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Shaun Sabico

Assistant Professor

Assistant Professor and Deputy Director

كلية العلوم
Chair for Biomarkers of Chronic Diseases, Biochemistry Department, College of Science, KSU
publication
Journal Article
2014

Does visceral adiposity index signify early metabolic risk in children and adolescents?: association with insulin resistance, adipokines, and subclinical inflammation

BACKGROUND:

Visceral adiposity index (VAI) is a novel gender-specific index based on waist circumference (WC), BMI, and lipid parameters. Although VAI does not actually estimate visceral adiposity, it accurately reflects visceral fat function and insulin resistance. This index has not been studied in children thus far. This study aims to fill this gap.

METHODS:

In a cohort of Saudi children and adolescents, anthropometric measurements and metabolic/hormonal profile were obtained.

RESULTS:

A total of 543 subjects, 292 of whom were boys, were included (mean age: 11.9 ± 3.3 y; BMI: 19.8 ± 5.6 kg/m(2)). In all subjects, VAI was inferior to BMI and WC regarding its correlations with adiponectin, leptin, insulin resistance (homeostasis model of assessment-insulin resistance (HOMA-IR)), C-reactive protein (CRP) level, and systolic blood pressure, but it exhibited a stronger association with glucose in boys (r = 0.23; P < 0.01). In stepwise multivariate analyses, only BMI was consistent as an independent predictor of adiponectin, leptin, HOMA-IR, and CRP. VAI was the only index independently associated with glucose.

CONCLUSION:

Although VAI is related to glucose in children, it seems to be inferior to BMI in terms of association with insulin resistance, adipokines, and subclinical inflammation. Until specific studies can be performed in children, VAI should be extrapolated with caution in this age range.

Publication Work Type
Observational
Volume Number
75
Issue Number
3
Magazine \ Newspaper
Pediatric Research 2014
Pages
459-463
more of publication
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by Fuggle NR, Beaudart C, Bruyère O, Abrahamsen B, Al-Daghri N, Burlet B, Chandran M, Rosa MM, Cortet B, Demonceau C, Dere W, Halbout P, Hiligsmann M,
2024
Published in:
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publications

Background: Evidence on the metabolic effects of functional foods such as kale and peas are limited in the Middle East, particularly in Saudi Arabia where obesity rates are high.

by Aldisi D, Sabico S, Al-Farraj A, Basaeed TA, Wani K, Hussain SD, Al-Daghri NM, Almiman A, McTernan PG
2024
Published in:
Biolife SAS
publications

Interleukins (ILs) are a group of cytokines known to have immunomodulatory effects; they include ILs-33 and -37 whose emerging roles in the pathogenesis of metabolic syndrome (MetS) remain under…

by Amer OE, Sabico S, Khattak MNK, Alnaami AM, Saadawy GM, Al-Daghri NM
2024
Published in:
MDPI