease: A nationwide cohort study” (Nam et al., 2018), approached this important investigation in a big way. Spanning a 5-year period (2009 through 2012), the research scientists analyzed the health check-up data of nearly the entire South Korean population who met the study criteria, e.g., study individuals had to be 40 years of age or older and have no prior diagnosis of PD.

Ultimately, 8,215,180 men and 8,948,380 women (for a total of 17,163,560 people) were part of the study analyses. Demographics and lifestyle data were gathered through self-reporting questionnaires, including comorbidities (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, ischemic heart disease and stroke), as well as smoking status, alcohol consumption, income, age, gender, and of course, their specific test results for all 5 MetS risk factors. Of note, study participants were diagnosed as having MetS if they had 3 or more of the 5 risk factors.

Results

What Does This Mean?

This study suggests that not only does having MetS risk factors increase your risk for PD, but also, the more risk factors you have, the more likely you are to develop PD. That being said, the jury is still out as to what actually causes MetS in the first place.

Many of the risk factors of metabolic syndrome are associated with insulin resistance (IR). More and more studies suggest that IR negatively impacts dopamine functioning in the brain. And PD symptoms – including tremors, stiffness, and slowness of movement – are caused by a lack of dopamine in the brain;  hence, why a drug that replenishes the brain’s reduced supply of dopamine, i.e.,  levodopa, helps diminish those symptoms.

Perhaps the biggest take-away is three-fold:

  1. Improving our understanding of the relationship between the components of MetS and PD could help us better understand the pathophysiology that links the two.
  2. Adopting a healthier lifestyle (better food choices, more exercise and medications, if prescribed) is a well-documented path to halt, and even reverse MetS – which, according to this study, may also reduce your risk for developing PD.
  3. Being able to identify people at increased risk for developing PD is vital information to have, as mounting an early intervention strategy as described above could potentially make a big difference.

Constipation, an easy-to-identify condition, may be a marker for cardiovascular risk factors and increased cardiovascular risk in older women, according to the results of a large analysis. … After those recalculations, the women with severe constipation had a 23% higher risk of cardiovascular events.

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