1. One-Year Lifestyle Intervention, Muscle Lipids, and Cardiometabolic Risk
- Author
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Isabelle Lemieux, Paul Poirier, Angelo Tremblay, Jean Bergeron, Natalie Alméras, Alexandre Maltais, and Jean-Pierre Després
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Waist ,Diet, Reducing ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Type 2 diabetes ,Gastroenterology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Insulin resistance ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Insulin ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Healthy Lifestyle ,Muscle, Skeletal ,business.industry ,Cholesterol ,Torso ,Cardiorespiratory fitness ,030229 sport sciences ,Stepwise regression ,Lipid Metabolism ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,Obesity ,Exercise Therapy ,Thigh ,chemistry ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Obesity, Abdominal ,Body Composition ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Lipoprotein - Abstract
PURPOSE Low-attenuation muscle (LAM) area at mid-thigh, a computed tomography (CT)-derived index of intramuscular lipids, is associated with insulin resistance, obesity, and type 2 diabetes. The present study aimed at testing the hypothesis that changes in LAM area in trunk muscles from a single abdominal scan could provide relevant information to evaluate the effects of a lifestyle intervention without the use of a mid-thigh CT scan. METHODS Cardiometabolic risk variables, including waist circumference, lipoprotein-lipid profile, glucose tolerance, and cardiorespiratory fitness, were assessed in a sample of 102 dyslipidemic viscerally obese men at baseline and after a 1-yr lifestyle intervention. Abdominal (L4-L5) and mid-thigh CT scans were performed and abdominal muscles classified as psoas and core muscles. Scans were segmented to calculate muscle areas, LAM areas, and mean attenuation values. RESULTS All muscle groups showed a decrease in LAM areas (P < 0.0001) in response to the lifestyle intervention. Changes in LAM areas were significantly associated with changes in triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio and log triglycerides/HDL cholesterol ratio (mid-thigh, 0.20 ≤ |r| ≤ 0.29; psoas, 0.28 ≤ |r| ≤ 0.38; core, 0.29 ≤ |r| ≤ 0.34, P < 0.05). Changes in core LAM area were significantly associated with changes in 2-h glucose levels, glucose area measured during the oral glucose tolerance test and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (0.21 ≤ r ≤ 0.34, P < 0.05). Stepwise regression analyses showed that changes in LAM psoas area were associated with changes in HDL cholesterol and the cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio independently from changes in visceral adiposity. CONCLUSIONS Changes in trunk LAM areas are useful indices of changes in mid-thigh LAM area observed with a 1-yr lifestyle intervention. Thus, an additional mid-thigh scan is not necessary to evaluate muscle lipid content by CT when an abdominal CT scan is available.
- Published
- 2019
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