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Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study

Previous cross-sectional studies have indicated that low relative appendicular lean mass (ALM) against body weight (divided by body weight, ALM/Wt, or divided by body mass index, ALM/BMI) was negatively associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS). Conversely, previous cross-sectional studies have indi...

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Autores principales: Yamada, Yosuke, Murakami, Haruka, Kawakami, Ryoko, Gando, Yuko, Nanri, Hinako, Nakagata, Takashi, Watanabe, Daiki, Yoshida, Tsukasa, Hatamoto, Yoichi, Yoshimura, Eiichi, Sanada, Kiyoshi, Miyatake, Nobuyuki, Miyachi, Motohiko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9536572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36201472
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263213
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author Yamada, Yosuke
Murakami, Haruka
Kawakami, Ryoko
Gando, Yuko
Nanri, Hinako
Nakagata, Takashi
Watanabe, Daiki
Yoshida, Tsukasa
Hatamoto, Yoichi
Yoshimura, Eiichi
Sanada, Kiyoshi
Miyatake, Nobuyuki
Miyachi, Motohiko
author_facet Yamada, Yosuke
Murakami, Haruka
Kawakami, Ryoko
Gando, Yuko
Nanri, Hinako
Nakagata, Takashi
Watanabe, Daiki
Yoshida, Tsukasa
Hatamoto, Yoichi
Yoshimura, Eiichi
Sanada, Kiyoshi
Miyatake, Nobuyuki
Miyachi, Motohiko
author_sort Yamada, Yosuke
collection PubMed
description Previous cross-sectional studies have indicated that low relative appendicular lean mass (ALM) against body weight (divided by body weight, ALM/Wt, or divided by body mass index, ALM/BMI) was negatively associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS). Conversely, previous cross-sectional studies have indicated that the absolute ALM or ALM divided by squared height (ALM/Ht(2)) were positively associated with MetS. The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate the association between low absolute or relative skeletal muscle mass, leg muscle power, or percent body fat and the development of MetS in Japanese women in a 7-y prospective study. The study participants included 346 Japanese women aged 26 to 85 years. The participants were divided into low and high groups based on the median values of ALM/Wt, ALM/BMI, ALM/Ht(2), absolute ALM, or leg power. The longitudinal relationship between ALM indices or leg power and MetS development was examined using Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox regression models (average follow-up duration 7 years, range 1 to 10 years). During follow-up, 24 participants developed MetS. MetS incidence was higher in the low ALM/Wt group than the high ALM/Wt group even after controlling for age, obesity, waist circumference, family history of diabetes, smoking, and physical activity [adjusted hazard ratio = 5.60 (95% CI; 1.04–30.0)]. In contrast, MetS incidence was lower in the low ALM/Ht(2) group than the high ALM/Ht(2) group [adjusted hazard ratio = 10.6 (95%CI; 1.27–89.1)]. MetS incidence was not significantly different between the low and high ALM/BMI, absolute ALM, and leg power groups. Both ALM/Ht(2) and ALM/Wt were not significant predictive variables for MetS development when fat mass or percent body fat was taken into account in the Cox model. At the very least, the results of this study underscore the importance of body composition measurements in that percent body fat, but not ALM, is associated with MetS development.
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spelling pubmed-95365722022-10-07 Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study Yamada, Yosuke Murakami, Haruka Kawakami, Ryoko Gando, Yuko Nanri, Hinako Nakagata, Takashi Watanabe, Daiki Yoshida, Tsukasa Hatamoto, Yoichi Yoshimura, Eiichi Sanada, Kiyoshi Miyatake, Nobuyuki Miyachi, Motohiko PLoS One Research Article Previous cross-sectional studies have indicated that low relative appendicular lean mass (ALM) against body weight (divided by body weight, ALM/Wt, or divided by body mass index, ALM/BMI) was negatively associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS). Conversely, previous cross-sectional studies have indicated that the absolute ALM or ALM divided by squared height (ALM/Ht(2)) were positively associated with MetS. The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate the association between low absolute or relative skeletal muscle mass, leg muscle power, or percent body fat and the development of MetS in Japanese women in a 7-y prospective study. The study participants included 346 Japanese women aged 26 to 85 years. The participants were divided into low and high groups based on the median values of ALM/Wt, ALM/BMI, ALM/Ht(2), absolute ALM, or leg power. The longitudinal relationship between ALM indices or leg power and MetS development was examined using Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox regression models (average follow-up duration 7 years, range 1 to 10 years). During follow-up, 24 participants developed MetS. MetS incidence was higher in the low ALM/Wt group than the high ALM/Wt group even after controlling for age, obesity, waist circumference, family history of diabetes, smoking, and physical activity [adjusted hazard ratio = 5.60 (95% CI; 1.04–30.0)]. In contrast, MetS incidence was lower in the low ALM/Ht(2) group than the high ALM/Ht(2) group [adjusted hazard ratio = 10.6 (95%CI; 1.27–89.1)]. MetS incidence was not significantly different between the low and high ALM/BMI, absolute ALM, and leg power groups. Both ALM/Ht(2) and ALM/Wt were not significant predictive variables for MetS development when fat mass or percent body fat was taken into account in the Cox model. At the very least, the results of this study underscore the importance of body composition measurements in that percent body fat, but not ALM, is associated with MetS development. Public Library of Science 2022-10-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9536572/ /pubmed/36201472 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263213 Text en © 2022 Yamada et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yamada, Yosuke
Murakami, Haruka
Kawakami, Ryoko
Gando, Yuko
Nanri, Hinako
Nakagata, Takashi
Watanabe, Daiki
Yoshida, Tsukasa
Hatamoto, Yoichi
Yoshimura, Eiichi
Sanada, Kiyoshi
Miyatake, Nobuyuki
Miyachi, Motohiko
Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study
title Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study
title_full Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study
title_fullStr Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study
title_full_unstemmed Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study
title_short Association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in Japanese women: A 7-year prospective study
title_sort association between skeletal muscle mass or percent body fat and metabolic syndrome development in japanese women: a 7-year prospective study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9536572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36201472
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263213
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