Zhang Tao, Zhang Huijie, Li Shengxu, Li Ying, Liu Yaozhong, Fernandez Camilo, Harville Emily, Bazzano Lydia, He Jiang, Chen Wei
From the Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shandong University, Jinan, China (T.Z.); Departments of Epidemiology (T.Z., H.Z., S.L., C.F., E.H., L.B., J.H., W.C.) and Biostatistics and Bioinformatics (Y. Liu), Tulane University Health Sciences Center, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA; Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, the First Hospital of Xiamen, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China (H.Z.); and Department of Nutrition and Food Hygiene, School of Public Health, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China (Y. Li).
Hypertension. 2016 Jan;67(1):56-62. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.115.06509. Epub 2015 Nov 16.
Adiposity and insulin resistance are closely associated with hypertension. This study aims to investigate whether the association between adiposity and hypertension is modified by insulin resistance. The cohort consisted of 1624 middle-aged normotensive black and white adults aged 18 to 43 years at baseline who followed for 16 years on average. Overweight/obesity at baseline was defined as body mass index (BMI) ≥25, and insulin resistance was measured using homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance. Prevalence of incident hypertension was compared between the insulin-sensitive adiposity and insulin-resistant adiposity groups. The prevalence of incident hypertension was higher in the insulin-resistant adiposity than in the insulin-sensitive adiposity group (32.1% versus 22.1%, P<0.001). In multivariable logistic analyses, adjusted for baseline age, race, sex, follow-up years, and smoking, baseline insulin-resistant obesity was associated with incident hypertension (odds ratio, 1.9; P=0.008). Odds ratios did not differ between blacks and whites (P=0.238). Of note, the odds ratios of BMI associated with hypertension significantly increased with increasing quartiles of baseline homeostasis model assessment (odds ratio, 1.3, 1.1, 1.5, and 2.5 in quartiles I, II, III, and IV, respectively; P=0.006 for trend). Slopes of increasing follow-up blood pressure with baseline BMI, measured as regression coefficients (β), were significantly greater in insulin-resistant than in insulin-sensitive individuals (β=0.74 versus β=0.35 for systolic blood pressure, P=0.004 for difference; β=0.51 versus β=0.23 for diastolic blood pressure, P=0.001 for difference). These findings suggest that insulin resistance has a synergistic effect on the obesity-hypertension association in young adults, indicating that the role of adiposity in the development of hypertension is modified by insulin resistance.
肥胖与胰岛素抵抗与高血压密切相关。本研究旨在调查肥胖与高血压之间的关联是否会因胰岛素抵抗而改变。该队列由1624名基线时年龄在18至43岁之间的中年血压正常的黑人和白人成年人组成,平均随访16年。基线时超重/肥胖定义为体重指数(BMI)≥25,胰岛素抵抗采用胰岛素抵抗稳态模型评估法进行测量。比较胰岛素敏感型肥胖组和胰岛素抵抗型肥胖组的新发高血压患病率。胰岛素抵抗型肥胖组的新发高血压患病率高于胰岛素敏感型肥胖组(32.1%对22.1%,P<0.001)。在多变量逻辑分析中,对基线年龄、种族、性别、随访年限和吸烟情况进行调整后,基线胰岛素抵抗性肥胖与新发高血压相关(比值比,1.9;P=0.008)。黑人和白人之间的比值比无差异(P=0.238)。值得注意的是,与高血压相关的BMI比值比随着基线稳态模型评估四分位数的增加而显著升高(四分位数I、II、III和IV的比值比分别为1.3、1.1、1.5和2.5;趋势P=0.006)。以回归系数(β)衡量,胰岛素抵抗个体中随访血压随基线BMI升高的斜率显著大于胰岛素敏感个体(收缩压β=0.74对β=0.35,差异P=0.004;舒张压β=0.51对β=0.23,差异P=0.001)。这些发现表明,胰岛素抵抗对年轻人肥胖与高血压之间的关联具有协同作用,表明肥胖在高血压发生发展中的作用会因胰岛素抵抗而改变。