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Christian Weyer

Researcher at Amylin Pharmaceuticals

Publications -  103
Citations -  18814

Christian Weyer is an academic researcher from Amylin Pharmaceuticals. The author has contributed to research in topics: Insulin & Pramlintide. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 103 publications receiving 18015 citations. Previous affiliations of Christian Weyer include National Institutes of Health.

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Hypoadiponectinemia in obesity and type 2 diabetes: close association with insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia.

TL;DR: It is confirmed that obesity and type 2 diabetes are associated with low plasma adiponectin concentrations in different ethnic groups and indicate that the degree of hypoadiponectinemia is more closely related to thedegree of insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia than to the level of adiposity and glucose intolerance.
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Circulating Ghrelin Levels Are Decreased in Human Obesity

TL;DR: Plasma ghrelin concentration was decreased in obese Caucasians as compared with lean Caucasians and was lower in Pima Indians, a population with a very high prevalence of obesity, compared with Caucasians.
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The natural history of insulin secretory dysfunction and insulin resistance in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

TL;DR: Defects in insulin secretion and insulin action occur early in the pathogenesis of diabetes, and intervention to prevent diabetes should target both abnormalities.
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Enlarged subcutaneous abdominal adipocyte size, but not obesity itself, predicts type II diabetes independent of insulin resistance.

TL;DR: Although enlarged mean subcutaneous abdominal adipocyte size is associated with insulin resistance cross-sectionally, prospectively, both abnormalities are independent and additive predictors of Type II diabetes.
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Circulating interleukin-6 in relation to adiposity, insulin action, and insulin secretion.

TL;DR: Fasting plasma IL- 6 concentrations are positively related to adiposity and negatively related to insulin action in Pima Indians, and the relationship between IL-6 and insulin action seems to be mediated through adiposity.