Williams D R, Moffitt P S, Fisher J S, Bashir H V
Diabetologia. 1987 Feb;30(2):72-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00274574.
A survey of adults living in two predominantly Aboriginal communities in eastern New South Wales revealed a crude prevalence of clinically diagnosed diabetes of 6.7% in Aboriginals. 1.4% of Aboriginal subjects investigated with 75 g oral glucose tolerance tests were found to have previously undiagnosed diabetes, and 2.8% had impaired glucose tolerance. 53% of women and 27% of men were obese as judged by body mass index. The age-sex standardised prevalence of diabetes in Aboriginals (previously diagnosed and newly detected) was 7.8%, which is substantially lower than the 15.6% prevalence found in the Aboriginal population of Bourke (central New South Wales). HLA antigen studies on these same individuals suggest approximately 60% genetic admixture from non-Aboriginal sources. Insulin response to oral glucose and mean body mass index were both related to non-Aboriginal genetic admixture with higher values in Aboriginal subjects than in their non-Aboriginal neighbours, and highest values were found in those with no detectable non-Aboriginal HLA haplotypes. The extent of genetic admixture in these communities may partly explain the lower prevalence of diabetes when compared with that found in the Aboriginal population of Bourke.
一项针对居住在新南威尔士州东部两个主要为原住民社区的成年人的调查显示,原住民临床诊断糖尿病的粗患病率为6.7%。在接受75克口服葡萄糖耐量试验的原住民受试者中,1.4%被发现患有先前未诊断出的糖尿病,2.8%有糖耐量受损。根据体重指数判断,53%的女性和27%的男性肥胖。原住民(先前诊断出和新检测出的)糖尿病的年龄性别标准化患病率为7.8%,这大大低于伯克(新南威尔士州中部)原住民人口中15.6%的患病率。对这些相同个体的HLA抗原研究表明,约60%的基因混合来自非原住民来源。口服葡萄糖后的胰岛素反应和平均体重指数均与非原住民基因混合有关,原住民受试者的值高于其非原住民邻居,在没有可检测到的非原住民HLA单倍型的人中发现的值最高。与伯克的原住民人口相比,这些社区的基因混合程度可能部分解释了糖尿病患病率较低的原因。