Associations of Insulin Levels With Left Ventricular Structure and Function in American Indians

The Strong Heart Study

  1. Arzu Ilercil1,
  2. Richard B. Devereux2,
  3. Mary J. Roman2,
  4. Mary Paranicas2,
  5. Michael J. O’Grady2,
  6. Elisa T. Lee3,
  7. Thomas K. Welty4,
  8. Richard R. Fabsitz5 and
  9. Barbara V. Howard6
  1. 1Montefiore Medical Center of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York
  2. 2Department of Medicine, Cornell Medical Center, New York, New York
  3. 3University of Oklahoma Health Science Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  4. 4Aberdeen Area Tribal Chairmen’s Health Board, Rapid City, South Dakota
  5. 5National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Maryland
  6. 6MedStar Research Institute, Washington, DC

    Abstract

    We evaluated the association of insulin and echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) measurements in 1,388 (45% men) nondiabetic American Indian participants in the Strong Heart Study (SHS). Significant (all P < 0.05) relations were found in men and women between log10 fasting insulin and LV mass (r = 0.24 and 0.26), left atrial diameter (r = 0.25 and 0.28), posterior wall thickness (r = 0.20 and 0.26), septal thickness (r = 0.19 and 0.24), LV diameter (r = 0.17 and 0.16), and cardiac output (r = 0.20 and 0.24) and in women relative wall thickness (r = 0.11) and peripheral resistance (r = −0.17). In regression analyses, adjusting for BMI, age, height, and systolic pressure, fasting insulin was independently correlated with cardiac output in men and relative wall thickness and septal thickness in women (all P < 0.05). The 97th percentiles of fasting insulin (25 μU/ml for men, and 23 μU/ml for women) in 163 apparently normal (BMI <26; blood pressure <140/90; and absence of diabetes, valvular disease, LV wall motion abnormality, or antihypertensive treatment) SHS participants were used to separate normal from elevated fasting insulin levels. Adjusting for age, BMI, and height, men with elevated insulin levels had larger LV diameters (5.41 vs. 5.16 cm; P = 0.05), higher cardiac output (5.5 vs. 4.9 l/min; P < 0.001), and lower peripheral resistance (1,487 vs. 1,666; P = 0.01), paralleling results of regression analyses. Positive relations between insulin and heart size in nondiabetic adults are largely due to associations with body size; after adjustments for covariates, fasting insulin levels are related to greater LV size and cardiac output in men and more concentric LV geometry in women.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Richard B. Devereux, Division of Cardiology, the New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical Center, 525 East 68th St., New York, NY 10021. E-mail: rbdevere{at}med.cornell.edu.

      Received for publication 13 February 2001 and accepted in revised form 23 January 2002.

      LV, left ventricular; SHS, Strong Heart Study; WHO, World Health Organization.

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