Burchfiel C M, Curb J D, Sharp D S, Rodriguez B L, Arakaki R, Chyou P H, Yano K
Honolulu Epidemiology Research Unit, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, HI 96817, USA.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 1995 Dec;15(12):2213-21. doi: 10.1161/01.atv.15.12.2213.
The role of insulin in cardiovascular disease is uncertain, and studies in elderly or minority populations are infrequent. Fasting and 2-hour insulin concentrations and their cross-sectional associations with cardiovascular risk factors were examined in 3562 elderly (aged 71 to 93 years) Japanese American men from the Honolulu Heart Program who were reexamined between 1991 and 1993. Insulin distributions were skewed (mean and median: 16.8 and 12 microU/mL for fasting; 117.2 and 93 microU/mL for 2-hour); fasting but not 2-hour insulin levels declined significantly with age (P < .0001 and P = .54, respectively). Factors most strongly correlated with insulin included measures of obesity, fat distribution, and levels of triglyceride, glucose (r = .38 to r = .50 fasting, r = .21 to r = .27 2-hour), and HDL cholesterol (r = -.41 and r = -.22, respectively). Other correlates included fibrinogen, hematocrit, heart rate, blood pressure, cigarettes per day (all positive), alcohol, physical activity, and forced vital capacity (negative). Associations were also evident across risk factor quintiles. Insulin levels were significantly elevated in men with hypertension and diabetes. In multiple linear regression analyses, log10 fasting insulin was positively and independently associated with body mass index, triglycerides, glucose, fibrinogen, hematocrit, heart rate, diabetes, and hypertension and negatively associated with HDL cholesterol, physical activity, and forced vital capacity. In general, results were similar for log10 2-hour insulin and when subjects who fasted < 12 hours or had diabetes were excluded. Substitution of medication use and blood pressure for hypertension indicated independent associations of medication use but not blood pressure with insulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
胰岛素在心血管疾病中的作用尚不确定,针对老年人群或少数族裔人群的研究较少。我们对来自檀香山心脏项目的3562名日裔美国老年男性(年龄在71至93岁之间)进行了检查,这些男性在1991年至1993年间接受了复查,检测了他们的空腹和餐后2小时胰岛素浓度及其与心血管危险因素的横断面关联。胰岛素分布呈偏态(空腹时均值和中位数分别为16.8和12微单位/毫升;餐后2小时为117.2和93微单位/毫升);空腹胰岛素水平随年龄显著下降,但餐后2小时胰岛素水平无明显变化(P分别为<.0001和P = .54)。与胰岛素相关性最强的因素包括肥胖、脂肪分布、甘油三酯、血糖水平(空腹时r = .38至r = .50,餐后2小时r = .21至r = .27)以及高密度脂蛋白胆固醇(分别为r = -.41和r = -.22)。其他相关因素包括纤维蛋白原、血细胞比容、心率、血压、每日吸烟量(均为正相关)、饮酒量、体力活动和用力肺活量(负相关)。在危险因素五分位数之间也存在明显关联。高血压和糖尿病男性的胰岛素水平显著升高。在多元线性回归分析中,log10空腹胰岛素与体重指数、甘油三酯、血糖、纤维蛋白原、血细胞比容、心率、糖尿病和高血压呈正相关且独立相关,与高密度脂蛋白胆固醇、体力活动和用力肺活量呈负相关。总体而言,log10餐后2小时胰岛素的结果相似,排除空腹<12小时或患有糖尿病的受试者后结果也相似。用药物使用和血压替代高血压进行分析表明,药物使用与胰岛素独立相关,但血压与胰岛素无此关联。(摘要截短于250字)