Literature DB >> 7052036

Clustering of anthropometric parameters, glucose tolerance, and serum lipids in children with high and low beta- and pre-beta-lipoproteins. Bogalusa Heart Study.

A W Voors, D W Harsha, L S Webber, B Radhakrishnamurthy, S R Srinivasan, G S Berenson.   

Abstract

Children initially aged 21/2 to 14 years living in Bogalusa, Louisiana (n = 2530) were examined twice, 3 years apart, for fasting serum pre-beta- and beta-lipoprotein cholesterol (beta-LPC) levels. Based on averages of these levels, the children were ranked for pre-beta- and beta-LPC in combinations of extreme quintiles (low-low, high-high) or quartiles (low-high, high-low), n = 388, and were reexamined for serum lipids, lipoprotein cholesterol, glucose tolerance, and anthropometry. Skinfolds were thicker in whites than in blacks except for subscapular skinfold. Children in the high-high stratum were heavier and more obese. The postglucose insulin level was positively correlated with fasting serum triglycerides and pre-beta-LPC. Compared with other strata, high-high strata showed more clustering among half-hour and 1-hour plasma insulin, serum triglycerides and pre-beta-LPC, and trunk skinfolds. We conclude that racial differences in lipid and carbohydrate metabolism occur in all four strata, and that a strong clustering occurs more in the high-high stratum, which may, in part, explain the coincidence of several high cardiovascular risk factor levels observed in the same children. These observations document in free-living children changes of obesity, plasma glucose, and insulin metabolism related to serum lipoproteins that are involved in the early natural history of atherosclerosis.

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Year:  1982        PMID: 7052036     DOI: 10.1161/01.atv.2.4.346

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arteriosclerosis        ISSN: 0276-5047


  3 in total

1.  Body fatness and risk for elevated blood pressure, total cholesterol, and serum lipoprotein ratios in children and adolescents.

Authors:  D P Williams; S B Going; T G Lohman; D W Harsha; S R Srinivasan; L S Webber; G S Berenson
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Persistence of juvenile-onset obesity over eight years: the Bogalusa Heart Study.

Authors:  D S Freedman; C L Shear; G L Burke; S R Srinivasan; L S Webber; D W Harsha; G S Berenson
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1987-05       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Defining Obesity Using a Biological End Point in Sri Lankan Children.

Authors:  Vithanage Pujitha Wickramasinghe; Carukshi Arambepola; Priyantha Bandara; Mithila Abeysekera; Suran Kuruppu; Prasanna Dilshan; Buddhini Samanthi Dissanayake
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  2016-07-07       Impact factor: 1.967

  3 in total

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