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In addition to overweight/obesity, visceral adipose tissue is considered an important indicator of insulin resistance and diabetes
.
Recently, the heart blood vessels published a research article on the disease areas authoritative magazine JAHA, the researchers designed to test the hypothesis that specific area of visceral fat tissue may regulate different biological effects of new-onset diabetes, regardless of overall obesity
.
Researchers quantified various visceral fat tissue measurements of 1039 asymptomatic participants who underwent multi-detector computed tomography, including epicardial fat tissue, paracardiac fat tissue, atrial fat, peri-aortic fat, and thoracic aorta Adipose tissue
.
Researchers explored the association between visceral adipose tissue and baseline glycemic index and new-onset diabetes
In addition to anthropometric indicators, epicardial adipose tissue, paracardiac adipose tissue, atrial fat, peri-aortic fat and thoracic aortic adipose tissue, and glycemic index (fasting blood glucose, postprandial blood glucose, HbA1c, and homeostatic model evaluation) Insulin resistance) are different and independently correlated
.
The superposition of atrial fat and thoracic aortic adipose tissue with the insulin resistance assessed by the homeostasis model of age, gender, body mass index, and baseline increases the likelihood of baseline diabetes (from 67.
It can be seen that regional specific visceral obesity may have different performance in distinguishing baseline blood glucose abnormalities or diabetes, and have different predictive performance in new-onset diabetes
.
The data from this study suggests that atrial fat may be a potential marker for new-onset diabetes
Region-specific visceral obesity may have different performance in distinguishing between baseline abnormal blood glucose or diabetes, and has different predictive performance in new-onset diabetes
Original source:
Kuo‐Tzu Sung,et al.