Gault A, O'Dea K, Rowley K G, McLeay T, Traianedes K
Deakin Institute of Human Nutrition, Deakin University, Malvern, Victoria, Australia.
Diabetes Care. 1996 Nov;19(11):1269-73. doi: 10.2337/diacare.19.11.1269.
To determine the age- and sex-specific prevalence of diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and coronary heart disease risk factors in a remote central Australian Aboriginal community maintaining some degree of traditional lifestyle, living in homeland communities on their ancestral land.
A cross-sectional survey of 437 subjects > or = 15 years of age (189 men, 248 women), representing 80% of the adult population residing in the community at the time of the survey, was performed and the following parameters measured: BMI, glucose tolerance, circulating insulin and lipids, and blood pressure.
The mean BMI for this population was 22.9 +/- 4.8 kg/m2. The prevalence of diabetes in the age group of 15-34 years (103 men and 140 women) was 2 and 6% for men and women, respectively. In the 35-years-and-older age group (86 men and 108 women), diabetes prevalence was 19 and 13% for men and women, respectively. Over half the diabetic subjects did not exhibit fasting hyperglycemia. IGT occurred in 8 and 15% of younger men and women, respectively, and in 17 and 32% of older men and women, respectively. Smoking was common among men (53% current smokers) but rare among women (2% current smokers). The prevalence of hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia, hypertension, and overweight rose with increasing degrees of glucose intolerance. The two communities adjacent to the only store in the area had a higher prevalence of abnormal glucose tolerance than did the more remote homeland communities (odds ratio for abnormal glucose tolerance: 2.92; 95% CI 1.51-5.63).
Despite their relative leanness, this Aboriginal population exhibited relatively high prevalences of IGT and diabetes without fasting hyperglycemia. The data suggest a protective effect of a decentralized mode of living, as opposed to a more urbanized lifestyle, on the occurrence of glucose intolerance. Abnormal lipid profiles (particularly high triglycerides and low HDL cholesterol) and the high prevalence of smoking in men indicated a high-risk profile for coronary heart disease in this population.
确定在澳大利亚中部偏远地区保持一定传统生活方式、居住在祖传土地上的原住民社区中,糖尿病、糖耐量受损(IGT)以及冠心病危险因素在不同年龄和性别的患病率。
对437名年龄大于或等于15岁的受试者(189名男性,248名女性)进行横断面调查,这些受试者占调查时居住在该社区成年人口的80%,并测量了以下参数:体重指数(BMI)、糖耐量、循环胰岛素和血脂以及血压。
该人群的平均BMI为22.9±4.8kg/m²。在15 - 34岁年龄组(103名男性和140名女性)中,男性和女性的糖尿病患病率分别为2%和6%。在35岁及以上年龄组(86名男性和108名女性)中,男性和女性的糖尿病患病率分别为19%和13%。超过一半的糖尿病患者未表现出空腹血糖升高。IGT在年轻男性和女性中的发生率分别为8%和15%,在年长男性和女性中的发生率分别为17%和32%。吸烟在男性中很常见(53%为当前吸烟者),但在女性中很少见(2%为当前吸烟者)。高胆固醇血症、高甘油三酯血症、高血压和超重的患病率随着糖耐量受损程度的增加而上升。与该地区唯一商店相邻的两个社区的糖耐量异常患病率高于更偏远的家园社区(糖耐量异常的优势比:2.92;95%可信区间1.51 - 5.63)。
尽管该原住民人群相对偏瘦,但IGT和糖尿病患病率相对较高,且无空腹血糖升高。数据表明,与城市化程度更高的生活方式相比,分散居住模式对糖耐量异常的发生具有保护作用。异常的血脂谱(特别是高甘油三酯和低高密度脂蛋白胆固醇)以及男性吸烟率高表明该人群患冠心病的风险较高。