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Adipobiology

Adipose tissue: The renaissance marked by four paradigm shifts

Gorana Rančić, Marco Fiore, Rouzha Pancheva, Neşe Tunçel, Jerzy Beltowski, Marin Zhelezov, Peter Ghenev, Alexander Hinev, Plamen Panayotov, Nikolay Evtimov, Stanislav Yanev, Anton Tonchev, Luigi Aloe, George N. Chaldakov

Abstract

One of the biggest recent achievements in the study of cardio- metabolic diseases (atherosclerosis, hypertension, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, metabolic syndrome, and Alzheimer`s disease, which is recently viewed as type 3 diabetes, see below) is associated with the `rediscovery` of a neglected tissue, the adipose tissue. Here we will Dance Round four paradigm shifts in the study of adipose tissue.

In 1962, Thomas S. Kuhn published his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1st edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA). Its publication was a landmark event in the history and philosophy of scientific knowledge (epistemology). Kuhn challenged the prevailing view of `normal science` which DANCE ROUND We dance round in a ring and suppose, But the Secret sits in the middle and knows.

Robert Frost
was viewed as `development-by-accumulation` of accepted facts and concepts leading - most often - to epistemological paralysis, we dubbed it neophobia (the term also used for children above the age of 1 year). Kuhn argued for a model in which a period of such conceptual continuity in normal science were interrupted by a period of revolutionary science leading to a new paradigm, an event he designated paradigm shift.

At epistemological level, the adipose tissue has undergone four major paradigm shifts in last 20 years, which `upregulated` it above the horizon. Consequently, adipose tissue takes center stage in so many diseases that it leaves most scientists and medical doctors astonished.


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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14748/adipo.v6.1136

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About The Authors

Gorana Rančić
Medical faculty
Serbia

Department of histology and Embryology

Marco Fiore
Institute of cellular biology and neurobiology
Italy

CNR of Rome

Rouzha Pancheva
Medical university of Varna
Bulgaria

Department of hygiene Faculty of Public health

Neşe Tunçel
Osmangazi university of Eskisehir
Turkey

Department of physiology, Medical faculty

Jerzy Beltowski
Medical university of Lublin
Poland

Department of pathophysiology

Marin Zhelezov
Medical university of Varna
Bulgaria

Laboratory of cell biology, Department of anatomy and histology

Peter Ghenev
Medical university of Varna

Department of general and clinical pathology

Alexander Hinev
St Marina University hospital of Varna
Bulgaria

Urology clinic

Plamen Panayotov
St Marina University hospital of Varna

Department of cardiac surgery

Nikolay Evtimov
St Anna University hospital of Varna

Urology clinic

Stanislav Yanev
Bulgarian academy of sciences of Sofia

Laboratory of drug toxicology, Institute of neurobiology

Anton Tonchev

Luigi Aloe
Institute of cellular biology and neurobiology
Italy

CNR of Rome

George N. Chaldakov

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