Abdominal Visceral Fat and Fasting Insulin Are Important Predictors of 24-Hour GH Release Independent of Age, Gender, and Other Physiological Factors — Jody L. Clasey (2001) | RDL Network
Abdominal Visceral Fat and Fasting Insulin Are Important Predictors of 24-Hour GH Release Independent of Age, Gender, and Other Physiological Factors
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 86(8): 3845-3852
Article 2001 English
Authors
JC
Jody L. Clasey
AW
Arthur Weltman
JP
Jim Patrie
Abstract
1 min read
Numerous physiological factors modulate GH secretion, but these variables are not independent of one another. We studied 40 younger (20–29 yr.; 21 men and 19 women) and 62 older (57–80 yr.; 35 men and 27 women) adults to determine the contributions of several demographic and physiological factors to the variability in integrated 24-h GH concentrations. Serum GH was measured every 10 min for 24 h in an enhanced sensitivity chemiluminescence assay. The predictor variables included: age group (young or old), gender, abdominal visceral fat (by computed tomography), total body fat mass and percentage body fat by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, serum IGF-I, fasting serum insulin, 24-h mean estradiol and testosterone, and peak oxygen uptake by graded exercise (treadmill) testing. Multiple ordinary least squares regression analysis was used to quantitatively assess the individual contribution that each predictive measure made to explain the variability among values of integrated 24-h GH concentrations while in the presence of the remaining predictors. The model explained 65% of the variance in integrated 24-h GH concentrations. Abdominal visceral fat (P < 0.002) and fasting insulin (P < 0.008) were consistently important predictors of integrated 24-h GH concentrations independent of age group, gender, and all other predictor variables. Although serum IGF-I was an important overall predictor of integrated 24-h GH concentrations (P = 0.002), this relationship was present only in the young subjects and was modulated by gender. The remaining variables failed to contribute significantly to the model. We conclude that abdominal visceral fat and fasting insulin are important predictors of integrated 24-h GH concentrations in healthy adults, independent of age and gender. Serum IGF-I is an important predictor of integrated 24-h GH concentrations in young but not older subjects. Bidirectional feedback between each of these three factors and GH secretion may account for the strong relationships observed.
Arthur Weltman, Jean Després, Jody L. Clasey, Judy Y. Weltman, Laurie Wideman, Jill A. Kanaley, James T. Patrie, Jean Bergeron, Michael O. Thorner, Claude Bouchard, Mark L. Hartman
Yuling Hong, Jean‐Pierre Després, Treva Rice, André Nadeau, Michael A. Province, Jacques Gagnon, Arthur S. Leon, James S. Skinner, J H Wilmore, Claude Bouchard, D. C. Rao
Renée de Mutsert, Karin B. Gast, Ralph L. Widya, Eelco J.P. de Koning, Ingrid M. Jazet, Hildo J. Lamb, Saskia le Cessie, Albert de Roos, Johannes W. A. Smit, Frits R. Rosendaal, Martin den Heijer
Agnès Pascot, Simone Lemieux, Isabelle Lemieux, Denis Prud’homme, Angelo Tremblay, Claude Bouchard, André Nadeau, Charles Couillard, André Tchernof, Jean Bergeron, Jean‐Philippe Després
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.