Carregant...
Miniatura

Tipus de document

Part del llibre

Versió

Versió publicada

Data de publicació

Llicència de publicació

cc by (c) González Franquesa, Alba et al., 2012
Si us plau utilitzeu sempre aquest identificador per citar o enllaçar aquest document: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/178616

Skeletal Muscle Mitochondrial Function/Dysfunction and Type 2 Diabetes

Títol de la revista

Director/Tutor

ISSN de la revista

Títol del volum

Resum

“Let food be your medicine and medicine be your food” stated Hippocrates, the father of Western medicine, in 400 B.C. This statement was based on the belief that food was able to influence disease, a concept that was revived several times in later years by painters, writers, scientists, and philosophers. One such philosopher, Ludwig Feuerbach, famously wrote in his 1863-4 essay “man is what he eats” introducing the idea that if we want to improve the spiritual conditions of people we must first improve their material conditions (Feuerbach, 2003). However, for years his warnings remained unheeded, at least in Western countries, in contrast to the teachings of Indian and Chinese medicine which for millennia have argued that a living organism has to assume a healthy diet. Like diet, physical activity has been also considered an important starting point for people's health. Hippocrates wrote in his book Regimen "if we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment and exercise, not too little and not too much, we would have found the safest way to health" (Hippocrates, 1955). Our knowledge about the links between diet, exercise, and disease has vastly increased since Hippocrates time. A healthy lifestyle based on diet and physical activity is now considered the keystone of disease prevention and the basis for a healthy aging. However, modern society has created conditions with virtually unrestricted access to food resources and reduced physical activity, resulting in a positive overall energy balance. This is far from the environment of our ”hunter-gathered ancestros” whose genes were modulated over thousands of years adapting our metabolism to survive when food was scarce and maximizing energy storage when food became available. In terms of evolution, this radical and sudden lifestyle change in modern society has led to a dramatic increase in the incidence of metabolic diseases including obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). It seems clear that the development of T2DM has a genetic component that becomes obvious when individuals are exposed to western lifestyle. However, environment plays a critical role in the incidence of the disease being obesity the main etiological cause of T2DM. Thus, modest weight loss is enough for obese glucose intolerant subjects to prevent the development of T2DM (National Task Force on the Prevention and Treatment of Obesity, 2000)...

Matèries (anglès)

Citació

Citació

GONZÁLEZ FRANQUESA, Alba, DE NIGRIS, Valeria, LERÍN MARTÍNEZ, Carlos, GARCÍA-ROVES, Pablo m. (pablo miguel). Skeletal Muscle Mitochondrial Function/Dysfunction and Type 2 Diabetes. _Chapter 12 in: Cseri_. Julianna. 2012. Skeletal Muscle. IntechOpen. ISBN: 978-953-51-7024-2. DOI: 10.5772/2961. pp: 258-292.. [consulta: 25 de febrer de 2026]. [Disponible a: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/178616]

Exportar metadades

JSON - METS

Compartir registre