Association of measures of body fat with serum alpha-tocopherol and its metabolites in middle-aged individuals — Fleur L. Meulmeester (2021) | RDL Network
Association of measures of body fat with serum alpha-tocopherol and its metabolites in middle-aged individuals
Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases 31(8): 2407-2415
Article 2021 English
Authors
FM
Fleur L. Meulmeester
JL
Jiao Luo
LM
Leon G. Martens
Abstract
1 min read
Background and aimsThe accumulation of fat increases the formation of lipid peroxides, which are partly scavenged by alpha-tocopherol (α-TOH). Here, we aimed to investigate the associations between different measures of (abdominal) fat and levels of urinary α-TOH metabolites in middle-aged individuals.Methods and resultsIn this cross-sectional analysis in the Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity study (N = 511, 53% women; mean [SD] age of 55 [6.1] years), serum α-TOH and α-TOH metabolites from 24-h urine were measured as alpha-tocopheronolactone hydroquinone (α-TLHQ, oxidized) and alpha-carboxymethyl-hydroxychroman (α-CEHC, enzymatically converted) using liquid-chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Body mass index and total body fat were measured, and abdominal subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue (aSAT and VAT) were assessed using magnetic resonance imaging. Using multivariable-adjusted linear regression analyses, we analysed the associations of BMI, TBF, aSAT and VAT with levels of urinary α-TOH metabolites, adjusted for confounders. We observed no evidence for associations between body fat measures and serum α-TOH. Higher BMI and TBF were associated with lower urinary levels of TLHQ (0.95 [95%CI: 0.90, 1.00] and 0.94 [0.88, 1.01] times per SD, respectively) and with lower TLHQ relative to CEHC (0.93 [0.90, 0.98] and 0.93 [0.87, 0.98] times per SD, respectively). We observed similar associations for VAT (TLHQ: 0.94 [0.89, 0.99] times per SD), but not for aSAT.ConclusionsOpposite to our research hypothesis, higher abdominal adiposity was moderately associated with lower levels of oxidized α-TOH metabolites, which might reflect lower vitamin E antioxidative activity in individuals with higher abdominal fat instead.
Jiao Luo, Fleur L. Meulmeester, Leon G. Martens, Nadia Ashrafi, Renée de Mutsert, Dennis O. Mook‐Kanamori, Frits R. Rosendaal, Ko Willems van Dijk, Saskia le Cessie, Kevin Mills, Raymond Noordam, Diana van Heemst
Jiao Luo, Yasufumi Hashimoto, Leon G. Martens, Fleur L. Meulmeester, Nadia Ashrafi, Dennis O. Mook‐Kanamori, Frits R. Rosendaal, J. Wouter Jukema, Ko Willems van Dijk, Kevin Mills, Saskia le Cessie, Raymond Noordam, Diana van Heemst
Leon G. Martens, Jiao Luo, Fleur L. Meulmeester, Nadia Ashrafi, Esther Winters-van Eekelen, Renée de Mutsert, Dennis O. Mook‐Kanamori, Frits R. Rosendaal, Ko Willems van Dijk, Kevin Mills, Raymond Noordam, Diana van Heemst
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