Literature DB >> 11360146

Impaired fasting glycaemia in middle-aged women: a prospective study.

J R Guthrie1, M Ball, E C Dudley, C V Garamszegi, M L Wahlqvist, L Dennerstein, H G Burger.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate: (i) the incidence of impaired fasting glycaemia (IFG) developed over 5 y in a population-based sample of Australian-born women; (ii) prospectively the factors which are associated with the development of IFG; (iii) the association of the menopausal transition with the onset of IFG and an increase in serum insulin concentrations. DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 265 women (110 pre-, 138 peri-, 17 postmenopausal) participants in the longitudinal phase of the Melbourne Women's Midlife Health Project, aged 46-57 and with normal fasting plasma glucose concentrations at the time of the initial measure, were interviewed, had physical measurements and blood taken annually over a 5 y follow-up period.
RESULTS: During the study period 43 women (16%) recorded a fasting glucose concentration of > or =6.1 mmol/l (IFG). Women who recorded IFG prospectively had, at the time of the initial measure when fasting glucose concentrations were normal: higher body mass index (BMI), trunk skinfold thicknesses, waist and hip circumferences (P<0.005), lower SHBG, higher free androgen index and serum insulin concentrations (P<0.05), higher systolic blood pressure, serum triglyceride and lower HDL-cholesterol concentrations (P<0.05) than women whose fasting glucose concentrations remained normal. The onset of IFG was not triggered by the menopausal transition or hormone use. Changes in insulin concentration were associated with changes in BMI (P<0.05).
CONCLUSION: Women who developed IFG during the menopausal transition exhibited significantly higher levels of body fatness and dyslipidemia, premenopausally, compared with the women who did not develop IFG. The menopausal transition did not have an effect on the development of IFG, but weight gain during this period was associated with an increase in insulin concentration.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11360146     DOI: 10.1038/sj.ijo.0801569

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord


  7 in total

1.  A Longitudinal Retrospective Observational Study on Obesity Indicators and the Risk of Impaired Fasting Glucose in Pre- and Postmenopausal Women.

Authors:  Myung Ji Nam; Hyunjin Kim; Yeon Joo Choi; Kyung-Hwan Cho; Seon Mee Kim; Yong-Kyun Roh; Kyungdo Han; Jin-Hyung Jung; Yong-Gyu Park; Joo-Hyun Park; Do-Hoon Kim
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-05-16       Impact factor: 4.964

2.  Are changes in cardiovascular disease risk factors in midlife women due to chronological aging or to the menopausal transition?

Authors:  Karen A Matthews; Sybil L Crawford; Claudia U Chae; Susan A Everson-Rose; Mary Fran Sowers; Barbara Sternfeld; Kim Sutton-Tyrrell
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2009-12-15       Impact factor: 24.094

3.  Does abdominal obesity accelerate the effect of hypertriglyceridemia on impaired fasting glucose?

Authors:  Soojin Lee; Kihong Chun; Soonyoung Lee; Daejung Kim
Journal:  Yonsei Med J       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 2.759

4.  Narrowing sex differences in lipoprotein cholesterol subclasses following mid-life: the very large database of lipids (VLDL-10B).

Authors:  Kristopher J Swiger; Seth S Martin; Michael J Blaha; Peter P Toth; Khurram Nasir; Erin D Michos; Gary Gerstenblith; Roger S Blumenthal; Steven R Jones
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2014-04-22       Impact factor: 5.501

5.  Cohort profile: Women's Healthy Ageing Project (WHAP) - a longitudinal prospective study of Australian women since 1990.

Authors:  Cassandra Szoeke; Melissa Coulson; Stephen Campbell; Lorraine Dennerstein
Journal:  Womens Midlife Health       Date:  2016-10-04

6.  Cardiovascular health in the menopause transition: a longitudinal study of up to 3892 women with up to four repeated measures of risk factors.

Authors:  Gemma L Clayton; Ana Gonçalves Soares; Fanny Kilpi; Abigail Fraser; Paul Welsh; Naveed Sattar; Scott M Nelson; Kate Tilling; Deborah A Lawlor
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2022-08-17       Impact factor: 11.150

7.  Liver fat and SHBG affect insulin resistance in midlife women: the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN).

Authors:  Kylie Kavanagh; Mark A Espeland; Kim Sutton-Tyrrell; Emma Barinas-Mitchell; Samar R El Khoudary; Rachel P Wildman
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 5.002

  7 in total

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