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International Comparison of Abdominal Fat Distribution Among Four Populations: The ERA-JUMP Study

Authors
Kadowaki, SayakaMiura, KatsuyukiKadowaki, TakashiFujiyoshi, AkiraEl-Saed, AimanMasaki, Kamal H.Okamura, TomonoriEdmundowicz, DanielRodriguez, Beatriz L.Nakamura, YasuyukiBarinas-Mitchell, Emma J. M.Kadota, AyaWillcox, Bradley J.Abbott, Robert D.Kuller, Lewis H.Choo, JinaShin, CholUeshima, HirotsuguSekikawa, Akira
Issue Date
May-2018
Publisher
MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
Keywords
visceral adipose tissue; subcutaneous adipose tissue; international study; cross-sectional study; epidemiology
Citation
METABOLIC SYNDROME AND RELATED DISORDERS, v.16, no.4, pp.166 - 173
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
METABOLIC SYNDROME AND RELATED DISORDERS
Volume
16
Number
4
Start Page
166
End Page
173
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/76042
DOI
10.1089/met.2017.0132
ISSN
1540-4196
Abstract
Background: Abdominal fat distribution varies across groups with different races or environments. Whether environmental factors, apart from racial differences, affect abdominal fat distribution is unknown. Methods: We compared the abdominal fat distribution of four groups; different races with similar environments (Caucasians vs. Japanese Americans), different environments with an identical race (Japanese Americans vs. Japanese), and similar races with similar environments (Japanese vs. Koreans). A population-based sample of 1212 men aged 40-49 were analyzed: 307 Caucasians and 300 Japanese Americans in the United States, 310 Japanese in Japan, and 295 Koreans in Korea. We compared the proportion of visceral adipose tissue area to total abdominal adipose tissue area (VAT%) and other factors that can affect abdominal fat distribution (smoking, alcohol use, physical activity levels, and metabolic factors). Results: VAT% was significantly higher in Japanese and Koreans than in Japanese Americans and Caucasians (50.0, 48.5, 43.2, 41.0%, respectively, P < 0.001). Even after adjustment for possible confounders, the significant VAT% difference remained in comparing groups with identical race but different environments (i.e., Japanese vs. Japanese Americans). In contrast, comparing groups with different races but similar environments (i.e., Caucasians vs. Japanese Americans), VAT% was not significantly different. Comparing groups with similar races and similar environments (i.e., Japanese vs. Koreans), VAT% did not significantly differ. Conclusions: Environmental differences, apart from racial differences, affect the difference in abdominal fat distribution across different groups in middle-aged men.
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