Okosun I S, Chandra K M, Choi S, Christman J, Dever G E, Prewitt T E
Department of Community Medicine, Mercer University School of Medicine, Macon, Georgia 31207, USA.
Obes Res. 2001 Jan;9(1):1-9. doi: 10.1038/oby.2001.1.
To evaluate the impact of generalized, abdominal, and truncal fat deposits on the risk of hypertension and/or diabetes and to determine whether ethnic differences in these fat patterns are independently associated with increased risk for the hypertension-diabetes comorbidity (HDC).
Data (n = 7075) from the Third U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were used for this investigation. To assess risks of hypertension and/or diabetes that were due to different fat patterns, odds ratios of men and women with various cut-points of adiposities were compared with normal subjects in logistic regression models, adjusting for age, smoking, and alcohol intake. To evaluate the contribution of ethnic differences in obesity to the risks of HDC, we compared blacks and Hispanics with whites.
Generalized and abdominal obesities were independently associated with increased risk of hypertension, diabetes and HDC in white, black, and Hispanic men and women. The risk of HDC due to generalized, truncal, and abdominal obesities tended to be higher in whites than blacks and Hispanics. In men, the contribution of black and Hispanic ethnicities to the increased risk of HDC due to the various obesity phenotypes was approximately 73% and approximately 61%, respectively. The corresponding values for black and Hispanic women were approximately 115% and approximately 125%, respectively.
In addition to advocating behavioral lifestyles to curb the epidemic of obesity among at-risk populations in the United States, there is also the need for primary health care practitioners to craft their advice to the degree and type of obesity in these at-risk groups.
评估全身、腹部和躯干脂肪沉积对高血压和/或糖尿病风险的影响,并确定这些脂肪分布模式中的种族差异是否与高血压-糖尿病合并症(HDC)风险增加独立相关。
本研究使用了美国第三次国家健康和营养检查调查的数据(n = 7075)。为了评估不同脂肪分布模式导致的高血压和/或糖尿病风险,在逻辑回归模型中,将不同肥胖切点的男性和女性与正常受试者的优势比进行比较,并对年龄、吸烟和饮酒量进行了调整。为了评估肥胖种族差异对HDC风险的影响,我们将黑人和西班牙裔与白人进行了比较。
全身肥胖和腹部肥胖与白人、黑人及西班牙裔男性和女性患高血压、糖尿病和HDC的风险增加独立相关。白人因全身、躯干和腹部肥胖导致的HDC风险往往高于黑人和西班牙裔。在男性中,黑人及西班牙裔种族因各种肥胖表型导致的HDC风险增加的贡献率分别约为73%和约61%。黑人及西班牙裔女性的相应值分别约为115%和约125%。
除了倡导改变行为生活方式以遏制美国高危人群中的肥胖流行外,初级保健从业者还需要根据这些高危人群的肥胖程度和类型提供建议。