Fourman Lindsay T, Lu Michael T, Lee Hang, Fitch Kathleen V, Hallett Travis R, Park Jakob, Czerwonka Natalia, Weiss Julian, Stanley Takara L, Lo Janet, Grinspoon Steven K
Department of Medicine, Endocrine Division, Program in Nutritional Metabolism, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Radiology, Cardiac PET MR CT Program, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Physiol Rep. 2017 Oct;5(19). doi: 10.14814/phy2.13386. Epub 2017 Oct 16.
HIV-infected patients commonly experience changes in central and peripheral fat content as well as ectopic fat accumulation. However, whether hepatic and epicardial fat stores relate differentially to body composition or how these associations are modified by HIV status has not been well explored. A previously recruited sample of 124 HIV-infected patients and 58 healthy controls had undergone dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) and computed tomography (CT) from which body composition measures, liver-spleen ratio, and epicardial fat volume were obtained. Unique to the HIV-infected group, there was a parabolic association between abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) area and liver-spleen ratio (=0.03, inflection point 324 cm) such that hepatic fat content was greatest at the extremes of low and high SAT A quadratic model also closely described the relationship between mean leg fat and liver-spleen ratio among patients with HIV (=0.02, inflection point 4.7 kg), again suggesting greater liver fat content with both low and high leg fat. Notably, an analogous relationship of epicardial fat with SAT was not evident among HIV-infected individuals or healthy controls. In contrast, visceral adipose tissue (VAT) linearly related to both liver-spleen ratio in HIV and epicardial fat volume irrespective of HIV status in multivariable models. In conclusion, our analyses implicate both low and high SAT as risk factors for hepatic fat accumulation in HIV These findings add to growing evidence of SAT dysfunction in the setting of HIV infection, and highlight key physiologic differences between hepatic and epicardial fat depots.
感染HIV的患者通常会出现中枢和外周脂肪含量的变化以及异位脂肪堆积。然而,肝脏和心外膜脂肪储存与身体组成之间的关系是否存在差异,或者这些关联如何因HIV感染状态而改变,尚未得到充分研究。之前招募的124名感染HIV的患者和58名健康对照样本接受了双能X线吸收法(DEXA)和计算机断层扫描(CT),从中获得了身体组成测量值、肝脾比和心外膜脂肪体积。在感染HIV的组中,腹部皮下脂肪组织(SAT)面积与肝脾比之间存在抛物线关系(=0.03,拐点为324平方厘米),使得在SAT极低和极高的极端情况下肝脏脂肪含量最高。二次模型也密切描述了HIV患者平均腿部脂肪与肝脾比之间的关系(=0.02,拐点为4.7千克),再次表明腿部脂肪低和高时肝脏脂肪含量都更高。值得注意的是,在感染HIV的个体或健康对照中,心外膜脂肪与SAT之间的类似关系并不明显。相比之下,在多变量模型中,无论HIV感染状态如何,内脏脂肪组织(VAT)与HIV患者的肝脾比和心外膜脂肪体积均呈线性相关。总之,我们的分析表明,SAT低和高都是HIV患者肝脏脂肪堆积的危险因素。这些发现进一步证明了HIV感染情况下SAT功能障碍的证据越来越多,并突出了肝脏和心外膜脂肪库之间关键的生理差异。