Genetic epidemiology on casual theories and pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus

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Abstract

Diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM2) is a worldwide public health problem. The etiology of the disease is multifactorial and is characterized by great heterogeneity of metabolic disorders. The most common are the insufficient production of insulin, insulin resistance and impaired incretin system. The specialist must understand the multi-causal nature of DM2 in the post-genomic era. This nature is determined by the additive effect of genes and environment, so there is no simple genetic epidemiological model to explain the inheritance pattern. Hence the need to establish the proportion of disease that is determined by genes and the contribution of environmental factors, the combination of which regulates the threshold or tolerance level for diabetes development. Given this complexity in DM2 in this work are discussed the various existing theories of causality of this disease, which will permit us to understand the interaction between the environment and the human genome, and also to know how risk factors or predisposition to this disease influence, laying the grounds that delimit environment interaction with the genome.

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APA

Castro-Juárez, C. J., Ramírez-García, S. A., Villa-Ruano, N., & García-Cruz, D. (2017). Genetic epidemiology on casual theories and pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Gaceta Medica de Mexico. Academia Nacional de Medicina. https://doi.org/10.24875/GMM.M18000086

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