Aging Per Se Does Not Influence Glucose Homeostasis
Diabetes Care 26(2): 480-484
Article 2003 English
Authors
PI
Pascal Imbeault
JP
Johannes B. Prins
MS
Manuela Stolic
Abstract
1 min read
OBJECTIVE—To assess the effect of age on glucose metabolism by examining 1) glucose metabolism in young and middle-aged subjects when total or regional adiposity is taken into account and 2) in vitro glucose transport in adipose tissue explants from young and middle-aged women paired for total and abdominal adiposity. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Study 1: body composition, subcutaneous abdominal and visceral adipose tissue areas, and fasting and oral glucose–stimulated glucose and insulin were measured in 84 young and 81 middle-aged men and in 110 young and 91 middle-aged women. Study 2: glucose uptake in subcutaneous abdominal and visceral adipose tissue explants were measured in eight young and eight middle-aged women. RESULTS—Study 1: young and middle-aged men showed similar subcutaneous abdominal tissue area, whereas fat mass and visceral adipose tissue were greater in middle-aged than in young men (P < 0.01). Fat mass and subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue areas were greater in middle-aged as compared with young women (P < 0.01). Fasting plasma glucose and the glucose response to an oral glucose tolerance test were significantly higher in middle-aged than in young men and women (P < 0.001). Statistical control for visceral adipose tissue area eliminated the difference seen in glucose response in men and women. Study 2: glucose transport in subcutaneous and omental adipose tissue did not differ between young and middle-aged women. CONCLUSIONS—1) Visceral obesity, more than age per se, correlates with glucose intolerance in middle-aged subjects; 2) aging does not influence in vitro adipose tissue glucose uptake.
Agnès Pascot, Simone Lemieux, Isabelle Lemieux, Denis Prud’homme, Angelo Tremblay, Claude Bouchard, André Nadeau, Charles Couillard, André Tchernof, Jean Bergeron, Jean‐Philippe Després
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