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Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men

OBJECTIVE—To understand why atherogenic risk differs more between diabetic and nondiabetic women than between diabetic and nondiabetic men. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS AND RESULTS—Measures of cardiovascular risk, body composition, and serum hormones from the baseline examinations of the Insulin Resi...

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Autores principales: Williams, Ken, Tchernof, Andre, Hunt, Kelly J., Wagenknecht, Lynne E., Haffner, Steven M., Sniderman, Allan D.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2584135/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18809621
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db08-0787
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author Williams, Ken
Tchernof, Andre
Hunt, Kelly J.
Wagenknecht, Lynne E.
Haffner, Steven M.
Sniderman, Allan D.
author_facet Williams, Ken
Tchernof, Andre
Hunt, Kelly J.
Wagenknecht, Lynne E.
Haffner, Steven M.
Sniderman, Allan D.
author_sort Williams, Ken
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE—To understand why atherogenic risk differs more between diabetic and nondiabetic women than between diabetic and nondiabetic men. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS AND RESULTS—Measures of cardiovascular risk, body composition, and serum hormones from the baseline examinations of the Insulin Resistance Atherosclerosis Study on 524 nondiabetic women, 258 diabetic women, 421 nondiabetic men, and 220 diabetic men were compared to detect greater adverse differences in women than in men. Systolic blood pressure; apolipoprotein B (apoB); total cholesterol; apoB–to–apoA-I ratio; non-HDL cholesterol; LDL particle count, small LDL, and intermediate-density lipoprotein by nuclear magnetic resonance; and C-reactive protein exhibited significant diabetes-sex interaction (P < 0.05). ApoB exhibited the most significant interaction (P = 0.0005). Age- and ethnicity-adjusted apoB means were lower in nondiabetic women than nondiabetic men (102.4 vs. 106.8 mg/dl, P < 0.05) but higher in diabetes (115.7 vs. 110.2 mg/dl, P < 0.01). Plotted against BMI, waist circumference was 6% higher and hip circumference 10% lower in diabetic than nondiabetic women (both P < 0.05), whereas the circumference measures did not differ conspicuously between diabetic and nondiabetic men. CONCLUSIONS—In diabetic women, an elevated level of atherogenic particles, as manifested by apoB and LDL particle count, which may result from abdominal adiposity, represents a major treatable cardiovascular risk factor.
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spelling pubmed-25841352009-12-01 Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men Williams, Ken Tchernof, Andre Hunt, Kelly J. Wagenknecht, Lynne E. Haffner, Steven M. Sniderman, Allan D. Diabetes Pathophysiology OBJECTIVE—To understand why atherogenic risk differs more between diabetic and nondiabetic women than between diabetic and nondiabetic men. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS AND RESULTS—Measures of cardiovascular risk, body composition, and serum hormones from the baseline examinations of the Insulin Resistance Atherosclerosis Study on 524 nondiabetic women, 258 diabetic women, 421 nondiabetic men, and 220 diabetic men were compared to detect greater adverse differences in women than in men. Systolic blood pressure; apolipoprotein B (apoB); total cholesterol; apoB–to–apoA-I ratio; non-HDL cholesterol; LDL particle count, small LDL, and intermediate-density lipoprotein by nuclear magnetic resonance; and C-reactive protein exhibited significant diabetes-sex interaction (P < 0.05). ApoB exhibited the most significant interaction (P = 0.0005). Age- and ethnicity-adjusted apoB means were lower in nondiabetic women than nondiabetic men (102.4 vs. 106.8 mg/dl, P < 0.05) but higher in diabetes (115.7 vs. 110.2 mg/dl, P < 0.01). Plotted against BMI, waist circumference was 6% higher and hip circumference 10% lower in diabetic than nondiabetic women (both P < 0.05), whereas the circumference measures did not differ conspicuously between diabetic and nondiabetic men. CONCLUSIONS—In diabetic women, an elevated level of atherogenic particles, as manifested by apoB and LDL particle count, which may result from abdominal adiposity, represents a major treatable cardiovascular risk factor. American Diabetes Association 2008-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2584135/ /pubmed/18809621 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db08-0787 Text en Copyright © 2008, American Diabetes Association https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.
spellingShingle Pathophysiology
Williams, Ken
Tchernof, Andre
Hunt, Kelly J.
Wagenknecht, Lynne E.
Haffner, Steven M.
Sniderman, Allan D.
Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men
title Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men
title_full Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men
title_fullStr Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men
title_full_unstemmed Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men
title_short Diabetes, Abdominal Adiposity, and Atherogenic Dyslipoproteinemia in Women Compared With Men
title_sort diabetes, abdominal adiposity, and atherogenic dyslipoproteinemia in women compared with men
topic Pathophysiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2584135/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18809621
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db08-0787
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