Li Li, Gower Barbara A, Shelton Richard C, Wu Xiaoyan
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United States.
Department of Nutrition Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United States.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2017 Nov 10;8:292. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00292. eCollection 2017.
Prior research suggests a bidirectional relationship between obesity and major depressive disorder (MDD), but the results have been heterogeneous. Differences between males and females in the association of MDD with obesity may contribute to inconsistent results. Thus, this study was designed to determine whether sex has a differential effect on the relationship between MDD and obesity, and to explore the potential mechanisms.
All participants were diagnosed with MDD, and depression severity was measured using the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Body weight and height were measured to calculate body mass index (BMI). Body composition, including total fat, trunk fat, android fat, and visceral fat mass, was measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Subjects provided blood samples, and serum was extracted for measuring the inflammatory factors using human immunoassay kits.
Among all obesity measures, depressed women had greater BMI and total body fat. By contrast, depressed men had greater visceral fat mass. However, only in depressed women was depression correlated with several measures of obesity, including BMI, total body fat, and visceral fat mass. A stepwise multiple regression analysis was conducted, and only visceral fat entered the regression model and was most predictive of depression in women (β = 0.60, = 0.007). Moreover, compared with depressed men, depressed women had higher leptin levels after controlling for BMI, total body fat, and visceral fat.
These results highlight gender differences in determining the association between obesity and depression, and elevated leptin level is a potential mechanism linking MDD to obesity in depressed women. Understanding a gender-specific relationship between obesity and MDD would allow clinicians to target and personalize therapies in the hope of improving health outcomes.
先前的研究表明肥胖与重度抑郁症(MDD)之间存在双向关系,但结果并不一致。MDD与肥胖关联中的性别差异可能导致结果不一致。因此,本研究旨在确定性别对MDD与肥胖之间的关系是否有不同影响,并探索潜在机制。
所有参与者均被诊断为MDD,使用17项汉密尔顿抑郁量表测量抑郁严重程度。测量体重和身高以计算体重指数(BMI)。通过双能X线吸收法测量身体成分,包括总脂肪、躯干脂肪、男性型脂肪和内脏脂肪量。受试者提供血样,提取血清并使用人类免疫分析试剂盒测量炎症因子。
在所有肥胖测量指标中,抑郁女性的BMI和全身脂肪更高。相比之下,抑郁男性的内脏脂肪量更大。然而,仅在抑郁女性中,抑郁与多种肥胖测量指标相关,包括BMI、全身脂肪和内脏脂肪量。进行了逐步多元回归分析,只有内脏脂肪进入回归模型,并且对女性抑郁的预测性最强(β = 0.60,P = 0.007)。此外,在控制BMI、全身脂肪和内脏脂肪后,与抑郁男性相比,抑郁女性的瘦素水平更高。
这些结果突出了在确定肥胖与抑郁之间关联时的性别差异,瘦素水平升高是抑郁女性中MDD与肥胖之间联系的潜在机制。了解肥胖与MDD之间的性别特异性关系将使临床医生能够针对并个性化治疗,以期改善健康结果。