Background: Decrease of both visceral fat (surgery, physical exercise) and subcutaneous fat (liposuction) is accompanied by improvement of insulin sensitivity. Methods: In this study, metabolic variables (glucose, insulin, high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol, triglycerides, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, uric acid, ferritin) and adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, entothelin-1, E-selectin) were determined in 126 morbidly obese subjects before and 1 year after bariatric restrictive surgery (laparoscopic gastric banding) and correlated with anthropometric measures, i.e., body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (waist), and with echographic measures of thickness of visceral (usVT) and subcutaneous (usST) abdominal fat. Results: Under basal conditions and after 1 year, metabolic variables correlated with BMI and waist (r from 0.157 to 0.507, p from 0.0182 to 0.0001) and with usVT (r from 0.211 to 0.512, p from 0.05 to 0.0001); insulin also correlated with usST, and adhesion molecules only correlated with BMI and usVT (r from 0.341 to 0.502, p from 0.0066 to 0.0001). Changes of metabolic variables correlated with changes of BMI and waist (r from 0.163 to 0.356, p from 0.0328 to 0.0001) and with usVT changes (r from 0.211 to 0.361, p from 0.0339 to 0.0002); changes of adhesion molecules only correlated with BMI and usVT changes (r from 0.227 to 0.361, p from 0.0444 to 0.0108). Changes of metabolic variables and of adhesion molecules virtually never correlated with changes of usST. Conclusion: These data indicate that in morbid obesity, most metabolic abnormalities are associated with visceral fat and that their improvements after weight loss are associated with decrease of visceral fat.

In morbid obesity, metabolic abnormalities and adhesion molecules correlate with visceral fat, not with subcutaneous fat: effect of weight loss through surgery / A. E. Pontiroli, F. Frigè, M. Paganelli, F. Folli. - In: OBESITY SURGERY. - ISSN 0960-8923. - 19:6(2009 Jun), pp. 745-750.

In morbid obesity, metabolic abnormalities and adhesion molecules correlate with visceral fat, not with subcutaneous fat: effect of weight loss through surgery

A. E. Pontiroli
Primo
;
F. Folli
Ultimo
2009

Abstract

Background: Decrease of both visceral fat (surgery, physical exercise) and subcutaneous fat (liposuction) is accompanied by improvement of insulin sensitivity. Methods: In this study, metabolic variables (glucose, insulin, high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol, triglycerides, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, uric acid, ferritin) and adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, entothelin-1, E-selectin) were determined in 126 morbidly obese subjects before and 1 year after bariatric restrictive surgery (laparoscopic gastric banding) and correlated with anthropometric measures, i.e., body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (waist), and with echographic measures of thickness of visceral (usVT) and subcutaneous (usST) abdominal fat. Results: Under basal conditions and after 1 year, metabolic variables correlated with BMI and waist (r from 0.157 to 0.507, p from 0.0182 to 0.0001) and with usVT (r from 0.211 to 0.512, p from 0.05 to 0.0001); insulin also correlated with usST, and adhesion molecules only correlated with BMI and usVT (r from 0.341 to 0.502, p from 0.0066 to 0.0001). Changes of metabolic variables correlated with changes of BMI and waist (r from 0.163 to 0.356, p from 0.0328 to 0.0001) and with usVT changes (r from 0.211 to 0.361, p from 0.0339 to 0.0002); changes of adhesion molecules only correlated with BMI and usVT changes (r from 0.227 to 0.361, p from 0.0444 to 0.0108). Changes of metabolic variables and of adhesion molecules virtually never correlated with changes of usST. Conclusion: These data indicate that in morbid obesity, most metabolic abnormalities are associated with visceral fat and that their improvements after weight loss are associated with decrease of visceral fat.
English
Adhesion molecules; Gastric banding; Metabolic syndrome; Obesity; Visceral fat
Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
giu-2009
Rapid Communications of Oxford
19
6
745
750
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
In morbid obesity, metabolic abnormalities and adhesion molecules correlate with visceral fat, not with subcutaneous fat: effect of weight loss through surgery / A. E. Pontiroli, F. Frigè, M. Paganelli, F. Folli. - In: OBESITY SURGERY. - ISSN 0960-8923. - 19:6(2009 Jun), pp. 745-750.
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
4
262
Article (author)
si
A. E. Pontiroli, F. Frigè, M. Paganelli, F. Folli
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/60733
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