20 research outputs found

    The effects of weather and climate change on dengue

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    There is much uncertainty about the future impact of climate change on vector-borne diseases. Such uncertainty reflects the difficulties in modelling the complex interactions between disease, climatic and socioeconomic determinants. We used a comprehensive panel dataset from Mexico covering 23 years of province-specific dengue reports across nine climatic regions to estimate the impact of weather on dengue, accounting for the effects of non-climatic factors

    Influence of metformin on metabolic effect of insulin in human adipose tissue in vitro

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    To study the mechanism(s) of action of metformin, fragments of human subcutaneous adipose tissue were incubated with therapeutic blood concentrations of metformin. In the absence of insulin no effect of metformin was seen on either lipolysis or glucose metabolism. When insulin was present, however, metformin stimulated glucose conversion into both triglycerides and CO2. In marked contrast, no effect of metformin was observed on the antilipolytic effect of insulin. In agreement with this selective effect no change in insulin binding was found. In conclusion, metformin seems to exert its effect on glucose metabolism by potentiating the action of insulin at a post-receptor level, possibly on the rate of glucose transport

    Effect of insulin on lipolysis in adipose tissue of rats of different ages

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    Several authors have not been able to find any antilipolytic effect of insulin in adipose tissue "in vitro". We investigated the possible role of cell size and/or age of donors on this phenomenon. The lipolytic rates (glycerol release per cell) were lower in the small cells of the 4-6 weeks old rats than in the larger cells of the 25-30 weeks old animals; however, the difference disappeared when the data were expressed per unit of cell surface area. Insulin (0.5-50 ng/ml) failed to inhibit both maximally and submaximally noradrenaline stimulated lipolysis in the adipocytes of the young rats, but its antilipolytic action was fully restored by using glucose-free medium. Therefore, at our experimental conditions, a glucose dependent factor, possibly involving the preferential hydrolysis of newly synthetized triglycerides, seems to blunt or to mask the insulin induced inhibition of glycerol release. Relatively higher rates of glucose metabolism and a lower lipolysis in small fat cells might explain the difference in the action of insulin on glycerol release in the adipose tissue of young rats as compared to the older ones
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