Abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue: a protective fat depot?

SA Porter, JM Massaro, U Hoffmann, RS Vasan… - Diabetes …, 2009 - Am Diabetes Assoc
SA Porter, JM Massaro, U Hoffmann, RS Vasan, CJ O'Donnel, CS Fox
Diabetes care, 2009Am Diabetes Assoc
OBJECTIVE Obesity is associated with increased metabolic and cardiovascular risk. The
ectopic fat hypothesis suggests that subcutaneous fat may be protective, but this theory has
yet to be fully explored. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Participants from the
Framingham Heart Study (n= 3,001, 48.5% women) were stratified by visceral adipose
tissue (VAT) into sex-specific tertiles. Within these tertiles, age-adjusted abdominal
subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) tertiles were examined in relation to cardiometabolic …
OBJECTIVE
Obesity is associated with increased metabolic and cardiovascular risk. The ectopic fat hypothesis suggests that subcutaneous fat may be protective, but this theory has yet to be fully explored.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
Participants from the Framingham Heart Study (n = 3,001, 48.5% women) were stratified by visceral adipose tissue (VAT) into sex-specific tertiles. Within these tertiles, age-adjusted abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) tertiles were examined in relation to cardiometabolic risk factors.
RESULTS
In the lowest VAT tertile, risk factor prevalence was low, although systolic blood pressure in women and rates of high triglycerides, impaired fasting glucose, hypertension, and the metabolic syndrome in men increased with increasing SAT tertile (all P < 0.04). In contrast, in the top VAT tertile, lower triglycerides were observed in men with increasing SAT (64.4% high triglycerides in SAT tertile 1 vs. 52.7% in SAT tertile 3, P = 0.03). Similar observations were made for women, although results were not statistically significant (50.6% high triglycerides in SAT tertile 1 vs. 41.0% in tertile 3, P = 0.10). Results in the highest VAT tertile were notable for a lack of increase in the prevalence of low HDL in men and women and in rates of impaired fasting glucose in men with increasing subcutaneous fat, despite sizable differences in BMI across SAT tertiles (27.1 to 36.3 kg/m2[women]; 28.1 to 35.7 kg/m2[men]).
CONCLUSIONS
Although adiposity increases the absolute risk of metabolic and cardiovascular disease, abdominal subcutaneous fat is not associated with a linear increase in the prevalence of all risk factors among the obese, most notably, high triglycerides.
Am Diabetes Assoc