Guven S, El-Bershawi A, Sonnenberg G E, Wilson C R, Hoffmann R G, Krakower G R, Kissebah A H
Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Clinical Nutrition and Clinical Research Center, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA.
Diabetes. 1999 Feb;48(2):347-52. doi: 10.2337/diabetes.48.2.347.
Obesity is a complex disease with multiple features that has confounded efforts to unravel its pathophysiology. As a means of distinguishing primary from secondary characteristics, we compared levels of fasting plasma leptin and insulin in a cohort of weight-reduced obese women who have attained and maintained a normal BMI for more than 1 year with the levels in cohorts of never-obese and currently obese women. Weight-reduced obese women showed decreased plasma concentrations of leptin and insulin compared with obese women, but these levels remained significantly higher than those of never-obese women. Plasma leptin levels were highly correlated with plasma insulin levels (r = 0.60, P < 0.001). To further explore relationships with body composition, total body fat was determined by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and body fat distribution by computed tomography in subsets of these groups. Weight-reduced obese women had a significantly greater percent body fat and subcutaneous abdominal fat mass than did the never-obese women, and these were highly correlated with plasma leptin (r = 0.90, P < 0.001, and r = 0.52, P < 0.001, respectively). In these weight-reduced obese women, visceral fat mass was similar to that of the never-obese. The insulin sensitivity index and first-phase insulin response were also comparable. These results demonstrate that higher leptin levels in weight-reduced obese women are related to the higher total fat and particularly the subcutaneous fat masses. Normalization of visceral fat mass in the weight-reduced obese was accompanied by normalization of insulin sensitivity index and first-phase insulin response. This study suggests that increases in plasma leptin and insulin in obesity are secondary features of the obese state.
肥胖是一种具有多种特征的复杂疾病,这使得揭示其病理生理学的努力变得复杂。作为区分主要特征和次要特征的一种方法,我们比较了一组体重减轻且已达到并维持正常体重指数超过1年的肥胖女性的空腹血浆瘦素和胰岛素水平,与从未肥胖和当前肥胖女性队列中的水平。与肥胖女性相比,体重减轻的肥胖女性血浆瘦素和胰岛素浓度降低,但这些水平仍显著高于从未肥胖的女性。血浆瘦素水平与血浆胰岛素水平高度相关(r = 0.60,P < 0.001)。为了进一步探索与身体成分的关系,通过双能X线吸收法测定了这些组亚组中的全身脂肪,并通过计算机断层扫描测定了身体脂肪分布。体重减轻的肥胖女性的体脂百分比和腹部皮下脂肪量显著高于从未肥胖的女性,且这些与血浆瘦素高度相关(分别为r = 0.90,P < 0.001和r = 0.52,P < 0.001)。在这些体重减轻的肥胖女性中,内脏脂肪量与从未肥胖的女性相似。胰岛素敏感性指数和第一相胰岛素反应也相当。这些结果表明,体重减轻的肥胖女性中较高的瘦素水平与较高的总脂肪尤其是皮下脂肪量有关。体重减轻的肥胖女性内脏脂肪量的正常化伴随着胰岛素敏感性指数和第一相胰岛素反应的正常化。这项研究表明,肥胖中血浆瘦素和胰岛素的增加是肥胖状态的次要特征。