| Literature DB >> 28920146 |
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We seek to describe the relationship between diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular risk in migrant South Asians compared to native white Europeans, and to determine the temporal change in this relationship over recent years. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular risk; Diabetes mellitus; South Asian; Type 2 diabetes mellitus
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28920146 PMCID: PMC5602092 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-017-0929-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Mechanisms potentially underlying the higher risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus in South Asians
| Mechanism | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Adiposity | At a given BMI, South Asians have a higher fat mass and a larger proportion of fat in deep abdominal subcutaneous and visceral deposits compared to white Europeans. There is also some evidence for greater liver fat. Such findings are in keeping with greater insulin resistance in South Asians |
| Lean body mass | South Asians have less lean tissue than white Europeans for any given BMI. This relative lack of skeletal muscle and capacity for glucose disposal contributes to greater insulin resistance and diabetes risk |
| ß-cell function | Compared to white Europeans, South Asians have greater ß-cell function until adulthood but earlier and more rapid decline in insulin production beyond middle age. Such evidence requires verification using robust measures of beta-cell function |
| Fitness and skeletal muscle function | South Asians obtain a lower level of cardiorespiratory fitness than white Europeans for the same level of physical activity and have evidence of reduced fat oxidation (indicative of impaired muscle metabolism) during submaximal exercise compared with BMI-matched white Europeans. Once again, studies using more robust measures of muscle function are required to verify these findings |
| Lifestyle | South Asians are less physically active than white Europeans. There is no consistent evidence linking South Asian dietary patterns to increased diabetes risk; however, short term overfeeding may have greater adverse effects in South Asians |
| Genetic factors | There is some evidence that epigenetic signals may contribute to the increased risk of diabetes in South Asians. These signals appear to relate mostly to impaired beta-cell function. Genetic risk factors for diabetes do not appear to significantly differ between South Asians and white Europeans |
| Foetal programming | There is little robust evidence for foetal programming underlying the excess risk of diabetes in South Asians; observational data suggests that increased maternal fasting blood glucose levels mediate the relationship between South Asian ethnicity and greater fat mass in offspring but the long-term implications of this finding is not clear |
(Adapted from: Sattar N, Gill JMR. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2015;3(12):1004–16, with permission from Elsevier) [6••]
Fig. 1Relative risk of mortality in migrant South Asians with diabetes versus white Europeans reported in papers spanning the last 3–4 decades. All relevant studies discussed in the text [4, 5, 11, 13–16, 17••]. IHD ischaemic heart disease
Fig. 2Speculated mechanisms for changing cardiovascular mortality risks in migrant South Asians with diabetes relative to white Europeans. Several proposed mechanisms require confirmation from future studies