Evans Department of Medicine and Whitaker Cardiovascular Institute, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of General Surgery, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013 Dec 17;62(24):2297-305. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2013.07.078. Epub 2013 Sep 4.
The aim of this study was to determine whether the effects of weight loss on arterial function are differentially modified by insulin status.
Clinical studies suggest that plasma insulin levels may predict the extent of cardiovascular benefit achieved with weight loss in obese individuals, but mechanisms are currently unknown.
We prospectively followed 208 overweight or obese patients (body mass index [BMI] ≥25 kg/m(2)) receiving medical/dietary (48%) or bariatric surgical (52%) weight-loss treatment during a median period of 11.7 months (interquartile range: 4.6 to 13 months). We measured plasma metabolic parameters and vascular endothelial function using ultrasound at baseline and following weight-loss intervention and stratified analyses by median plasma insulin levels.
Patients age 45 ± 1 years, with BMI 45 ± 9 kg/m(2), experienced 14 ± 14% weight loss during the study period. In individuals with higher baseline plasma insulin levels (above median >12 μIU/ml; n = 99), ≥10% weight loss (compared with <10%) significantly improved brachial artery macrovascular flow-mediated vasodilation and microvascular reactive hyperemia (p < 0.05 for all). By contrast, vascular function did not change significantly in the lower insulin group (≤12 μIU/ml; n = 109) despite a similar degree of weight loss. In analyses using a 5% weight loss cut point, only microvascular responses improved in the higher insulin group (p = 0.02).
Insulin status is an important determinant of the positive effect of weight reduction on vascular function with hyperinsulinemic patients deriving the greatest benefit. Integrated improvement in both microvascular and macrovascular function was associated with ≥10% weight loss. Reversal of insulin resistance and endothelial dysfunction may represent key therapeutic targets for cardiovascular risk reduction in obesity.
本研究旨在确定体重减轻对动脉功能的影响是否受胰岛素状态的差异调节。
临床研究表明,血浆胰岛素水平可能预测肥胖个体通过体重减轻获得的心血管益处的程度,但目前机制尚不清楚。
我们前瞻性地随访了 208 名超重或肥胖患者(体重指数 [BMI]≥25 kg/m²),他们在中位数为 11.7 个月(四分位距:4.6 至 13 个月)的时间内接受了医学/饮食(48%)或减肥手术(52%)减肥治疗。我们在基线和减肥干预后使用超声测量了血浆代谢参数和血管内皮功能,并按中位数血浆胰岛素水平进行了分层分析。
患者年龄为 45±1 岁,BMI 为 45±9 kg/m²,在研究期间体重减轻了 14±14%。在基线血浆胰岛素水平较高的患者中(高于中位数>12 μIU/ml;n=99),与<10%体重减轻相比(n=99),≥10%体重减轻显著改善了肱动脉大血管血流介导的血管扩张和微血管反应性充血(所有 p<0.05)。相比之下,在胰岛素水平较低的组(≤12 μIU/ml;n=109)中,尽管体重减轻程度相似,但血管功能并没有显著变化。在使用 5%体重减轻切点的分析中,仅在高胰岛素组中微血管反应得到改善(p=0.02)。
胰岛素状态是体重减轻对血管功能的积极影响的重要决定因素,高胰岛素血症患者获益最大。微血管和大血管功能的综合改善与≥10%的体重减轻相关。逆转胰岛素抵抗和内皮功能障碍可能是肥胖患者降低心血管风险的关键治疗靶点。