Ethnic differences in the effects of hepatic fat deposition on insulin resistance in nonobese middle school girls

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Abstract

Objective In nonobese youth, to investigate whether hepatic fat deposition and its metabolic consequences vary between ethnic groups. Design and Methods Thirty-two nonobese girls (12 Hispanic White [H] and 20 non-Hispanic White [NHW] girls), aged 11-14 years old were recruited. Outcome measures were MRI measured hepatic proton density fat fraction (hepatic PDFF), BMI Z-score, waist circumference, fasting insulin, glucose, adiponectin, sex hormone-binding globulin [SHBG], ALT, AST, triglycerides, and HOMA-IR. Results There were no significant differences in mean BMI Z-scores (P = 0.546) or hepatic PDFF (P = 0.275) between H and NHW girls; however, H girls showed significant correlations between hepatic PDFF and markers of IR (fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, adiponectin, SHBG, triglycerides; all P < 0.05), while NHW girls showed no significant correlations. Matched by hepatic PDFF or BMI Z-score, H girls had more evidence of IR for a given hepatic PDFF (mean insulin, HOMA-IR, and SHBG; all P < 0.05) or BMI Z-score (mean insulin and HOMA-IR; all P < 0.01) than NHW girls. Conclusions In nonobese female youth, ethnicity-related differences in effects of hepatic fat on IR are evident, so that in H girls, a given amount of hepatic fat appears to result in a more predictable and greater degree of IR than in NHW girls. © 2013 The Obesity Society.

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Wolfgram, P. M., Connor, E. L., Rehm, J. L., Eickhoff, J. C., Reeder, S. B., & Allen, D. B. (2014). Ethnic differences in the effects of hepatic fat deposition on insulin resistance in nonobese middle school girls. Obesity, 22(1), 243–248. https://doi.org/10.1002/oby.20521

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