期刊
DIABETES
卷 59, 期 7, 页码 1771-1779出版社
AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db09-1626
关键词
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资金
- National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01-HL-61753, HL-79611]
- American Diabetes Association [7-09-CVD-06]
- Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center [P30-DK-57516]
- NIH [M01-RR00051, K23-DK-075360]
- NIH, Office of Research in Women's Health, Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health (BIRCHW)
- BIRCWH K12 Program
OBJECTIVE Individuals with type 1 diabetes have a less atherogenic fasting lipid profile than those without diabetes but paradoxically have increased rates of cardiovascular disease (CVD). We investigated differences in lipoprotein subfraction cholesterol distribution and insulin resistance between subjects with and without type 1 diabetes to better understand the etiology of increased CVD risk. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Fast protein liquid chromatography was used to fractionate lipoprotein cholesterol distribution in a substudy of the Coronary Artery Calcification in Type 1 Diabetes (CACTI) study (n = 82, age 46 +/- 8 years, 52% female, 49% with type 1 diabetes for 23 +/- 8 years). Insulin resistance was assessed by a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp. RESULTS Among men, those with type 1 diabetes had less VLDL and more HDL cholesterol than control subjects (P < 0.05), but among women, those with diabetes had a shift in cholesterol to denser LDL, despite more statin use. Among control subjects, men had more cholesterol distributed as VLDL and LDL but less as HDL than women; however, among those with type 1 diabetes, there was no sex difference. Within sex and diabetes strata, a more atherogenic cholesterol distribution by insulin resistance was seen in men with and without diabetes, but only in women with type 1 diabetes. CONCLUSIONS The expected sex-based less atherogenic lipoprotein cholesterol distribution was not seen in women with type 1 diabetes. Moreover, insulin resistance was associated with a more atherogenic lipoprotein cholesterol distribution in all men and in women with type 1 diabetes. This lipoprotein cholesterol distribution may contribute to sex-based differences in CVD in type 1 diabetes. Diabetes 59:1771-1779, 2010
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