Literature DB >> 10938014

Race, visceral adipose tissue, plasma lipids, and lipoprotein lipase activity in men and women: the Health, Risk Factors, Exercise Training, and Genetics (HERITAGE) family study.

J P Després1, C Couillard, J Gagnon, J Bergeron, A S Leon, D C Rao, J S Skinner, J H Wilmore, C Bouchard.   

Abstract

Abdominal obesity is associated with numerous metabolic alterations, such as hypertriglyceridemia and low levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. However, compared with abdominally obese white individuals, abdominally obese black individuals have been characterized by higher plasma HDL cholesterol levels, suggesting that the impact of abdominal fat accumulation on the lipoprotein-lipid profile may differ among ethnic groups. Therefore, we have compared the associations between body fatness, visceral adipose tissue (AT) accumulation, and metabolic risk variables in a sample of 247 white men and 240 white women versus a sample of 93 black men and 143 black women. Although no difference in mean total body fatness was found between the 2 race groups, white men had higher levels of visceral AT than did black men (P<0.001). Despite the fact that black women had a greater body fat content than did white women, black women had levels of visceral AT that were similar to those of white women, suggesting a lower susceptibility to visceral obesity in black women. This lower accumulation of visceral AT in blacks was accompanied by significantly reduced apolipoprotein B concentrations and ratios of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol as well as higher plasma HDL cholesterol levels (P<0.05) compared with those values in whites. Irrespective of sex, higher postheparin plasma hepatic lipase (HL) and lower lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activities were found in whites, resulting in an HL/LPL ratio that was twice as high in whites as in blacks (P<0.005). Although differences in lipoprotein-lipid levels were noted between whites and blacks, results from multiple regression analyses revealed that after control for morphometric and metabolic variables of the study (body fat mass, visceral AT, LPL, HL, and age), ethnicity had, per se, only a minor contribution to the variance in plasma lipoprotein levels. Thus, our results suggest that the higher plasma HDL cholesterol levels and the generally more cardioprotective plasma lipoprotein profile found in abdominally obese black versus white individuals are explained, at least to a certain extent, by a lower visceral AT deposition and a higher plasma LPL activity in black individuals.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10938014     DOI: 10.1161/01.atv.20.8.1932

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol        ISSN: 1079-5642            Impact factor:   8.311


  122 in total

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2.  Biogeographic ancestry, self-identified race, and admixture-phenotype associations in the Heart SCORE Study.

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3.  Ethnic differences in lipoprotein subclasses in obese adolescents: importance of liver and intraabdominal fat accretion.

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4.  Significant associations of age, menopausal status and lifestyle factors with visceral adiposity in African-American and European-American women.

Authors:  Ellen W Demerath; Nikki L Rogers; Derek Reed; Miryoung Lee; Audrey C Choh; Roger M Siervogel; Wm Cameron Chumlea; Bradford Towne; Stefan A Czerwinski
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Review 5.  The Interplay Between Sex, Ethnicity, and Adipose Tissue Characteristics.

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Journal:  Curr Obes Rep       Date:  2015-06

6.  Effect of gender on intra-abdominal fat in teenagers and young adults.

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7.  Primary Prevention of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease in Women.

Authors:  Rebeccah A McKibben; Mahmoud Al Rifai; Lena M Mathews; Erin D Michos
Journal:  Curr Cardiovasc Risk Rep       Date:  2015-12-29

8.  Higher post-absorptive skeletal muscle LPL activity in African American vs. non-Hispanic White pre-menopausal women.

Authors:  Evan S Berk; Julia A Johnson; Mijeong Lee; Kuan Zhang; Carol N Boozer; F Xavier Pi-Sunyer; Susan K Fried; Jeanine B Albu
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 5.002

9.  Greater adipose tissue infiltration in skeletal muscle among older men of African ancestry.

Authors:  Iva Miljkovic; Jane A Cauley; Moira A Petit; Kristine E Ensrud; Elsa Strotmeyer; Yahtyng Sheu; Christopher L Gordon; Bret H Goodpaster; Clareann H Bunker; Alan L Patrick; Victor W Wheeler; Lewis H Kuller; Kimberly A Faulkner; Joseph M Zmuda
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2009-05-19       Impact factor: 5.958

10.  Relationships between measures of adiposity with subclinical atherosclerosis in patients with type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Mingxia Yuan; Fang-Chi Hsu; Donald W Bowden; Jianzhao Xu; S Carrie Smith; Lynne E Wagenknecht; Mary E Comeau; Jasmin Divers; Thomas C Register; J Jeffrey Carr; Carl D Langefeld; Barry I Freedman
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2016-06-29       Impact factor: 5.002

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