首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
OBJECTIVE: To find out the severity of coronary atherosclerosis and its relationship to body structure and adiposity in severely obese people with body mass index (BMI) > or = 35.0 kg/m(2) and to examine the incidence and characteristic features of myocardial infarction and other fatal coronary events in this population. DESIGN: Autopsy reports were analyzed, including data on age, height, weight, abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness, heart weight, coronary atherosclerosis, histopathology and toxicology. Myocardial collagen and arteriolar structure were examined by computerized image analysis. SUBJECTS: Forensic autopsy cases (n=166) with a BMI > or = 35.0 kg/m(2) examined in 1992-1998 were collected from the files of the Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Oulu, Finland. RESULTS: In a large number of the severely obese individuals, the coronary arteries were either lesion-free or only fatty streaks were observed (38% of men, 44% of women) and coronary thrombosis was rare (3.8% of men and 1.6% of women). Cardiac causes of death predominated, cardiomyopathy being the commonest. Myocardial infarction was the immediate cause of death in 14.4% of men and 12.9% of the women, and it was associated with increased heart size in men. Coronary atherosclerosis without any infarction had been determined as the cause of death in 8.6% of the men and 8.1% of the women. Abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness had a significant negative association with the severity of coronary atherosclerosis in the women, and a decrease in the arteriolar media/lumen ratio with increasing BMI was observed in the men. CONCLUSIONS: A considerable number of severely obese people have only fatty streaks and no marked stenosis in their coronary arteries, even at an advanced age. The large amounts of subcutaneous adipose tissue in obese women may provide some protection against coronary lesion development, which could be an estrogen effect. Myocardial infarction in severely obese men is associated with cardiac hypertrophy. The significance of the BMI-related dilatation of the myocardial arterioles in men and its relationship to a remodelling of the epicardial arteries will require future investigations.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: Few data are available on the actual degree of coronary atherosclerosis or its relationship to body composition in young women. The present study was carried out to identify, with the help of simple indicators of obesity and body structure, those women under 50 y of age who have the most advanced coronary lesions. DESIGN: Autopsy reports were analysed including age, height, weight, abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness, heart weight, liver and kidney weights, coronary atherosclerosis, and ovarial status. SUBJECTS: Female cases of sudden unexpected death (n = 599) aged between 15 and 50 y autopsied in 1973-1995 were collected from the files of the Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Oulu, Finland. RESULTS: The percentage of individuals with coronary lesions was 50% in women over 41 years of age, 32% in women from 31 to 40, 17% in women from 21 to 30, and 6% in women under 20 y of age. 2.1% of the women had died from manifestations of coronary heart disease (CHD). The most severe lesions were found in women with body mass index (BMI) between 24.2 and 27.2 when adjusted for age, and when abdominal subcutaneous fat thickness exceeded 35 mm when adjusted for age and BMI. Heart weight indexed to body size increased with BMI and abdominal fat and was positively correlated with the degree of coronary atherosclerosis, which was also associated with short stature and high liver and kidney weights when adjusted for body size. CONCLUSION: Mild to moderate overweight, short stature, increased amounts of abdominal subcutaneous fat, increased components of fat free mass and myocardial hypertrophy are the physical characteristics that indicate more advanced coronary atherosclerosis in women under 50 y of age.  相似文献   

3.
Overweight and obese children have low bone mass and area for their weight   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether girls and boys categorized from body mass index (BMI) values as overweight or obese for their age have lower bone mineral content (BMC) or lower bone area in relation to total body weight than children of normal adiposity. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study in a university bone research unit. SUBJECTS: Two hundred girls and 136 boys aged 3-19 y recruited from the general population by advertisement. MEASUREMENTS: Total body BMC (g) and bone area (cm2) measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in relation to body weight (kg), lean tissue mass (kg) and fat mass (kg) in boys and girls of three different BMI percentile groupings: normal weight (BMI<85th percentile); overweight (85 to 94th BMI percentile); obese (> or =95th BMI percentile). RESULTS: Obese children had higher BMC, bone area, and fat mass for chronological age than those of normal body weight (P<0.001). In spite of this the observed values for age-adjusted total body BMC and bone area relative to body weight were each lower than predicted values, in both overweight and obese children (2.5-10.1% less, P<0.05) than in children of lower adiposity. CONCLUSION: In overweight and obese boys and girls there is a mismatch between body weight and bone development during growth: their bone mass and bone area are low for their body weight.  相似文献   

4.
BackgroundThe blood pressure (BP) increase with age is well documented in adults and children. However, in the pediatric age group, body size is the most important determinant of age-related BP increases. The aim of the present analysis was to investigate the relationships between age, gender, and body size and BP in children.MethodsTo this purpose, data were analyzed from 4,514 prepubertal children, aged 6-11 years (71% of the eligible sample; boys = 2,283, girls = 2,231) from the ARCA Project, a screening of childhood obesity carried out in southern Italy. Girls who reported the occurrence of menarche were excluded from the analysis. The sample constituted roughly 20% of all the children attending the primary schools in the area. Weight, height, waist circumference, and BP were measured according to standardized procedures.ResultsAs expected, both systolic and diastolic BP significantly increased (P < 0.001) with age in boys and girls. However, after adjustment for waist circumference (as index of adiposity) and height (as index of body size), BP significantly increased with age only in girls (systolic BP: F = 4.380, P = 0.002; diastolic BP: F = 3.093, P = 0.01) but not in boys (systolic BP: F = 0.711, P = 0.55; diastolic BP: F = 2.180, P = 0.07). The association, however, was no longer apparent after the exclusion of children aged >10 years.ConclusionsIn prepubertal girls in the age range 6-11 years, but not in boys, age is significantly associated with BP independently of body size and adiposity.American Journal of Hypertension 2008; doi:10.1038/ajh.2008.228American Journal of Hypertension (2008); 21, 9, 1007-1010. doi 10.1038/ajh.2008.228.  相似文献   

5.
CONTEXT: Fetal development is thought to be gender specific for adiposity and circulating insulin and IGF-I but not adipokinemia, as judged by serum visfatin and adiponectin at term birth. We studied the potential relationship between these gender specificities and fetal growth. SETTING: The study was conducted at a university hospital. STUDY POPULATION: Subjects included 96 strictly matched neonates born appropriate for gestational age (AGA; 24 girls, 24 boys) or small for gestational age (SGA; 24 girls, 24 boys). MAIN OUTCOMES: Outcomes included serum insulin, IGF-I, visfatin, total and high-molecular-weight (HMW) adiponectin, osteocalcin at term birth, and neonatal body composition by absorptiometry. RESULTS: Cord insulin and IGF-I levels were higher in girls than boys (P < or = 0.01), in both the AGA and SGA subpopulation. In AGA newborns, fat and lean mass were each gender specific (P < 0.0001), whereas visfatin and total and HMW adiponectin were not. Conversely, in SGA newborns, visfatin and HMW adiponectin were gender specific (higher levels in girls), whereas body adiposity was not. In SGA fetuses, the distribution of adiponectin isoforms was in both genders shifted toward HMW (P < 0.005 vs. AGA). Cord osteocalcin did not differ by either gender or birth weight. CONCLUSION: At term birth, the gender specificity of adiposity and circulating visfatin and HMW adiponectin appeared to depend on prenatal growth, whereas the gender specificity of insulin and IGF-I levels did not. The fetal shift in adiponectin isoforms may contribute to explain why SGA newborns tend to be hypersensitive to insulin.  相似文献   

6.
Rao S  Kanade A 《Journal of hypertension》2007,25(12):2383-2389
OBJECTIVES: To examine the importance of somatic disproportion rather than absolute values of leg height and trunk height for predicting risk of high blood pressure among adolescents. METHODS: Adolescent girls (9-16 years old) from high (HSE) and low socio-economic (LSE) classes were examined (n = 1036 and n = 1040, respectively) in a cross-sectional study, for skeletal growth (height and sitting height), adiposity [weight, body mass index (BMI) and body fat] and blood pressure levels. RESULTS: Girls from LSE class were thin, short and undernourished compared to those from HSE class (average age-adjusted BMI, 16.47 +/- 2.61 versus 19.77 +/- 3.85, P < 0.000). A high prevalence of high systolic blood pressure (HSBP) was a problem in girls of the HSE (9.7 versus 4.4%, P < 0.001) class, while a high prevalence of high diastolic blood pressure (HDBP) was seen in girls of the LSE (15.3 versus 2.7%, P < 0.001) class. Further, in the HSE class, the prevalence of HSBP was higher only among girls in the third tertile of BMI and body fat, while in the case of the LSE class the prevalence of HDBP was higher (7-11%) even in the lowest tertile of these measures. The odds ratio (OR) for HDBP (2.28) in the LSE class and that for HSBP (2.27) in the HSE class were significantly higher for girls in the lower tertile of leg height to height ratio. This was also true in the case of leg height to sitting height ratio. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings showed that rather than absolute leg or trunk length, somatic disproportion may be a relevant biomarker associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, especially in an adolescent population.  相似文献   

7.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to investigate early influences of postnatal growth on blood pressure (BP) in healthy, British-born South Asian and European origin infants. We tested the hypotheses that South Asian infants would be smaller in all body dimensions (length and weight) with higher relative truncal skinfold thickness at birth, and that increased (central) adiposity and accelerated growth up to 1 year would be associated with higher BP in both ethnic groups. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Five hundred and sixty infants were followed prospectively from birth to 3 and/or 12 months with measures of anthropometry and resting BP, compared against a UK 1990 growth reference, and analysed using regression methods. RESULTS: Marked differences in birth size persisted, as expected, between European and South Asian babies, but with a sexual dichotomy: South Asian boys were smaller in all anthropometric parameters (P < 0.001), including skinfolds (P < 0.05), than European boys, but South Asian girls, although smaller in length and weight, had similar skinfolds to European girls and thus a slightly larger subscapular skinfold thickness relative to birth weight [1.3 versus 1.2, mean difference 0.07, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.0009-0.14, P = 0.047]. The dichotomy persisted postnatally; South Asian boys showed a striking early increase in weight and length compared with European boys, associated with significant accrual of subscapular fat (6.1 versus 5.3 mm, mean difference 0.8, 95% CI 0.3-1.3, P = 0.003). In gender and ethnicity adjusted regression models, infants with the largest weight standard deviation score (SDS) increases in the first 3 months had the highest 12-month systolic BP (beta = 2.4, 95% CI 0.5-4.2, P = 0.01), while those with the greatest birth length (beta = 0.7, 95% CI 0.05-1.4, P = 0.04) but the smallest changes in length over 3-12 months (beta = -0.57, 95% CI -0.95 to -0.19, P = 0.004) had the highest diastolic BP. CONCLUSIONS: Ethnic and gender differences in growth and adiposity present in early infancy include truncal fat preservation in South Asian girls from birth, which in boys is related to rapid early weight gain. Weight gain during the first 3 months appears to drive the rise in systolic BP to 1 year, itself a likely driver of later BP.  相似文献   

8.
Leptin may have a role in the initiation of puberty and the regulation of subsequent weight gain, but this hypothesis has not been tested by longitudinal study. We report data from 40 normal children (20 boys and 20 girls) followed from 8-16 yr of age with hormone measurements and auxology every 6 months. Before the onset of puberty, leptin levels were similar in boys and girls: G1, mean (95% confidence interval), 2.63 (2.17-3.20) ng/mL; B1, 2.47 (2.08-2.94) ng/mL (P = 0.64) and increased with age in both sexes (B, 0.107 +/- 0.042; P = 0.02). With the onset of puberty, leptin levels increased in girls (B2-B5, P < 0.0005), but decreased in boys (G2-G5, P < 0.0005). Similar positive independent relationships were seen between leptin and fat mass in girls (B, 0.106 +/- 0.022; P < 0.0005) and boys (B, 0.121 +/- 0.020; P < 0.0005), and negative relationships were found with fat-free mass [girls: B, -1.104 +/- 0.381 (P < 0.005); boys: B, -1.288 +/- 0.217 (P < 0.0005)]. Girls gained more fat mass than boys, whereas boys gained more fat-free mass, and this explained the sex difference in leptin levels. Leptin levels correlated significantly with a large number of other hormones, but none was independent of changes in body composition. In girls, but not in boys, low leptin levels during prepuberty (B1) predicted subsequent gains in the percent body fat during puberty (r = -0.75; P = 0.005). The sexual dimorphism in leptin levels during puberty reflects differential changes in body composition. Prepubertal leptin levels in girls also predict gains in the percent body fat.  相似文献   

9.
Adiposity in childhood is often associated with metabolic abnormalities and accompanied by a dysregulation of the coagulation and fibrinolytic systems. We studied the interrelationship of metabolic and hemostatic parameters and explored their relationship with measures of adiposity and fat distribution in obese children. In 34 obese boys (mean age, 11.7 years) and 57 obese girls (12.1 years), blood samples were determined for insulin, glucose, triglycerides, fibrinogen, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), and tissue-type plasminogen activator-antigen (tPA-Ag). Body composition was assessed by means of impedance. Waist (Wc) and hip circumference were measured. The thickness of subcutaneous adipose tissue-layers (SAT-layers) was measured at 15 different body sites (from 1-neck to 15-calf) by means of the optical device, Lipometer. Overall subcutaneous fatness (SAT) was calculated and SAT-distribution was estimated by means of factor analysis. Significant correlations were found between different measures of adiposity and Wc with metabolic parameters. Fibrinogen was mainly associated with upper body subcutaneous fatness (factor 1) in boys. In girls, hemostatic parameters were associated with nearly all measures of adiposity and also with factor 1 and SAT. Regression analysis showed that factor 1 together with PAI-1 (both P <.0001) contribute to fibrinogen (adjusted [adj], R(2) =.30). PAI-1 together with trigylcerides (both P <.0001) and age (P <.04) were main determinants for tPA-Ag (adj, R(2) =.41). tPA-Ag (P <.0001) together with glucose (P <.001, negative slope), fibrinogen (P <.001, negative slope), and percentage fat mass (%FM) (P <.01) contributed to PAI-1 (adj, R(2) =.54). These results favor the concept of an interrelationship between metabolic and hemostatic parameters resulting from increased adiposity, perhaps influenced by pubertal development of children. Although upper body subcutaneous fatness was found to be a main correlate of metabolic and hemostatic parameters, it remains to be investigated whether this type of subcutaneous fat distribution is involved in the expression of metabolic and hemostatic risk factors and participates in the dysregulation of the hemostatic system in the state of childhood obesity.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the independent influence of alterations in fat mass, body fat distribution and hormone release on pubertal increases in fasting serum insulin concentrations and on insulin resistance assessed by the homeostasis model (HOMA). DESIGN AND SUBJECTS: Cross-sectional investigation of pre- (n=11, n=8), mid- (n=10, n=11), and late-pubertal (n=10, n=11) boys and girls with normal body weight and growth velocity. MEASUREMENTS: Body composition (by a four-compartment model), abdominal fat distribution and mid-thigh interfascicular plus intermuscle (extramyocellular) fat (by magnetic resonance imaging), total body subcutaneous fat (by skinfolds), mean nocturnal growth hormone (GH) release and 06:00 h samples of serum insulin, sex steroids, leptin and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I). RESULTS: Pubertal insulin resistance was suggested by greater (P<0.001) fasting serum insulin concentrations in the late-pubertal than pre- and mid-pubertal groups while serum glucose concentrations were unchanged and greater (P<0.001) HOMA values in late-pubertal than pre- and mid-pubertal youth. From univariate correlation fat mass was most related to HOMA (r=0.59, P<0.001). Two hierarchical regression models were developed to predict HOMA. In one approach, subject differences in sex, pubertal maturation, height and weight were held constant by adding these variables as a block in the first step of the model (r(2)=0.36). Sequential addition of fat mass (FM) increased r(2) (r(2)((inc)remental)=0.08, r(2)=0.44, P<0.05) as did the subsequent addition of a block of fat distribution variables (extramyocellular fat, abdominal visceral fat, and sum of skinfolds; r(2)(inc)=0.11, r(2)=0.55, P<0.05). Sequential addition of a block of hormone variables (serum IGF-I and log((10)) leptin concentrations; r(2)(inc)=0.04, P>0.05) did not reliably improve r(2) beyond the physical characteristic and adiposity variables. In a second model, differences in sex and pubertal maturation were again held constant (r(2)=0.25), but body size differences were accounted for using percentage fat data. Sequential addition of percentage body fat (r(2)((inc)remental)=0.11, r(2)=0.36, P<0.05), then a block of fat distribution variables (percentage extramyocellular fat, percentage abdominal visceral fat, and percentage abdominal subcutaneous fat; r(2)(inc)=0.08, r(2)=0.44, P=0.058), and then a block of serum IGF-I and log((10)) leptin concentrations (r(2)(inc)=0.07, r(2)=0.51, P<0.05) increased r(2). Mean nocturnal GH release was not related to HOMA (r=-0.04, P=0.75) and therefore was not included in the hierarchical regression models. CONCLUSION: Increases in insulin resistance at puberty were most related to FM. Accumulation of fat in the abdominal visceral, subcutaneous and muscular compartments may increase insulin resistance at puberty beyond that due to total body fat. Serum concentrations of leptin and IGF-I may further modulate HOMA beyond the effects of adiposity and fat distribution. However, the results are limited by the cross-sectional design and the use of HOMA rather than a criterion measure of insulin resistance.  相似文献   

11.
Adolescents, in particular girls, with type 1 diabetes may gain excessive weight during puberty. We present the results of a longitudinal study aimed to determine the roles of leptin and insulin in changes in body composition in subjects with type 1 diabetes and controls. Forty-six children (23 boys) with type 1 diabetes and 40 controls (20 boys) were followed from 8-17 yr of age. Height, weight, and sc skinfolds were assessed every 6 months, and a blood sample taken for leptin determination. Throughout the age range, body mass index (mean +/- SEM) was greater by 1.45 +/- 0.69 kg/m(2) in girls and 1.46 +/- 0.55 kg/m(2) in boys with type 1 diabetes compared with control values. In girls with type 1 diabetes, this reflected greater percent body fat (3.2 +/- 1.0%; P = 0.002), whereas in boys it related to differences in fat-free mass. Both boys and girls with type 1 diabetes had higher leptin levels adjusted for percent body fat than controls; in the girls this was related to insulin dose (regression coefficient B = 0.006 +/- 0.003; P = 0.04) and greater gains in fat mass. Hyperinsulinemia and raised leptin levels are associated with gains in fat mass throughout puberty in girls, but not boys, with type 1 diabetes.  相似文献   

12.
AIM: To study the regulation of GHBP serum levels by gonadal steroids in normal and precocious puberty. STUDY PROTOCOL: We studied GHBP levels in relation to age, sex, pubertal maturation, body composition as well as to circulating IGF-I and gonadal steroid levels in 320 healthy children. Furthermore, we studied the regulation of circulating GHBP in 33 girls with central precocious puberty before and during gonadal suppression with GnRH agonist. METHODS: GHBP was determined by a time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay (GHBP TR-FIA) based on a commercially available immunoassay for GH, the DELFIA GH assay. RESULTS: In healthy children GHBP levels were significantly higher in normal girls compared with boys, and there was no significant increase in GHBP in puberty in both sexes. GHBP levels did not correlate with height (SDS), age, pubertal stage, IGF-I or testosterone/oestradiol levels in boys and girls, respectively. There were significant correlations between BMI and GHBP in boys and girls (R 2 = 0.14 and R 2 = 0.12, both P < 0.0001). Furthermore, GHBP correlated highly significantly with the percentage body fat, determined by BIA in 43 healthy girls (R 2 = 0. 40, P < 0.0001). GHBP levels were significantly higher in girls with central precocious puberty (CPP) (1.31 SDS (1.26), mean (SD)) compared to prepubertal controls (P < 0.0001), and above + 2 SD in 10 out of 33 patients. In girls with CPP, GHBP correlated inversely with oestradiol before treatment (R 2 = 0.26, P < 0.01) and there was a tendency towards a positive correlation with BMI (R 2 = 0.13, P = 0.078). By contrast, there were no signficant correlations between GHBP and IGF-I or height SDS. Gonadal suppression with GnRH agonist treatment caused a transient significant increase of 0.57 SD after 2 months of treatment (P < 0.001), but decreased to baseline levels hereafter. CONCLUSION: We conclude that in children, as in adults, body fat is the primary determinant for the circulating level of GHBP, and that the difference in body fat is probably the main factor for the higher levels of serum GHBP in girls compared with boys, as well as for the negative influence of testosterone levels in boys and of oestrogen levels in girls. The elevation in GHBP levels observed in girls with central precocious puberty is probably due their higher body fat content.  相似文献   

13.

Introduction and objectives

The increase in the incidence of hypertension in children can be attributed to the rising prevalence of obesity. The objective is to analyze the impact of overweight and the degree or distribution of adiposity on blood pressure levels in a population of Spanish schoolchildren.

Methods

A cross-sectional study was carried out in 1511 schoolchildren between 6 years and 16 years of age. We measured weight, height, waist circumference, subcutaneous skinfolds, and blood pressure. Nutritional categories were established on the basis of body mass index, waist-to-height ratio, and percent body fat. According to the National High Blood Pressure Education Program Working Group, subjects whose blood pressure was above the 90th percentile of the standard normal distribution were considered to have high blood pressure.

Results

In all, 3.17% of the boys and 3.05% of the girls had high blood pressure. According to odds ratio analysis, the risk of high blood pressure increased in individuals with a body mass index indicative of obesity (7.87-fold in boys, 12.32-fold in girls), with a percent body fat>97th percentile (6.98-fold in boys, 18.51-fold in girls), or with a waist-to-height ratio≥0.5 (10.56-fold in boys, 7.82-fold in girls).

Conclusions

Overweight and obesity increase the risk of high blood pressure in children between 6 years and 16 years of age, although the risk level varies depending on the amount and distribution of adipose tissue. Anthropometric indicators of relative adiposity and fat distribution are especially useful in the identification of children and adolescents with high blood pressure.Full English text available from:www.revespcardiol.org/en  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association between the degree of adiposity, assessed using the international reference values for body mass index (BMI) of the International Obesity Task Force (IOTF), the fat distribution pattern and the blood pressure (BP) profile in children. METHODS: Anthropometric indices and blood pressure were measured in 3923 children aged 6-11 years in southern Italy. RESULTS: The prevalence of overweight and obesity (by IOTF references) and pediatric hypertension was, respectively: 27, 21 and 10% for boys; 25, 21 and 14% for girls. Body mass index and waist z-scores were the strongest determinants of BP by regression analysis. Overweight and obesity were associated with a greater tendency for central fat deposition and higher BP (waist, cm; boys: 59.2+/-6.0, 69.5+/-7.9, 79.0+/-9.7; girls: 58.8+/-6.5, 68.2+/-7.4, 75.3+/-8.9; SBP/DBP, mmHg; boys: 94/60+/-12/9, 99/62+/-13/8, 103/64+/-15/10; girls: 93/59+/-12/9, 99/62+/-14/9, 101/63+/-14/9; normal weight, overweight and obese, respectively; P<0.0001; M+/-SD), and a higher risk of hypertension (overweight: RR=2.33; 95% CI 1.76-3.08; obesity: RR=3.69; 95% CI 2.78-4.90), independent of age, physical activity, birth weight, parental adiposity and education. Among normal weight children, 99% had waist <85th percentile and 93% were normotensive. CONCLUSIONS: Overweight and obese children, identified according to the IOTF growth charts, are characterized by a central fat distribution pattern and higher BP.  相似文献   

15.
Adiponectin, a novel adipokine with anti-inflammatory and insulin-sensitizing properties, has been found to have independent negative associations with obesity and hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance in adults. We measured fasting plasma adiponectin and insulin concentrations and body composition (dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry or doubly labeled water) in 30 5-yr-old (11 boys and 19 girls) and 53 10-yr-old (17 boys and 36 girls) Pima Indian children. A subgroup of 20 children (5 boys and 15 girls) had all measurements at both 5 and 10 yr of age. Cross-sectionally, plasma adiponectin concentrations were negatively correlated with percentage body fat and fasting plasma insulin concentrations at both 5 yr (r = -0.35, P = 0.06, r = -0.42, P = 0.02) and 10 yr (r = -0.46, P = 0.001, r = -0.38, P = 0.005) of age. At age 10 yr, percentage body fat (P = 0.03) but not fasting plasma insulin (P = 0.59) was independently associated with fasting plasma adiponectin concentrations. Longitudinally, plasma adiponectin concentrations decreased with increasing adiposity. In summary, these results confirm our previously reported findings in adults of an inverse relationship between plasma adiponectin concentrations and adiposity in children. Longitudinal analyses indicated that hypoadiponectinemia is a consequence of the development of obesity in childhood. We did not find evidence that adiponectin is an early mediator of obesity-induced insulin resistance, a preliminary observation that needs to be confirmed in studies using a more direct measurement of insulin action than the one used in this investigation.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: To study the body composition of Bahraini school children. DESIGN: Cross-sectional national school survey. SUBJECTS: School children aged 6-18y. The sample comprised 818 boys and 775 girls. MEASUREMENTS: Weight, height, arm circumference and skinfold thicknesses were measured. Sum of skinfold thickness, body mass index (BMI), mid arm circumference, percentage body fat, fat weight and lean body weight were then calculated to determine body composition. RESULTS: A significant difference in the sum of skinfold thickness was observed between boys and girls. The girls have almost 50% extra skinfold thickness than boys at all ages. Similar trends were found in BMI, except at ages 9 and 18y. The percentage of body fat was higher in girls than boys. The mean BMI for Bahraini girls aged 13y and above exceeds that of their American counterparts, indicating a trend towards fat accumulation in the Bahraini girls. CONCLUSION: The data obtained are useful for monitoring obesity in school children in Bahrain as well as being usable as reference data for similar countries in the region. The high proportion of body fat among Bahraini school children, especially girls, urges an intervention program to prevent and control obesity in this age group.  相似文献   

17.
Whether or not C-reactive protein (CRP) predicts heart disease in adults because it is a marker of damage or atherosclerosis is difficult to assess. In children, there is no confounding with coronary disease or active smoking. We measured CRP in 699 children aged 10-11 years. CRP levels were 47% higher in girls than boys, and rose with age by 15%/year. CRP levels were 270% (95% CI, 155-439%) higher in the top fifth than the bottom fifth of Ponderal index (weight/height(3)). After adjustment, CRP levels remained 104% (95% CI, 23-236%) higher in the 56 children of South Asian origin. CRP was unrelated to: birth weight, height, social class, Helicobacter pylori infection or passive smoke exposure. CRP was correlated with several cardiovascular risk factors, but only fibrinogen (r = 0.33, P = 0.0001), HDL-cholesterol (r = -0.13, P = 0.0006), heart rate (r = 0.12, P = 0.002) and systolic blood pressure (r = 0.08, P = 0.02) remained statistically significant after adjustment. We conclude that adiposity is the major determinant of CRP levels in children while physical fitness has a small independent effect. The strong relationships with fibrinogen and HDL-cholesterol suggest a role for inflammation throughout life in the development of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. Longitudinal studies are needed to determine whether these associations reflect long term elevations of these risk factors in some individuals, or short term fluctuations in different individuals.  相似文献   

18.
This study aimed to document for the first time in a general population of French children the prevalence and levels of cardiovascular risk factors and to assess separately in boys and girls whether these risk factors were associated with fat mass distribution independently of subcutaneous overall adiposity. A cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from 452 children (235 boys and 217 girls) aged 8 to 17 years included in a 1999 population-based epidemiologic study (the Fleurbaix Laventie Ville Santé II study) was made. Overweight was defined according to the International Obesity Task Force references and the 90th percentiles of the French body mass index curves. The thresholds of parameters defining cardiovascular and metabolic risks were the 95th percentile of the Task Force Report on High Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents for blood pressure and those of the American Academy of Pediatrics for lipids. Anthropometric and biological parameters were described by sex and according to overweight status. Partial correlations between cardiovascular risk factors and anthropometric measures of adiposity (body mass index, sum of 4 skinfold thicknesses, waist circumference, waist-to-height ratio) were calculated. Then, these correlations were additionally adjusted for the sum of 4 skinfold thicknesses. High plasma triglycerides, high insulin concentration, and low plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) concentration were associated with all measures of adiposity (|r| > or = 0.20, P < .002). When obese children were excluded, overweight children already had high triglycerides and low HDL-C levels, respectively, 2 and 20 times more frequently than normal-weight children did. Among overweight children, 7.7% had at least 2 risk factors among high blood pressure, high plasma triglycerides or glucose, and low HDL-C concentration vs 0.25% among normal-weight children (P = .002). After adjusting for the sum of skinfolds, an independent association between the risk factors and waist circumference was found in girls. In conclusion, (a) modest excess weight is associated with increased levels of cardiovascular risk factors. (b) In girls, abdominal fat distribution is associated with cardiovascular risk factors, independently of overall adiposity. (c) International definition of abdominal obesity in children is required to standardize studies and to progress in the evaluation of childhood obesity and its consequences.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE: Coronary heart disease has been described to be increased with both glucose intolerance and cigarette smoking. All three of these have also been reported to be associated with central adiposity (disproportionate deposition of fat on the trunk compared to the extremities). The purpose of this analysis was to determine the relationship of cigarette smoking to glucose intolerance and coronary heart disease, the relationship of cigarette smoking to risk factors such as adiposity, body fat distribution, and plasma lipoprotein and insulin levels, the relationship of cigarette smoking to these risk factors independent of disease status, and whether these risk factors could account for any of the relationship between cigarette smoking and disease status. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The study design was cross-sectional. The study sample contained 219 middle-aged and elderly Japanese-American men: 77 with normal and 74 with impaired glucose tolerance and 68 with type II diabetes. There were 54 men with coronary heart disease. A detailed smoking history was obtained. Glucose tolerance status was established by medical history and a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test. Coronary heart disease was determined by medical history and a resting electrocardiogram. Adiposity and fat distribution measurements were body mass index (kg/m2), skinfold thicknesses, body circumferences, and cross-sectional fat areas by computed tomography. Levels of insulin, C-peptide, cholesterol (total, low-density lipoprotein [LDL], high-density lipoprotein [HDL], HDL2, HDL3, very-low-density lipoprotein [VLDL]), and triglyceride (total, VLDL) were measured in fasting blood specimens. RESULTS: A central pattern of body fat was associated with both non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and coronary heart disease. Smoking history was related to both adiposity and body fat distribution, and was strongly related to coronary heart disease but not to diabetes. Past smokers who had smoked up to a month ago were the heaviest while present smokers who were currently smoking or had smoked within the past month were the leanest. However, although present smokers had reduced amounts of fat, this was attributable to those present smokers without heart disease. Present smokers with heart disease were not as lean and had increased amounts of intra-abdominal fat. Past smokers had the greatest amount of central fat and this was attributable to those with heart disease. By two-way (smoking history and coronary heart disease status) analysis of covariance, smoking history was significantly related only to subcutaneous fat disposition on the chest and abdomen independent of coronary heart disease, while coronary heart disease status was strongly related to plasma levels of insulin C-peptide, VLDL, HDL, HDL2, and HDL3 cholesterol, and total and VLDL triglyceride, independent of smoking history. Further analysis showed that none of the body fat variables could account for the risk of coronary heart disease associated with smoking history. Higher fasting plasma C-peptide levels in past smokers accounted statistically for part of the risk of coronary heart disease associated with cigarette smoking. However, this effect was not mediated by any of the body fat measurements. CONCLUSIONS: Disproportionately increased intra-abdominal fat is related to coronary heart disease but not to smoking history. Smoking history is related to coronary heart disease but not to diabetes. Weight gain is associated with smoking cessation and appears to be concentrated in the central subcutaneous regions, especially for those who have coronary heart disease. Weight gain associated with cessation of smoking appears to be unrelated to atherogenic changes in lipids, lipoproteins, or insulin. Other pathogenic processes must be considered in the association between smoking and coronary heart disease.  相似文献   

20.
Besides body fatness, the body fat distribution is associated with coronary risk in adults, but little has been reported on this aspect in children. This study describes body fatness, body fat distribution (waist-to-hip ratio, WHR) and the plasma lipid and apoprotein profile (TC, HDL-C, LDL-C, TG, apo A-I and apo B) in 60 boys (age 10.8 +/- 0.1 year; mean +/- s.e.m.) and 64 girls (age 10.2 +/- 0.1 year), all caucasian. To avoid interference by the large changes in plasma sex hormone levels during puberty, only pre- and early pubertal children (Tanner stages of genital c.q. breast development 1 or 2) participated. Physical and sports activity was scored in hours per week using a questionnaire. The boys were taller than the girls (146.2 +/- 0.7 vs 143.2 +/- 0.9 cm; ANOVA, P less than or equal to 0.05) and their WHR was larger (0.88 +/- 0.01 vs 0.83 +/- 0.01; ANOVA, P less than or equal to 0.05). The boys spent 8.0 +/- 0.4 hours weekly on physical and sports activities, the girls 5.5 +/- 0.3 (ANOVA, P less than or equal to 0.05). The plasma lipid and apoprotein profiles were similar in both groups. Body fatness was significantly associated with the lipid and apoprotein profile, although in different ways in boys and girls. In boys there was a relationship with TG (r = 0.49), with apo B (r = 0.33) and with the apo A-I to apo B ratio (r = -0.24); in girls with TG (r = 0.25), HDL-C (r = -0.39), apo A-I (r = -0.28) and with the HDL-C to TC ratio (r = -0.31); P less than 0.05 for all correlations. A regional component of the subcutaneous fatmass, assessed by the partial correlations of the individual skinfold thicknesses with the plasma lipid and apoprotein profile after controlling for body fatness, was lacking in these early and prepubertal children. The WHR was associated with TC (r = 0.35), LDL-C (r = 0.32), apo B (r = 0.36) and with apo A-I/apo B (r = -0.34) in the girls after controlling for body fatness. Although closer investigation into the validity of the WHR as a measure of fat distribution in children is needed, the tentative conclusion is that in pre- and early pubertal girls the WHR has an impact on the plasma lipid and apoprotein profile similar to that seen in adults. It is suggested that in boys these relationships develop later in puberty.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号