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Age-related increase in visceral adipose tissue and body fat and the metabolic risk profile of premenopausal women.
Authors:A Pascot  S Lemieux  I Lemieux  D Prud'homme  A Tremblay  C Bouchard  A Nadeau  C Couillard  A Tchernof  J Bergeron  J P Després
Affiliation:Lipid Research Center, Laval University Medical Research Center, Ste-Foy, Quebec, Canada.
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: Age-related differences in body fat and, more specifically, in the accumulation of abdominal visceral adipose tissue (AT) were examined as potential covariates of the age-related difference in the metabolic profile predictive of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk observed in young, as compared with middle-aged, premenopausal women. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Body composition, AT distribution, plasma lipoprotein-lipid levels, glucose tolerance, and plasma insulin concentrations were assessed in a sample of 122 young women (27.4+/-7.5 years, mean +/- SD) and compared with a sample of 52 middle-aged premenopausal women (49.5+/-5.3 years) who still had a normal menstrual cycle. RESULTS: Middle-aged women were characterized by elevated levels of total abdominal and visceral AT and greater body fat mass and waist circumference, as well as by higher plasma levels of total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, apolipoprotein (apo)B, and LDL-apoB compared with younger women. Furthermore, middle-aged women showed a greater glycemic response to a 75-g oral glucose load than young women (P < 0.01). In both young and middle-aged subjects, visceral AT accumulation was significantly correlated with plasma triglyceride, apoB, and LDL-apoB levels and with the cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio, as well as with plasma glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels measured in the fasting state and after the oral glucose load, and negatively correlated with HDL cholesterol levels (-0.41 < or = r < or = 0.65, P < 0.05). When variables were adjusted for levels of visceral AT and fat mass, age-related differences that were initially found in plasma apoB and LDL-apoB levels, as well as in fasting glycemia and glucose tolerance, were eliminated. CONCLUSIONS: Results of the present study suggest that even before the onset of menopause there is an age-related deterioration in the metabolic risk profile and an increase in visceral AT deposition in middle-aged women compared with young control subjects. Furthermore, our results provide support for the notion that the age-related increase in visceral AT accumulation is a significant factor involved in the deterioration of the CVD risk profile noted in premenopausal women with age.
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