Hanley Carrie, Matthews Karen A, Brooks Maria M, Janssen Imke, Budoff Matthew J, Sekikawa Akira, Mulukutla Suresh, El Khoudary Samar R
University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, Pittsburgh, PA.
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Pittsburgh, PA.
Menopause. 2018 Jan;25(1):38-45. doi: 10.1097/GME.0000000000000945.
Cardiovascular fat (CF) is associated with greater coronary heart disease (CHD) risk. Postmenopausal women have greater CF volumes than premenopausal women, and the association between specific CF depot volumes and CHD risk is more pronounced after menopause. Race, central adiposity, and visceral adiposity are important factors that could impact CF volumes. Whether racial differences in CF volumes and in their associations with central (visceral fat [VAT]) and general adiposity (body mass index [BMI]) exist in midlife women have not been addressed before.
In all, 524 participants from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (mean age: 50.9 ± 2.9 years; 62% White and 38% Black) who had data on CF volumes (epicardial fat [EAT], paracardial fat [PAT], total heart fat, and aortic perivascular fat), VAT, and BMI were studied.
In models adjusted for age, study site, menopausal status, comorbid conditions, alcohol consumption, and physical activity, Black women had 19.8% less EAT, 24.5% less PAT, 20.4% less total heart fat, and 13.2% less perivascular fat than White women (all P < 0.001). These racial differences remained significant after additional adjustment for BMI or VAT. Race significantly modified associations between adiposity measures and CF volumes. Every 1-SD higher BMI was associated with 66.7% greater PAT volume in White compared with 42.4% greater PAT volume in Black women (P = 0.004), whereas every 1-SD higher VAT was associated with 32.3% greater EAT volume in Black compared with 25.3% greater EAT volume in White women (P = 0.039).
Racial differences were found in CF volumes and in their associations with adiposity measures among midlife women. Future research should determine how race-specific changes in CF volumes impact CHD risk in women.
心血管脂肪(CF)与冠心病(CHD)风险增加相关。绝经后女性的CF量高于绝经前女性,且特定CF储存部位的量与CHD风险之间的关联在绝经后更为明显。种族、中心性肥胖和内脏性肥胖是可能影响CF量的重要因素。中年女性CF量及其与中心性(内脏脂肪[VAT])和总体肥胖(体重指数[BMI])的关联是否存在种族差异此前尚未有研究涉及。
对来自全国女性健康研究(平均年龄:50.9±2.9岁;62%为白人,38%为黑人)的524名参与者进行研究,这些参与者有CF量(心外膜脂肪[EAT]、心包旁脂肪[PAT]、全心脂肪和主动脉血管周围脂肪)、VAT和BMI的数据。
在根据年龄、研究地点、绝经状态、合并症、饮酒情况和身体活动进行调整的模型中,黑人女性的EAT比白人女性少19.8%,PAT少24.5%,全心脂肪少20.4%,血管周围脂肪少13.2%(所有P<0.001)。在进一步根据BMI或VAT进行调整后,这些种族差异仍然显著。种族显著改变了肥胖指标与CF量之间的关联。每增加1个标准差的BMI,白人女性的PAT量增加66.7%,而黑人女性增加42.4%(P=0.004);每增加1个标准差的VAT,黑人女性的EAT量增加32.3%,而白人女性增加25.3%(P=0.039)。
在中年女性中发现了CF量及其与肥胖指标的关联存在种族差异。未来的研究应确定CF量的种族特异性变化如何影响女性的CHD风险。