... Rasgon discussed the extent to which insulin resistance may be responsible for the brain–body miscommunication and how it could potentially be used as a target for intervention. The functional effects of insulin have been well established. In the periphery, ... is specifically responsible for glucose use; in the brain, insulin has a significant adaptive plasticity role and a neuroprotective role. The pleiotropic and pleomorphic representation of the function of insulin makes it an interesting agent to consider as a link ... brain and body disorders. Insulin resistance is a condition in which tissue responsiveness to the normal action of insulin is impaired, which may or may not be ... levels of insulin, which can eventually lead to hyperglycemia. Insulin resistance forms a mechanistic foundation for a number of illnesses (Rasgon and Jarvik, 2004; Rasgon et al., 2002). The duration of the lack of tissue responsiveness to insulin and, therefore, the condition of insulin resistance, ... last for decades. It does not necessarily result in diabetes in all cases, but it may lead independently to cardiovascular disease, mood disorders, and dementia. In the periphery, the metabolic dysfunction of insulin resistance has distinct endpoints in somatic illness and in central nervous system ( ... , including obesity, depression, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, microalbuminuria, endothelial dysfunction, and polycystic ovary syndrome....