Metabolic syndrome
DEMetabolisches Syndrom
Reviewed by Maurice Lichtenberg
Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of interrelated cardiometabolic risk factors that substantially amplify the risk of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and premature mortality. The most widely applied diagnostic criteria are those of the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) and the harmonised joint scientific statement (IDF/AHA/NHLBI, 2009), which require the presence of three or more of five components: elevated waist circumference (with ethnicity-specific thresholds), elevated fasting triglycerides (≥150 mg/dL), reduced HDL-cholesterol (<40 mg/dL in men, <50 mg/dL in women), elevated blood pressure (≥130/85 mmHg), and elevated fasting glucose (≥100 mg/dL). Insulin resistance and abdominal adiposity are considered the central drivers. Prevalence exceeds 30% in Western adult populations and rises with age, making metabolic syndrome a key target of lifestyle and pharmacological longevity interventions.
Sources
- Grundy SM, Cleeman JI, Daniels SR, Donato KA, Eckel RH, Franklin BA, et al.. (2005). Diagnosis and Management of the Metabolic Syndrome: An American Heart Association/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Scientific Statement. *Circulation*doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.169404
- Alberti KG, Eckel RH, Grundy SM, et al.. (2009). Harmonizing the metabolic syndrome: a joint interim statement of the IDF Task Force on Epidemiology and Prevention; NHLBI; AHA; WHF; IAS; and IASO. *Circulation*doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.192644
