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Research Article

Direction of causality between body fat and insulin resistance in children – a longitudinal study (EarlyBird 51)

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Pages 428-433 | Received 07 Feb 2011, Published online: 25 Aug 2011
 

Abstract

Objective. To investigate the direction of causality in the association between adiposity and insulin resistance in children. Methods. Body composition by DEXA, and insulin resistance by HOMA-2 IR were measured annually in 238 children aged from 7–13 years. Longitudinal modelling was used to establish whether baseline and/or trends in adiposity were associated with change in IR or whether, conversely, baseline and/or trends in IR were associated with change in adiposity. Results. Baseline adiposity was associated with change in IR in the short-term (p < 0.001) but less so in the long-term (p < 0.09) in both genders. Baseline IR was not associated with short-term change in adiposity in either gender (p > 0.42). In the long-term, baseline IR appeared to be positively associated with change in adiposity in boys (p = 0.02) but inversely associated with change in adiposity (the higher the baseline IR, the lower the gain in %fat) in girls (p < 0.001). Conclusions. The dominant direction of causality appears to be from adiposity to insulin resistance. In boys, adiposity appears to be both a cause and an effect of IR in the long term. In girls, however, higher insulin resistance appeared to limit further gain in body fat in the long term, an observation consistent with insulin desensitization as an adaptive response to weight gain.

Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge our current funders: Bright Futures Trust, Nestle, Peninsula Medical School Foundation, Novo Nordisk, Kirby Laing Foundation, EarlyBird Diabetes Trust.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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