Visceral adiposity, not abdominal subcutaneous fat area, is associated with high blood pressure in Japanese men: the Ohtori study

被引:0
作者
Hideo Koh
Tomoshige Hayashi
Kyoko Kogawa Sato
Nobuko Harita
Isseki Maeda
Yoshiki Nishizawa
Ginji Endo
Wilfred Y Fujimoto
Edward J Boyko
Yonezo Hikita
机构
[1] Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine,Department of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health
[2] Epidemiologic Research and Information Center,Department of Metabolism
[3] Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System,Department of Medicine
[4] Endocrinology,undefined
[5] and Molecular Medicine,undefined
[6] Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine,undefined
[7] University of Washington,undefined
[8] The Ohtori Health Promotion Center,undefined
来源
Hypertension Research | 2011年 / 34卷
关键词
computed tomography; epidemiology; high normal blood pressure; visceral adiposity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Visceral adiposity is considered to have a key role in cardiometabolic diseases. The purpose of this study is to investigate cross-sectionally the association between intra-abdominal fat area (IAFA) measured by computed tomography (CT) and high blood pressure independent of abdominal subcutaneous fat area (ASFA) and insulin resistance. Study participants included 624 Japanese men not taking oral hypoglycemic medications or insulin. Abdominal, thoracic and thigh fat areas were measured by CT. Total fat area (TFA) was calculated as the sum of abdominal, thoracic and thigh fat area. Total subcutaneous fat area (TSFA) was defined as TFA minus IAFA. Hypertension and high normal blood pressure were defined using the 1999 criteria of the World Health Organization. Multiple-adjusted odds ratios of hypertension for tertiles of IAFA were 2.64 (95% confidence interval, 1.35–5.16) for tertile 2, and 5.08 (2.48–10.39) for tertile 3, compared with tertile 1 after adjusting for age, fasting immunoreactive insulin, diabetes status, ASFA, alcohol consumption, regular physical exercise and smoking habit. IAFA remained significantly associated with hypertension even after adjustment for ASFA, TSFA, TFA, body mass index or waist circumference, and no other measure of regional or total adiposity was associated with the odds of hypertension in models, which included IAFA. Similar results were obtained for the association between IAFA and the prevalence of high normal blood pressure or hypertension. In conclusion, greater visceral adiposity was associated with a higher odds of high blood pressure in Japanese men.
引用
收藏
页码:565 / 572
页数:7
相关论文
共 312 条
  • [1] Ohlson LO(1985)The influence of body-fat distribution on the incidence of diabetes-mellitus: 13.5 years of follow-up of the participants in the study of men born in 1913 Diabetes 34 1055-1058
  • [2] Larsson B(1994)Obesity, fat distribution, and weight-gain as risk-factors for clinical diabetes in men Diabetes Care 17 961-969
  • [3] Svardsudd K(1990)Body fat distribution, blood pressure, and hypertension: a prospective cohort study of men in normative aging study Ann Epidemiol 1 33-48
  • [4] Welin L(1998)Body fat distribution and hypertension incidence in women and men: the NHANES I Epidemiologic Follow-Up Study Int J Obes 22 127-134
  • [5] Eriksson H(1990)Incidence of hypertension and stroke in relation to body-fat distribution and other risk-factors in older women Stroke 21 701-706
  • [6] Wilhelmsen L(1992)Greater effect of glycemia on incidence of hypertension in women than in men Diabetes Care 15 1277-1284
  • [7] Björntorp P(1996)Metabolic precursors of hypertension: the San Antonio Heart Study Arch Intern Med 156 1994-2001
  • [8] Tibblin G(1998)Abdominal adiposity and coronary heart disease in women JAMA 280 1843-1848
  • [9] Chan JM(2007)Body fat distribution and risk of coronary heart disease in men and women in the European prospective investigation into cancer and nutrition in Norfolk cohort: a population-based prospective study Circulation 116 2933-2943
  • [10] Rimm EB(2008)Visceral adiposity, not abdominal subcutaneous fat area, is associated with an increase in future insulin resistance in Japanese Americans Diabetes 57 1269-1275