Title :
Understanding the Metabolic Syndrome: A Modeling Perspective
Author :
Khoo, Michael C. K. ; Oliveira, F.M.G.S. ; Limei Cheng
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract :
The prevalence of obesity is growing at an alarming rate, placing many at risk for developing diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, or a combination of disorders known as “metabolic syndrome”. The evidence to date suggests that metabolic syndrome results from an imbalance in the mechanisms that link diet, physical activity, glucose-insulin control, and autonomic cardiovascular control. There is also growing recognition that sleep-disordered breathing and other forms of sleep disruption can contribute significantly to autonomic dysfunction and insulin resistance. Chronic sleep deprivation resulting from sleep-disordered breathing or behavioral causes can lead to excessive daytime sleepiness and lethargy, which in turn contribute to increasing obesity. Analysis of this complex dynamic system using a model-based approach can facilitate the delineation of the causal pathways that lead to the emergence of the metabolic syndrome. In this paper, we provide an overview of the main physiological mechanisms associated with obesity and sleep-disordered breathing that are believed to result in metabolic and autonomic dysfunction, and review the models and modeling approaches that are relevant in characterizing the interplay among the multiple factors that underlie the development of the metabolic syndrome.
Keywords :
biochemistry; cardiovascular system; diseases; health care; medical computing; patient care; pneumodynamics; reviews; sleep; sugar; autonomic cardiovascular control; autonomic dysfunction; causal pathway delineation; chronic sleep; complex dynamic system; diabetes; diet; excessive daytime sleepiness; glucose-insulin control; hypertension; insulin resistance; lethargy; main physiological mechanisms; mechanism imbalance; metabolic dysfunction; metabolic syndrome; model-based approach; modeling perspective; obesity; physical activity; sleep apnea; sleep disruption; sleep-disordered breathing; Cardiovascular diseases; Diabetes; Immune system; Insulin; Obesity; Sleep apnea; Sugar; Autonomic function; computational model; glucose-insulin regulation; obesity; sleep apnea; Humans; Metabolic Syndrome X; Models, Biological; Monitoring, Physiologic; Obesity; Sleep Apnea Syndromes;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Reviews in
DOI :
10.1109/RBME.2012.2232651