Leptin and body fat in type 2 diabetes and monodrug therapy.

2003 
To better understand the relations among leptin, insulin, and body fat during the metabolic progression to diabetes and during drug monotherapy, metabolic parameters were examined in subjects classified as 1) type 2 diabetes; 2) impaired fasting glucose or mild diabetes mellitus; 3) nondiabetic, matched for body mass index (BMI); and 4) nonobese, nondiabetic. Diabetic subjects were also studied during no pharmacological treatment, after 3 months of randomization to metformin or glyburide, and after 3 months of cross-over to the opposite drug. Log leptin correlated more with percent body fat (slope, 0.042; confidence interval, 0.036–0.047; r2 = 0.826; P < 0.0001) than with total fat mass, percent truncal or nontruncal fat, or BMI. When normalized to percent fat, leptin did not differ by gender. Leptin normalized to percent fat was 35% less in untreated diabetes than that in BMI-matched controls (P < 0.001). Leptin normalized to percent fat was increased by 25% (P < 0.01) as a result of glyburide therapy co...
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