El-Mesallamy H.O.Hamdy N.M.Ibrahim S.M.Biochemistry DepartmentFaculty of PharmacyAin Shams UniversityCairoEgypt; Modern Sciences and Arts UniversityCairoEgypt2020-01-252020-01-252011196061https://doi.org/10.1007/s13312-011-0125-7PubMed ID 22080689https://t.ly/ZEKlBScopusAdiponectin serum levels were significantly lower in obese diabetic than in non-obese healthy boys (P<0.001). Circulating soluble E-selectin levels was significantly higher in obese diabetic boys than the healthy non-obese (P<0.01). There were significant inverse correlations between adiponectin and sE-selectin, hsCRP, IL-1?, and MCP-1 and positively with NOx. We conclude that sE-selectin and MCP-1 may represent a link between obesity and related co-morbidities in children and adults.EnglishAdiponectinChildrenEgyptInflammationObesitysE-selectinType 2 DiabetesadiponectinC reactive proteinendothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule 1glucosehigh density lipoprotein cholesterolinsulininterleukin 1betalipidmonocyte chemotactic protein 1nitric oxideadolescentadultadulthoodage distributionarticlebody masschildclinical articlecontrolled studyglucose blood levelglucose metabolismhumaninflammationinsulin resistancemalenon insulin dependent diabetes mellitusobesityprotein blood levelschool childAdiponectinAdolescentAdultBody Mass IndexC-Reactive ProteinCase-Control StudiesChemokine CCL2ChildCytokinesDiabetes Mellitus, Type 2E-SelectinHumansMaleNitric OxideObesityAdiponectin and pro-inflammatory cytokines in obese diabetic boysArticlehttps://doi.org/10.1007/s13312-011-0125-7PubMed ID 22080689