VEGF serum concentrations are increased in prepubertal and pubertal children with diabetes. Glycaemic control influences VEGF serum levels. Severity of microvascular complications is associated with marked increase of VEGF concentrations in the serum of these patients.
Weight gain has been recognized as an adverse effect of valproic acid therapy, but there are are no data about serum leptin levels in patients receiving this drug. To evaluate if valproic acid treatment in epileptic patients in whom obesity develops modifies serum levels of insulin and leptin, 40 female patients with epilepsy were evaluated before therapy and after 1 year of therapy. At the end of follow-up, 15 patients were obese and showed higher serum leptin and insulin levels than patients who did not gain weight. As in other types of obesity, elevation of serum leptin concentrations is related to the increase in body mass index.
Valproic acid is effective for treatment of many types of epilepsy, but its use in epileptic patients can be associated with an increase in body weight that could interfere with treatment compliance. The weight gain may result from different mechanisms, but the exact pathogenesis is still unknown. To evaluate insulin sensitivity in adolescents who gained weight during treatment with valproic acid, we studied 20 girls with different types of epilepsy: 15 patients had primary generalized seizures, including absence seizures (3 cases), and 5 patients had partial seizures. After 1 year of valproic acid treatment, the obese patients had serum insulin levels significantly higher than patients who did not gain weight (51.4 +/- 25.3 versus 28.2 +/- 12.9). Moreover, we observed that epileptic patients who gained weight were also insulin resistant in comparison with nonobese epileptic subjects. At the end of treatment, all patients showed normal levels of serum testosterone, androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), and luteinizing hormone. We found no significant correlation between insulinemia and serum valproic acid concentrations in obese and nonobese patients treated with valproic acid. Our study demonstrates that basal hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance can be present in patients who develop obesity during valproic acid treatment. Therefore, these obese patients could be exposed to the risks related to these metabolic abnormalities; if these data are confirmed in longer studies, these side effects may raise some concerns about the safety of valproic acid.
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