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Diabetes drug cures infertility and more.


Afflicting some 6 percent of U.S. women, polycystic ovary disease polycystic ovary disease
n. Abbr. PCOD
Sclerocystic disease of the ovary, characterized by enlarged ovaries, hirsutism, obesity, menstrual irregularity, and hyperinsulinism. Also called Stein-Leventhal syndrome.
 is the most common source of infertility. Cases of this inherited disorder usually go undiagnosed, however, notes endocrinologist Charles J. Glueck of the Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati. Most of the affected women don't ovulate o·vu·late
v.
To produce ova; discharge eggs from the ovary.



ovulate

see ovulation.
, but he's found that even among those who become pregnant, half miscarry mis·car·ry
v.
To have a miscarriage; abort.
 in the first trimester. That's five times the normal rate.

In the first of three studies that Glueck now reports, his team restored normal fertility to these women by using the common diabetes drug metformin metformin /met·for·min/ (met-for´min) an antihyperglycemic agent that potentiates the action of insulin, used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

met·for·min
n.
, also known as glucophage. Among the first 118 women treated, 91 percent ovulated, and the group became pregnant at the same rate that healthy women do. More importantly, among the 60 women who took the drug throughout their pregnancies, at least 90 percent had healthy babies.

In the December 1999 METABOLISM, Glueck's team unveiled the mechanism by which polycystic ovary disease jeopardizes pregnancies. Affected women make too much plasminogen-activator inhibitor (PAI PAI plasminogen activator inhibitor.
PAI Plasminogen activator inhibitor, see there
), a protein that keeps the body from breaking down blood clots Blood Clots Definition

A blood clot is a thickened mass in the blood formed by tiny substances called platelets. Clots form to stop bleeding, such as at the site of cut.
. During the first trimester of pregnancy, as the placenta begins connecting a woman's blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
 to those in her fetus, small clots can form. If they don't dissolve, these clots may shut down the fetal oxygen supply.

In a second new study, the researchers showed why enhancing insulin action, as metformin does, fixes the problem. "Polycystic ovary disease is the poster child for insulin resistance Insulin Resistance Definition

Insulin resistance is not a disease as such but rather a state or condition in which a person's body tissues have a lowered level of response to insulin, a hormone secreted by the pancreas that helps to regulate the level
," Glueck says. Although people with the disease produce what should be sufficient insulin, the hormone doesn't work well enough to clear all the sugar from their bloodstream. The body copes, at least for a while, by increasing its production of insulin. Eventually, he notes, roughly 70 percent of women with polycystic ovary disease develop adult-onset diabetes.

Side effects of extra insulin can include an overproduction o·ver·pro·duce  
tr.v. o·ver·pro·duced, o·ver·pro·duc·ing, o·ver·pro·duc·es
To produce in excess of need or demand.



o
 of PAI and male hormones. The latter promote excess body hair, weight gain, balding, and a disproportionate accumulation of fat at the waist--all hallmarks of polycystic ovary disease. But treatment with metformin returns the women's production of PAI and male hormones to normal, Glueck's team reports. This therapy also appears to prevent development of gestational diabetes--diabetic symptoms during pregnancy.

Metformin therapy also offered most of the women an extra benefit: weight loss even though they didn't cut calories or increase exercise. Prodded by this observation, the researchers undertook a third study, offering the same drug for 24 weeks to 22 morbidly obese, nondiabetic women and men.

These people shed about 6 percent of their weight--usually around 18 pounds--and lost 2 to 3 inches from their waist and hips. Moreover, blood concentrations of their low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol, the so-called bad cholesterol, dropped by 10 percent, and their fasting insulin, even more. In fact, Glueck says, "their reduction in weight appears to have been due almost exclusively to ameliorating insulin resistance."

He now plans to investigate whether prescribing metformin to apparently healthy people with insulin resistance will keep this high-risk population from developing diabetes.
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Article Details
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Author:J.R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 13, 2000
Words:495
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