International Journal of Hypertension

Hypertension and Diabetes in Obesity


Publishing date
15 Jun 2011
Status
Published
Submission deadline
15 Dec 2010

Lead Editor

1Human Neurotransmitters Laboratory and Nucleus Network Ltd., Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia

2Human Neurotransmitters Laboratory, Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia

3Endocrinology and Metabolism Division, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and UCLA School of Medicine, Sepulveda, CA 91343, USA


Hypertension and Diabetes in Obesity

Description

The increase in the prevalence of obesity, which has been considered as an epidemic by the World Health Organisation, is a serious, worldwide, health problem. Importantly, hypertension and diabetes are frequently associated with obesity, and, together, they constitute a significant burden, in terms of both patients' morbidity and health care costs. The driving forces linking obesity, hypertension, and diabetes remain to be clarified due, in part, to the fact that environmental, genetic, life style and behavioral confounders are involved generating the disease state. Additionally, it is recognized that neuroendocrine mechanisms, including insulin resistance, sympathetic nervous activation, stimulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), and adiponectin and leptin, are related to obesity, hypertension, and type 2 diabetes.

Importantly, taken in isolation, obesity, hypertension, and diabetes are all associated with increased risk of the development of cardiovascular and renal complications; however, with coexistence of diabetes and hypertension, the risk is elevated substantially more. The purpose of this special issue is to present the current findings on “hypertension and diabetes in obesity”, especially focused on the mechanisms linking the three with a focus on disease onset and development. A better understanding of the relationships and interactions between the physiological mechanisms of obesity, hypertension, and diabetes may help in the development of appropriate clinical treatment of obesity-related hypertension and obesity-related hypertension accompanied with diabetes. Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Epidemiology of obesity, hypertension, and diabetes in USA
  • High prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in hypertension and obesity
  • Cardiovascular and renal complications in patients with hypertension and diabetes
  • Sympathetic nervous system activity in patients with hypertension and diabetes
  • Insulin resistance in patients with hypertension
  • Interrelationships between sympathetic nervous activity and insulin resistance in hypertension and obesity
  • RAAS in patients with hypertension and diabetes
  • Adiponectin and leptin in patients with hypertension and diabetes
  • Interrelationships between sympathetic nervous system activity, insulin resistance, RAAS, and leptin in hypertension and diabetes
  • Adrenoceptor polymorphisms in hypertension, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and obesity
  • Leptin receptor polymorphisms in hypertension, diabetes, and obesity
  • Treatments:
    • lifestyle modification (weight loss program)
    • bariatric surgery (gastric banding, gastric bypass surgery)
    • pharmacological treatments for obesity and hypertension

Before submission authors should carefully read over the journal's Author Guidelines, which are located at http://www.hindawi.com/journals/ijht/guidelines/. Prospective authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through the journal Manuscript Tracking System at http://mts.hindawi.com/ according to the following timetable:

International Journal of Hypertension
 Journal metrics
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Acceptance rate8%
Submission to final decision110 days
Acceptance to publication13 days
CiteScore3.600
Journal Citation Indicator0.410
Impact Factor1.9
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