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Gewählte Publikation:

Sudi, KM; Gallistl, S; Tröbinger, M; Payerl, D; Aigner, R; Borkenstein, MH.
The effects of changes in body mass and subcutaneous fat on the improvement in metabolic risk factors in obese children after short-term weight loss.
Metabolism. 2001; 50(11):1323-1329 Doi: 10.1053%2Fmeta.2001.27230
Web of Science PubMed FullText FullText_MUG

 

Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
Aigner Reingard
Borkenstein Helmuth Martin
Gallistl Siegfried
Payerl Doris
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Abstract:
The pattern of subcutaneous fat (SAT) is related to metabolic risk factors in obese children. Because weight loss improves the risk-factor profile, we sought to determine whether changes in SAT or SAT-pattern contribute to the improvement in the risk-factor profile after 3 weeks of a low-calorie diet and physical activities. In 22 obese boys (mean age, 11.9 years) and 40 obese girls (mean age, 12 years), fat mass (by means of impedance) and fat distribution (waist and hip circumference) were assessed. The thickness of 15 different subcutaneous adipose tissue layers (SAT-layers) was measured using a Lipometer (Moeller Messtechnik, Graz, Austria). SAT and SAT-pattern (arm-SAT, trunk-SAT, leg-SAT) were calculated. Blood samples were taken for the determination of insulin, glucose, triglycerides, and cholesterol. After 3 weeks, fat mass, waist and hip circumference, SAT, arm-SAT, trunk-SAT (all P <.0001), and leg-SAT (P <.01) were reduced. Besides glucose, metabolic parameters were lowered (all P <.001) but changes in metabolic parameter were interrelated in boys and girls. Age- and sex-adjusted regression revealed that changes in body mass contributed to the variability in changes of insulin (adjusted R(2) =.15, P =.0015). For the change in triglycerides, changes in cholesterol together with subtle alterations in glucose and changes in leg-SAT were found to be the main determinants (adjusted R(2) =.587, P <.0001). The results indicate that the change in the atherogenic and metabolic risk factor profile is largely independent from the concomitant loss in SAT. The reduction in body mass explained only a small part of the variability in changes of insulin, but leg-SAT might participate in the lowering of triglycerides, especially in boys. The contribution of SAT-pattern to the risk factor profile is an issue that needs further investigation.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Adipose Tissue - metabolism
Age Factors - metabolism
Blood Glucose - metabolism
Body Composition - physiology
Body Constitution - physiology
Body Weight - physiology
Child - physiology
Cholesterol - blood
Energy Intake - blood
Exercise - physiology
Female - physiology
Humans - physiology
Insulin - blood
Male - blood
Obesity - metabolism
Regression Analysis - metabolism
Risk Factors - metabolism
Sex Factors - metabolism
Skinfold Thickness - metabolism
Triglycerides - blood
Weight Loss - physiology

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