Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
| View Larger Image | Metabolic Syndrome and Cardiovascular Disease | Hardcoverby T. Barry Levine (Author), Arlene Bradley Levine (Author)
| List Price: | $93.00 | | Price: | $87.17 | | You Save: | $5.83 (6%) | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Hardcover | | Publisher: | Saunders | | Edition: | 1st Edition | | Page Count: | 512 Pages | | Publication Date: | March 31, 2006 | | Sales Rank: | 1,454,458st |
|
EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description This practical resource explores the underlying mechanisms of insulin resistance and the metabolic syndrome as they relate to coronary heart disease, heart failure, hypertension, and secondary cardiovascular problems. Unlike other references that focus strictly on insulin resistance, this book combines theory with practice in meaningful applications that detail how to manage your at-risk patients. You'll find the help you need to formulate rational therapeutic interventions that will effectively prevent or mitigate the manifestations of the conditions that have emerged as key precursors to cardiovascular disease. |
SIMILAR PRODUCTS |

| The Metabolic Syndrome:: Epidemiology, Clinical Treatment, and Underlying Mechanisms (Contemporary Endocrinology) by Barbara Caleen Hansen (Editor), George A. Bray (Editor)
With an extraordinary need for early intervention and prevention to slow or halt its progression, Metabolic Syndrome is one of the most challenging health problems. Only through an understanding of the science underlying this syndrome can successful interventions be developed and implemented. In The Metabolic Syndrome: Epidemiology, Clinical Treatment, and Underlying Mechanisms, the writers stimulate new thinking concerning underlying mechanisms and encourage heightened efforts to develop...
| 
| The Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity by George A. Bray (Editor)
The Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity presents an up-to-date survey of the current scientific understanding of obesity and the metabolic syndrome, as well as an overview of the most significant changes to the field over the past 30 years. By first presenting a historical context for overweight, the book drives home the point that obesity is by no means simply a contemporary problem, and its continued existence means that we neither understand it, nor have developed effective therapies. The...
| 
| The Metabolic Syndrome in Clinical Practice by Satish Mittal (Author)
Presently, there is so much focus on diabetes and cardiovascular disease, that the clinical intervention that is required towards its precursor, metabolic syndrome, is often not realised. “Metabolic Syndrome in Clinical Practice” will draw the attention of clinicians towards the importance of diagnosing metabolic syndrome, and therapeutic (including lifestyle) intervention that could be enforced earlier on to prevent its consequences and complications. In doing so, the understanding of...
| 
| The Metabolic Syndrome Program: How to Lose Weight, Beat Heart Disease, Stop Insulin Resistance and More by Karlene Karst (Author)
Big Belly? High Body Mass Index? High Blood Pressure? If this sounds like you, you may be one of the millions of North Americans with Metabolic Syndrome. Predicted by medical experts as the likely number one risk factor for heart disease-Metabolic Syndrome, or MSX, describes a constellation of conditions, including those mentioned above, of which the body' resistance to insulin is a primary feature. A byproduct of obesity, 25 percent of the adult U.S. population is now estimated to...
| 
| From Belly Fat to Belly Flat: How Your Hormones Are Adding Inches to Your Waist and Subtracting Years from Your Life -- the Medically Proven Way to Reset Your Metabolism and Reshape Your Body by C.W. Randolph M.D. (Author), Genie James (Author)
Discover the hidden culprit behind the 'middle-age spread'--and the simple plan that's helped hundreds of women over 30 break the fat cycle!
It's an all-too-common problem once you hit thirty: Despite your best efforts, you just can't seem to lose the extra weight around your middle, and you look in the mirror wondering what month and year you lost your waistline. Medical research proves you're not alone--that the average American gains one to two pounds a year after age thirty--usually...
|
|
|
|