Aortoiliac arterial wall compliance was measured in apparently healthy subjects and in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM), on diet alone, who had no clinical evidence of peripheral arterial disease. Compliance was significantly lower in patients with diabetes. The two clinical groups were combined to provide as wide a range of blood glucose values as possible. After allowing for the influence of age, there were significant negative correlations between compliance and free fatty acid and insulin levels. These were almost completely accounted for by differences in blood glucose levels. Therefore, arterial compliance was best predicted on the basis of age and the area under the blood glucose curve.
Doppier ultrasound was used to measure pulse wave velocity down the aorta and iliac arteries. Arterial wall compliance was calculated from pulse wave velocity in 45 apparently healthy men. Their arterial compliance fell significantly with advancing age, raised blood pressure, increased serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels, and reduced serum high density lipoprotein cholesterol levels. The correlation between compliance and age was independent of the other risk factors, and the correlation between compliance and Iipid status was independent of age and blood pressure. There was no significant correlation between compliance and area under the glucose tolerance curve. (Arteriosclerosis 6:105-108, January/February 1986)
Most reports of outcome following obesity surgery report weight and co-morbidity changes only. We studied body composition changes in 17 adult patients (15 F, 2 M, age 43+/-2 years, range 28-58 years), with morbid obesity (initial BMI 40.4+/-4.9 kg/m(2), range 34.7-48.8) who were managed surgically by laparoscopically inserting an adjustable gastric band. Body composition was studied before and after surgery (mean interval of 909+/-51 days, range 441-1155 days) using anthropometry (abdominal circumference, AC, sum of four skinfold thicknesses, SFSUM), whole-body potassium counting (TBK), in vivo neutron activation analysis total body nitrogen (TBProtein) and whole-body dual-energy ray absorptiometry (total body percent fat TBF%, and total body bone mineral density TBBMD). Weight loss over the study period was 23.4+/-2.5 kg. ( p<0.0003) with an AC reduction of 20.0+/-4.5 cm ( p<0.008). Both SFSUM and TBF% were significantly reduced ( p<0.02 and p<0.0005 respectively). Both TBK and TBProtein after normalization for sex and height, were significantly ( p<0.0054 and p<0.001 respectively) reduced, but the ratio of loss of fat mass to fat-free mass, at 4.4:1 was usual for weight loss, and there was no significant changes in the ratio of potassium to protein. TBBMD, after normalization relative to a young same sex adult, was not significantly changed. In this group of patients, most of the substantial weight loss over a 2- to 3-year period was due to loss of fat mass, with relatively less reduction in the components of fat-free mass. Adjustable laparoscopic gastric banding induces fat loss without significant other deleterious effects on body composition.
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