P Chou1, K C Lin, H Y Lin, S T Tsai. 1. Community Medicine Research Center and Institute of Public Health, National Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To explore gender differences in the relationship of serum uric acid levels with fasting serum insulin and fasting plasma glucose concentrations among an adult Chinese nondiabetic population in Kinmen, Taiwan. METHODS: A total of 7,483 nondiabetic subjects (4,265 women, 3,218 men, aged 30 to 89 years) were involved in a community based epidemiologic study. Those with known or newly diagnosed diabetes were excluded. Overnight fasting blood samples were drawn for serum uric acid, glucose, insulin, lipid, and other biochemical measurements. Demographic and clinical variables including body mass index (weight/height2), waist-to-hip ratio, and blood pressure were measured and documented during face-to-face interviews with structured questionnaires. RESULTS: Stratified analyses revealed that (1) serum uric acid levels were positively associated with hyperinsulinemia and HOMA-insulin resistance in both men and women after adjusting for hypertriglyceridemia, hypertension, obesity, and plasma glucose levels; and (2) serum uric acid levels were more strongly associated with hyperinsulinemia and plasma glucose levels in women than in men. CONCLUSION; Hyperuricemia was positively associated with hyperinsulinemia among patients of both sexes without diabetes. Elevated levels of uric acid should alert physicians to the possibility of insulin resistance. The serum uric acid level was associated with insulin resistance and plasma glucose levels more strongly in females than in males in our study population.
OBJECTIVE: To explore gender differences in the relationship of serum uric acid levels with fasting serum insulin and fasting plasma glucose concentrations among an adult Chinese nondiabetic population in Kinmen, Taiwan. METHODS: A total of 7,483 nondiabetic subjects (4,265 women, 3,218 men, aged 30 to 89 years) were involved in a community based epidemiologic study. Those with known or newly diagnosed diabetes were excluded. Overnight fasting blood samples were drawn for serum uric acid, glucose, insulin, lipid, and other biochemical measurements. Demographic and clinical variables including body mass index (weight/height2), waist-to-hip ratio, and blood pressure were measured and documented during face-to-face interviews with structured questionnaires. RESULTS: Stratified analyses revealed that (1) serum uric acid levels were positively associated with hyperinsulinemia and HOMA-insulin resistance in both men and women after adjusting for hypertriglyceridemia, hypertension, obesity, and plasma glucose levels; and (2) serum uric acid levels were more strongly associated with hyperinsulinemia and plasma glucose levels in women than in men. CONCLUSION; Hyperuricemia was positively associated with hyperinsulinemia among patients of both sexes without diabetes. Elevated levels of uric acid should alert physicians to the possibility of insulin resistance. The serum uric acid level was associated with insulin resistance and plasma glucose levels more strongly in females than in males in our study population.
Authors: Di Cheng; Chunyan Hu; Rui Du; Hongyan Qi; Lin Lin; Xueyan Wu; Lina Ma; Kui Peng; Mian Li; Min Xu; Yu Xu; Yufang Bi; Weiqing Wang; Yuhong Chen; Jieli Lu Journal: Front Med Date: 2020-04-29 Impact factor: 4.592
Authors: Christian S Göbl; Latife Bozkurt; Johannes Lueck; Mona El-Samahi; Peter Grösser; Martin Clodi; Anton Luger; Alexandra Kautzky-Willer Journal: Wien Klin Wochenschr Date: 2012-10-16 Impact factor: 1.704