1. Association of adipose tissue blood flow with fat depot sizes and adipokines in women.
- Author
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Andersson J, Karpe F, Sjöström LG, Riklund K, Söderberg S, and Olsson T
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Body Composition, Body Mass Index, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Nitric Oxide blood, Postmenopause blood, Premenopause blood, Subcutaneous Fat blood supply, Young Adult, Adipokines blood, Blood Glucose metabolism, Intra-Abdominal Fat blood supply, Leptin blood, Obesity blood
- Abstract
Objective: To explore possible associations between adipose tissue (AT) blood flow (ATBF), AT depot sizes and adipocyte-derived hormones (adipokines) in women., Subjects: In all, 43 healthy women were divided into four groups: normal-weight (n=11) and obese (n=11) pre-menopausal women and normal-weight (n=10) and obese (n=11) post-menopausal women., Methods: Fasting levels of adipokines were obtained, and a single-slice computed tomography scan at the level of L4-L5 was used to estimate fat depot sizes. ATBF was assessed by xenon washout while in a fasting state and after oral glucose load. We also measured glucose, insulin and non-esterified fatty acids., Results: Total, subcutaneous and visceral AT areas strongly correlated with ATBF (all P<0.001). Circulating leptin levels strongly and inversely correlated with ATBF (P=0.001), but this association did not remain after adjustment for body mass index. Adiponectin was not associated with blood flow., Conclusion: ATBF is closely linked to subcutaneous and visceral AT size. Further analyses are needed to determine possible mediators of this association, including mechanistic studies to assess a putative role for leptin as a significant modulator of blood flow.
- Published
- 2012
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