Sr. Srinivasan et al., CHARACTERISTICS OF YOUNG OFFSPRING OF TYPE-2 DIABETIC PARENTS IN A BIRACIAL (BLACK-WHITE) COMMUNITY-BASED SAMPLE - THE BOGALUSA HEART-STUDY, Metabolism, clinical and experimental, 47(8), 1998, pp. 998-1004
The impact of race (black-white) and family history of type 2 diabetes
mellitus on metabolic characteristics in early life was examined in a
community-based sample from Bogalusa, LA. Study subjects included off
spring of type 2 diabetics (n = 53, 47% black) and nondiabetics (n = 5
2, 40% black), with the mean age of each group ranging from 14.2 to 15
.6 years. Offspring were given a 1-hour oral glucose tolerance test. M
easures of body fatness such as body weight, body-mass index (BMI; wei
ght/height(2)), and triceps and subscapular thicknesses were significa
ntly higher only in white offspring of diabetics versus nondiabetics;
measures of abdominal fat (waist circumference and waist-to-hip ratio)
were significantly higher among offspring of diabetics of both races.
Among the measures of glucose homeostasis, basal glucose, insulin, in
sulin-to-C-peptide ratio (a measure of hepatic insulin extraction), in
sulin resistance index (derived from basal glucose and insulin levels)
, and glucose response after glucose challenge were higher in the offs
pring of diabetics of both races. The differences in insulin-to-C-pept
ide ratio and glucose response remained significant after adjusting fo
r BMI; further, these two variables were independently associated with
parental diabetes in both races. Waist-to-hip ratio, glucose response
, C-peptide response (a measure of insulin secretion) were lower, and
basal insulin-to-C-peptide ratio and postglucose suppression of free f
atty acids greater in blacks versus whites, regardless of status of pa
rental diabetes. Black-white differences in postglucose suppression of
free fatty acids disappeared after adjusting for BMI. Thus, blacks an
d whites with parental type 2 diabetes show multiple abnormalities in
parameters governing glucose homeostasis early in life, and some of th
ese traits differ between the races, regardless of status of parental
diabetes. Copyright (C) 1998 by W.B. Saunders Company.