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Original Articles

Total Body Fat Content and Fat Topography Are Associated Differently With In Vivo Glucose Metabolism in Nonobese and Obese Nondiabetic Women

  1. Enzo Bonora,
  2. Stefano Del Prato,
  3. Riccardo C Bonadonna,
  4. Giovanni Gulli,
  5. Anna Solini,
  6. Myron L shank,
  7. Abraham A Ghiatas,
  8. Jack L Lancaster,
  9. Raphael F Kilcoyne,
  10. Abdalmajeid M Alyassin and
  11. Ralph A DeFronzo
  1. Diabetes Division, Department of Medicine and Department of Radiology, University of Texas Health Science Center and Audie L. Murphy Veterans Administration Hospital San Antonio, Texas
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Ralph A. DeFronzo, MD, Chief, Diabetes Division, University of Texas, Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX 78284; and Enzo Bonora, MD, PhD, Dept. of Metabolic Diseases, University of Verona, Medical School, Ospedale Policlinico, I 37134 Verona, Italy.
Diabetes 1992 Sep; 41(9): 1151-1159. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.41.9.1151
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Abstract

In this study, total body fat content and fat topography were related to glucose metabolism in the basal and nsulin-stimulated states in 18 nonobese and 18 obesepremenopausal nondiabetic women. All subjects received a euglycemic insulin (20 mil · min−1 · m2) clamp study in combination with [3-3H]-D-glucose infusion and indirect calorimetry to quantitate total body glucose uptake, glucose oxidation, and nonoxidative glucose disposal. Total body fat content was determined with tritiated water, whereas body fat distribution was estimated from the WHR, the STR, and the VSR (measured by magnetic resonance imaging). In the postabsorptive state, total body glucose utilization, glucose oxidation, and nonoxidative glucose disposal rates were similar in nonobese and obese women, whereas during the insulin clamp all three metabolic parameters were reduced significantly in the obese group. In nonobese women, total body fat content was related inversely to both total and nonoxidative glucose disposal during the insulin clamp, whereas no relationship was found between glucose metabolism (total, oxidative, and nonoxidative) and WHR, STR, or VSR. In contrast, in obese women, no relationship was observed between total body fat content and any measure of insulin-mediated glucose metabolism. However, both WHR and VSR were related inversely to total, oxidative, and nonoxidative glucose disposal rates during the insulin clamp. These results suggest that total body fat content and body fat topography are associated differently with insulin-mediated glucose metabolism in nonobese and obese women. In the nonobese women, total body fat mass appears to be a primary determinant of tissue sensitivity to insulin, whereas in obese women, body fat topography exerts a more dominant effect.

  • Received August 22, 1991.
  • Revision received March 27, 1992.
  • Accepted March 27, 1992.
  • Copyright © 1992 by the American Diabetes Association
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September 1992, 41(9)
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Total Body Fat Content and Fat Topography Are Associated Differently With In Vivo Glucose Metabolism in Nonobese and Obese Nondiabetic Women
Enzo Bonora, Stefano Del Prato, Riccardo C Bonadonna, Giovanni Gulli, Anna Solini, Myron L shank, Abraham A Ghiatas, Jack L Lancaster, Raphael F Kilcoyne, Abdalmajeid M Alyassin, Ralph A DeFronzo
Diabetes Sep 1992, 41 (9) 1151-1159; DOI: 10.2337/diab.41.9.1151

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Total Body Fat Content and Fat Topography Are Associated Differently With In Vivo Glucose Metabolism in Nonobese and Obese Nondiabetic Women
Enzo Bonora, Stefano Del Prato, Riccardo C Bonadonna, Giovanni Gulli, Anna Solini, Myron L shank, Abraham A Ghiatas, Jack L Lancaster, Raphael F Kilcoyne, Abdalmajeid M Alyassin, Ralph A DeFronzo
Diabetes Sep 1992, 41 (9) 1151-1159; DOI: 10.2337/diab.41.9.1151
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