Literature DB >> 16308839

The relationship between insulin sensitivity and serum adiponectin levels in three population groups.

W F Ferris1, N H Naran, N J Crowther, P Rheeder, L van der Merwe, N Chetty.   

Abstract

Reduced plasma adiponectin levels are associated with insulin resistance. Black South Africans, like African Americans, are more insulin-resistant than BMI-matched white subjects, as are Asian Indians. We investigated whether this interethnic variation in insulin resistance is due to differences in plasma adiponectin levels. Blood and anthropometric measurements were taken from black, white and Asian-Indian subjects. Serum adiponectin, lipids, glucose and insulin were measured; insulin sensitivity was calculated using HOMA. Black (HOMA = 2.62 +/- 0.99) and Asian-Indian subjects (HOMA = 3.41 +/- 2.85) were more insulin-resistant than BMI-matched white (HOMA = 1.76 +/- 0.63) subjects (p = 0.0001). Furthermore, the white subjects had higher adiponectin levels (8.11 +/- 4.39 microg/ml) compared to black (5.71 +/- 2.50 microg/ml) and Asian Indian (5.86 +/- 2.50 microg/ml) subjects (p = 0.003). When all ethnic groups were combined, multiple regression analysis demonstrated that serum adiponectin levels corrected for BMI and ethnicity did not correlate with HOMA, but did explain 10.0 % of the variance in HDL-cholesterol levels. Within each ethnic group, adiponectin only correlated inversely with HOMA in white subjects. Adiponectin may play a role in determining serum HDL-cholesterol levels, but ethnic variation in insulin sensitivity is not dependent on serum levels of this adipokine. The relationship between adiponectin and insulin resistance varies across ethnic groups.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16308839     DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-870580

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Metab Res        ISSN: 0018-5043            Impact factor:   2.936


  31 in total

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Review 4.  Metabolic syndrome in blacks: are the criteria right?

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Review 5.  Racial/Ethnic Differences in Insulin Resistance and Beta Cell Function: Relationship to Racial Disparities in Type 2 Diabetes among African Americans versus Caucasians.

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6.  Review: Metabolic Syndrome in Black South African Women.

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7.  The human immunodeficiency virus and the cardiometabolic syndrome in the developing world: an African perspective.

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8.  Ethnic variation in adiponectin and leptin levels and their association with adiposity and insulin resistance.

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9.  Higher C-reactive protein and soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor levels are associated with poor physical function and disability: a cross-sectional analysis of a cohort of late middle-aged African Americans.

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10.  Serum adiponectin in relation to race-ethnicity and vascular risk factors in the Northern Manhattan Study.

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