345 research outputs found
Estimating the burden of disease attributable to excess body weight in South Africa in 2000
Objective. To estimate the burden of disease attributable to excess body weight using the body mass index (BMI), by age and sex, in South Africa in 2000.Design. World Health Organization comparative risk assessment (CRA) methodology was followed. Re-analysis of the 1998 South Africa Demographic and Health Survey data provided mean BMI estimates by age and sex. Population attributable fractions were calculated and applied to revised burden of disease estimates. Monte Carlo simulation-modelling techniques were used for the uncertainty analysis.Setting. South Africa.Subjects. Adults ≥ 30 years of age.Outcome measures. Deaths and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) from ischaemic heart disease, ischaemic stroke, hypertensive disease, osteoarthritis, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and selected cancers. Results. Overall, 87% of type 2 diabetes, 68% of hypertensive disease, 61 % of endometrial cancer, 45% of ischaemic stroke, 38% of ischaemic heart disease, 31 % of kidney cancer, 24% of osteoarthritis, 17% of colon cancer, and 13% of postmenopausal breast cancer were attributable to a BMI ≥ 21 kg/m2. Excess body weight is estimated to have caused 36 504 deaths (95% uncertainty interval 31 018 - 38 637) or 7% (95% uncertainty interval 6.0 - 7.4%) of all deaths in 2000, and 462 338 DALYs (95% uncertainty interval 396 512 - 478 847) or 2.9% of all DALYs (95% uncertainty interval 2.4 - 3.0%). The burden infemales was approximately double that in males.Conclusions. This study shows the importance of recognising excess body weight as a major risk to health, particularly among females, highlighting the need to develop, implement and evaluate comprehensive interventions to achieve lasting change in the determinants and impact of excess body weight
Association between ethnicity and obesity with high-density lipoprotein (HDL) function and subclass distribution
Abstract Background Obesity and low high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) levels are associated with cardiovascular risk. Surprisingly, despite a greater prevalence of obesity and lower HDL concentrations than white women, black South African women are relatively protected against ischaemic heart disease. Methods We investigated whether this apparent discrepancy may be related to different HDL function and subclass distribution in black and white, normal-weight and obese South African women (n = 40). HDL functionality was assessed by measuring paraoxonase (PON) activity, platelet activating factor acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH) activity, Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity (ORAC) and quantification of the expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule in endothelial cells. PON-1 and PAF-AH expression was determined in isolated HDL and serum using Western blotting. Levels of large, intermediate and small HDL subclasses were measured using the Lipoprint® system. Results PON activity was lower in white compared to black women (0.49 ± 0.09 U/L vs 0.78 ± 0.10 U/L, p < 0.05), regardless of PON-1 protein levels. Obese black women had lower PAF-AH activity (9.34 ± 1.15 U/L vs 13.89 ± 1.21 U/L, p <0.05) and HDL-associated PAF-AH expression compared to obese white women. Compared to normal-weight women, obese women had lower large HDL, greater intermediate and small HDL; an effect that was more pronounced in white women than black women. There were no differences in antioxidant capacity or anti-inflammatory function across groups. Conclusions Our data show that both obesity and ethnicity are associated with differences in HDL functionality, while obesity was associated with decreases in large HDL subclass distribution. Measuring HDL functionality and subclass may, therefore, be important factors to consider when assessing cardiovascular risk
Recent Progress in Acoustic Travel-Time Tomography of the Atmospheric Surface Layer
Acoustic tomography of the atmospheric surface layer (ASL) is based on measurements of the travel times of sound propagation between sources and receivers which constitute a tomography array. Then, the temperature and wind velocity fields inside the tomographic volume or area are reconstructed using different inverse algorithms. Improved knowledge of these fields is important in many practical applications. Tomography has certain advantages in comparison with currently used instrumentation for measurement of the temperature and wind velocity. In this paper, a short historical overview of acoustic tomography of the atmosphere is presented. The main emphasis is on recent progress in acoustic tomography of the ASL. The tomography arrays that have been used so far are discussed. Inverse algorithms for reconstruction of the temperature and wind velocity fields from the travel times are reviewed. Some results in numerical simulations of acoustic tomography of the ASL and reconstruction of the turbulence fields in tomography experiments are presented and discussed. Zusammenfassung Die akustische Tomographie der atmosph¨arischen Bodenschicht basiert auf Messungen der Laufzeit von Schallwellen zwischen Sendern und Empf¨angern, welche ein tomographisches Messfeld bilden. Anschließend werden dann die Temperatur- und Windgeschwindigkeitsfelder innerhalb eines tomographischen Volumens oder einer Fl¨ache rekonstruiert, wobei verschiedene inverse Algorithmen angewendet werden k¨onnen. Eine verbesserte Kenntnis dieser meteorologischen Felder ist f ¨ur viele praktische Anwendungen bedeutsam. Tomographische Verfahren haben bestimmte Vorteile gegen¨uber den momentan genutzten Messverfahren f ¨ur die Temperatur und Windgeschwindigkeit. In dieser Ver ¨offentlichung wird ein kurzer ¨Uberblick zur Entwicklung der akustischen Tomographie der Atmosph¨are pr¨asentiert. Der Schwerpunkt der Arbeit liegt auf der Darstellung des aktuellen Fortschritts in der akustischen Tomographie der atmosph¨arischen Bodenschicht. Die bisher genutzten tomographischen Messfelder werden vorgestellt. Inverse Algorithmen f ¨ur die Rekonstruktion von Temperatur- und Windgeschwindigkeitsfeldern aus akustischen Laufzeiten werden bewertet. Einige Resultate der numerischen Simulation der akustischen Tomographie der Bodenschicht und der Rekonstruktion von turbulenten Feldern meteorologischer Gr ¨oßen in tomographischen Experimenten werden dargestellt und diskutiert
Ethnic differences in regional adipose tissue oestrogen receptor gene expression
Studies have shown ethnic differences in body fat distribution, characterised by greater peripheral and less central fat accumulation in black compared to white South African (SA) women. As sex hormones play an important role in body fat distribution, our study aimed to determine whether differences in body fat distribution between black and white SA women were associated with subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) expression of oestrogen receptors (ERA and ERB) and aromatase (CYP19A1). Body fat distribution (DXA and CT) and ERA, ERB and CYP19A1 expression in abdominal and gluteal SAT were measured in 26 black and 22 white SA women. Abdominal SAT ERA and ERB did not differ by ethnicity or BMI. Gluteal ERA was higher (1.08 ± 0.06 vs 0.99 ± 0.05, P < 0.001) and ERB was lower (0.99 ± 0.06 vs 1.10 ± 0.07, P < 0.001) in black vs white SA women. CYP19A1 increased with obesity in all depots (P < 0.001). In both black and white SA women, gluteal ERA was associated with lower central fat mass (FM) and greater gynoid FM (P < 0.05), while the inverse association was shown for CYP19A1 in all depots (P < 0.01). In conclusion, ethnic differences in gluteal ERA expression were associated with differences in body fat distribution previously reported between black and white SA women
Comparison of body fatness measurements by near-infrared reactance and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in normal-weight and obese black and white women
The aim of the present study was to compare body fat percent (BF %) using single-site near-IR reactance (NIR) and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in a cohort of normal-weight (BMI or = 30 kg/m2) black (n 117) and white (n 41) South African women (18-45 years). NIR-derived BF % was significantly correlated with DXA-derived BF % in all groups: normal-weight black (r 0.55, 95 % CI: 0.40, 0.67, P 45 %). The results of single-site NIR as a measure of BF % should therefore be interpreted with caution, particularly in women of African descent and in those with very high levels of adiposity
Non-canonical chemical feedback self-limits nitric oxide-cyclic GMP signaling in health and disease
Nitric oxide (NO)-cyclic GMP (cGMP) signaling is a vasoprotective pathway therapeutically targeted, for example, in pulmonary hypertension. Its dysregulation in disease is incompletely understood. Here we show in pulmonary artery endothelial cells that feedback inhibition by NO of the NO receptor, the cGMP forming soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), may contribute to this. Both endogenous NO from endothelial NO synthase and exogenous NO from NO donor compounds decreased sGC protein and activity. This effect was not mediated by cGMP as the NO-independent sGC stimulator, or direct activation of cGMP-dependent protein kinase did not mimic it. Thiol-sensitive mechanisms were also not involved as the thiol-reducing agent N-acetyl-L-cysteine did not prevent this feedback. Instead, both in-vitro and in-vivo and in health and acute respiratory lung disease, chronically elevated NO led to the inactivation and degradation of sGC while leaving the heme-free isoform, apo-sGC, intact or even increasing its levels. Thus, NO regulates sGC in a bimodal manner, acutely stimulating and chronically inhibiting, as part of self-limiting direct feedback that is cGMP independent. In high NO disease conditions, this is aggravated but can be functionally recovered in a mechanism-based manner by apo-sGC activators that re-establish cGMP formatio
Socio-cultural, environmental and behavioural determinants of obesity in black South African women
South Africa (SA) is undergoing a rapid epidemiological
transition and has the highest prevalence of obesity in sub-
Saharan Africa (SSA), with black women being the most
affected (obesity prevalence 31.8%). Although genetic factors
are important, socio-cultural, environmental and behavioural
factors, as well as the influence of socio-economic status,
more likely explain the high prevalence of obesity in black
SA women. This review examines these determinants in black
SA women, and compares them to their white counterparts,
black SA men, and where appropriate, to women from SSA.
Specifically this review focuses on environmental factors
influencing obesity, the influence of urbanisation, as well
as the interaction with socio-cultural and socio-economic
factors. In addition, the role of maternal and early life factors
and cultural aspects relating to body image are discussed.
This information can be used to guide public health interventions
aimed at reducing obesity in black SA women.Department of HE and Training approved lis
Adiposity Mediates the Association Between the Dietary Inflammatory Index and Markers of Type 2 Diabetes Risk in Middle-Aged Black South African Women
The dietary inflammatory index (DII®), a validated tool used to measure the inflammatory potential of the diet, has been associated with metabolic disorders in various settings, but not in African populations. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the DII is associated with markers of type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk, and if this association is mediated by adiposity and/or low-grade inflammation, in black South Africa women. Energy-adjusted-DII (E-DII) scores were calculated in 190 women (median age, 53 years) from the Birth-to-Twenty plus cohort using a validated food frequency questionnaire. Fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c, and inflammatory cytokines were measured, and an oral glucose tolerance test performed. Basic anthropometry and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry-derived body fat, including estimate of visceral adipose tissue (VAT) area, were measured. E-DII scores were associated with all markers of T2D risk, namely, fasting glucose and insulin, HbA1c, HOMA2-IR, two-hour glucose and Matsuda index (all p \u3c 0.05). After adjusting for age, measures of adiposity, but not inflammatory cytokines, mediated the association between E-DII and markers of T2D risk (p \u3c 0.05). Measures of central obesity had proportionally higher (range: 23.5–100%) mediation effects than total obesity (range: 10–60%). The E-DII is associated with T2D risk through obesity, in particular central obesity, among black middle-aged South African women
DNA methylation of FKBP5 in South African women : associations with obesity and insulin resistance
CITATION: Willmer, T., et al. 2020. DNA methylation of FKBP5 in South African women : associations with obesity and insulin resistance. Clinical Epigenetics, 12:141, doi:10.1186/s13148-020-00932-3.The original publication is available at https://clinicalepigeneticsjournal.biomedcentral.comBackground: Disruption of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis, a neuroendocrine system associated
with the stress response, has been hypothesized to contribute to obesity development. This may be mediated
through epigenetic modulation of HPA axis-regulatory genes in response to metabolic stressors. The aim of this
study was to investigate adipose tissue depot-specific DNA methylation differences in the glucocorticoid receptor
(GR) and its co-chaperone, FK506-binding protein 51 kDa (FKBP5), both key modulators of the HPA axis.
Methods: Abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (ASAT) and gluteal subcutaneous adipose tissue (GSAT) biopsies
were obtained from a sample of 27 obese and 27 normal weight urban-dwelling South African women. DNA
methylation and gene expression were measured by pyrosequencing and quantitative real-time PCR, respectively.
Spearman’s correlation coefficients, orthogonal partial least-squares discriminant analysis and multivariable linear
regression were performed to evaluate the associations between DNA methylation, messenger RNA (mRNA)
expression and key indices of obesity and metabolic dysfunction.
Results: Two CpG dinucleotides within intron 7 of FKBP5 were hypermethylated in both ASAT and GSAT in obese
compared to normal weight women, while no differences in GR methylation were observed. Higher percentage
methylation of the two FKBP5 CpG sites correlated with adiposity (body mass index and waist circumference),
insulin resistance (homeostasis model for insulin resistance, fasting insulin and plasma adipokines) and systemic
inflammation (c-reactive protein) in both adipose depots. GR and FKBP5 mRNA levels were lower in GSAT, but not
ASAT, of obese compared to normal weight women. Moreover, FKBP5 mRNA levels were inversely correlated with
DNA methylation and positively associated with adiposity, metabolic and inflammatory parameters.
Conclusions: These findings associate dysregulated FKBP5 methylation and mRNA expression with obesity and
insulin resistance in South African women. Additional studies are required to assess the longitudinal association of
FKBP5 with obesity and associated co-morbidities in large population-based samples.https://clinicalepigeneticsjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13148-020-00932-3Publisher's versio
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