Relationship between fat distribution and lipid and apolipoprotein profiles in young teenagers

2007 
The influence of obesity and fat distribution on serum levels of lipoprotein and apolipoprotein was investigated in 294 Japanese junior high school children (12-13 years of age). Serum levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLC) (P= 0.013), triglycerides (TG) (P= 0.0006), and apolipoprotein B (apoB) (P= 0.003), and the apoB/A-I ratio (P= 0.005) were significantly higher and serum levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC) (P= 0.00003) and apoA-1(P = 0.003) were significantly lower in obese boys than in non-obese boys. The serum levels of TG (P = 0.013) and the apoB/A-1 ratio (P= 0.011) were significantly higher and the serum levels of HDLC (P= 0.004) was significantly lower in obese girls than in non-obese girls. The LDLC/apoB ratio was lower in obese girls than in non-obese girls (P= 0.03). Obesity ( 20% of ideal weight) was strongly correlated with the serum levels of lipids and apolipoproteins in boys; this relationship was less clear in girls. The degree of obesity and the body mass index (BMI) were more strongly correlated with serum levels of lipids and apolipoproteins in boys than in girls. In boys, atherogenic-lipoproteins and apolipoproteins, such as LDLC and apoB, showed a stronger correlation with the thickness of the triceps skinfold, while in girls the anti-atherogenic lipoproteins and apolipoproteins, such as HDLC and apoA-1, showed a stronger correlation with both the triceps and the subscapular skinfold thicknesses. In girls the relationships between the BMI and the degree of obesity and the thickness of the subscapular skinfold (S) thickness were similar to the relationships between those parameters and the triceps skinfold (T) thickness. In boys, these parameters showed a stronger correlation with the subscapular skinfold thickness than with the triceps skinfold thickness. The correlation coefficients for the relationships between skinfold thickness and lipid and apolipoprotein levels were similar to the coefficients for the relationships between skinfold thicknesses and the severity of obesity and the BMI. The distribution of central-type fat accumulation, which is indicated by the thickness of the subscapular skinfold, the S/T ratio and S-T value, was inversely correlated with the HDLC level in both boys and girls. The degree of obesity was strongly correlated with the atherogenic lipoprotein profile in boys, in part because the subscapular skinfold thickness was strongly correlated with the degree of obesity and the BMI. In girls, the correlations between indices of central-type obesity and atherogenic lipid and apolipoprotein profiles were stronger than in boys. These data suggest that childhood obesity may be an early cardiovascular risk factor.
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