Korean Circ J.  1998 Jul;28(7):1176-1184. 10.4070/kcj.1998.28.7.1176.

Severity of Coronary Artery Disease and Visceral Fat Obesity

Abstract

BACKGROUND
The visceral fat obesity is known to be associated with coronary artery disease. We investigated the relation between visceral fat obesity and the severity of coronary artery disease by angiography.
METHODS
The coronary artery disease (CAD) group included 54 angina patients (43 men and 11 women) with angiographically demonstrated coronary artery disease. The control group included angiographically normal 28 controls (15 men and 13 women). The subjects with hypertension, non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and taking any medication known to affect the insulin sensitivity were excluded. We measured the visceral fat area, abdominal subcutaneous fat area, thigh muscle area and the thigh fat area with computed tomography (CT) in both groups. We measured the plasma lipid profile, fasting plasma insulin and glucose level in both groups.
RESULTS
There were no differences in the age, sex ratio and body mass index (BMI) between both groups. Total cholesterol and triglyceride increased in CAD group significantly (p<0.05, p<0.001). The HDL cholesterol decreased in CAD group. But there was no statistical significance (p=0.056). The fasting insulin increased in CAD group significantly (p<0.001). There were significant differences between CAD group and the control group in the visceral fat area (117.8+/-34.4 cm2vs. 85.5+/-17.6 cm2, p<0.001), thigh fat area (50.0+/-22.3 cm2vs. 65.8+/-12.9 cm2, p<0.001), visceral fat to abdominal subcutaneous fat area ratio (VS ratio:0.81+/-0.31 vs. 0.51+/-0.15, p<0.001) and the visceral fat to thigh fat area ratio (VSFTF ratio:2.72+/-1.24 vs. 1.34+/-0.35, p<0.001). In the male subgroup (CAD:43, control:15), triglyceride and fasting insulin increased in CAD group significantly (p<0.001). The visceral fat area, VS ratio, and VSFTF ratio increased in CAD group significantly (P<0.001) The thigh fat area decreased in CAD group significantly (P<0.001). In the female subgroup (CAD:11, control:13), fasting insulin and visceral fat area increased in CAD group significantly (p<0.001, p<0.05). Multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that VSFTF ratio, fasting insulin and the HDL cholesterol were independent associated factors of coronary artery disease. In comparison with normal control, one-vessel disease and multi-vessel disease (two vessel and three vessel), there were significant differences between groups in fasting insulin, triglyceride, visceral fat area, thigh fat area, VS ratio, VSFTF ratio. In Turkey's HSD Post Hoc test, however, there were no significant differences between one-vessel disease and multi-vessel disease.
CONCLUSION
We observed significant increases in the visceral fat area, VS ratio and VSFTF ratio and decrease in thigh fat area in angiographically demonstrated CAD group compared with age, BMI matched angiographically normal control. But we did not observed any relation between the visceral fat area and the severity of coronary disease by angiography.

Keyword

Coronary artery disease; Thigh fat area; Visceral fat area; Visceral fat to abdominal sub-cutaneous fat area ratio; Visceral fat to thigh fat area ratio

MeSH Terms

Angiography
Body Mass Index
Cholesterol
Cholesterol, HDL
Coronary Artery Disease*
Coronary Disease
Coronary Vessels*
Diabetes Mellitus
Fasting
Female
Glucose
Humans
Hypertension
Insulin
Insulin Resistance
Intra-Abdominal Fat*
Logistic Models
Male
Obesity*
Plasma
Sex Ratio
Subcutaneous Fat, Abdominal
Thigh
Triglycerides
Cholesterol
Cholesterol, HDL
Glucose
Insulin

Cited by  1 articles

Abdominal and Pericardial Fat in Patients with and without Coronary Artery Disease: Computed Tomography Study
Gwan Hyeop Sohn, Dong-Woon Kim, Sang Min Kim, Sang Yeub Lee, Jang-Whan Bae, Kyung-Kuk Hwang, Sung Mok Kim, Yeon Hyeon Choe, Jung Euy Park
J Lipid Atheroscler. 2014;3(1):29-37.    doi: 10.12997/jla.2014.3.1.29.

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