Resistência à insulina, baixa aptidão cardiorrespiratória e pressão arterial de exercício aumentada
Insulin Resistance, Low Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Increased Exercise Blood Pressure
Contribution of Abdominal Obesity
Abstract
Individuals with insulin resistance and
low cardiorespiratory fitness are frequently found to have an increased
waist circumference
and high exercise blood pressure. We tested the
hypothesis that the relationships among insulin resistance, low
cardiorespiratory
fitness, and increased exercise blood pressure
may be mediated by an elevated waist circumference. This study included
317
apparently healthy men and women (mean age:
34.8±12.8 years; mean body mass index: 26.1±5.2 kg/m2).
Exercise blood pressure values were measured using a submaximal
ergometer test evaluating physical working capacity. Plasma
insulin and glucose levels were measured during a
3-hour oral glucose tolerance test. Multivariate regression analyses
showed
that waist circumference accounted for 32.8% (P<0.0001) and 45.1% (P<0.0001)
of the variance in exercise systolic blood pressure in men and women,
respectively. Participants were classified
into tertiles according to either insulin
response, measured during the oral glucose tolerance test, or fitness
levels and
then further subdivided into 2 subgroups using
sex-specific waist circumference thresholds. Individuals with an
increased
waist circumference (≥94 cm and ≥80 cm for men
and women, respectively) had higher exercise systolic blood pressure
compared
with individuals with low waist circumference,
irrespective of their level of insulin resistance (10.6 versus 6.8, 12.2
versus
7.7, and 13.2 versus 8.7 mm Hg/metabolic
equivalent, respectively, for the low, intermediate, and high tertiles; P<0.05) or fitness levels (13.1 versus 8.2, 12.0 versus 7.9, and 10.6 versus 7.1 mm Hg/metabolic equivalent, respectively,
for the low, intermediate, and high tertiles; P<0.05). Individuals with a higher waist circumference have elevated exercise systolic blood pressure, regardless of their
insulin sensitivity or level of cardiorespiratory fitness.
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