Stability and Transformation of Metabolic Syndrome in Adolescents: A Prospective Assessment in Relation to the Change of Cardiometabolic Risk Factors.
Pei-Wen WuYi-Wen LaiYu-Ting ChinSharon TsaiTun-Min YangWei-Ting LinChun-Ying LeeWei-Chung TasiHsiao-Ling HuangDavid W SealTsai-Hui DuhChien-Hung LeePublished in: Nutrients (2022)
Underlying pathophysiological mechanisms drive excessive clustering of cardiometabolic risk factors, causing metabolic syndrome (MetS). MetS status may transform as adolescents transition to young adulthood. This study investigated the latent clustering structure and its stability for MetS during adolescence, and assessed the anthropometric and clinical metabolic determinants for MetS transformation. A community-based representative adolescent cohort ( n = 1516) was evaluated for MetS using four diagnostic criteria, and was followed for 2.2 years to identify new-onset MetS. The clustering structure underlying cardiometabolic parameters was stable across adolescence; both comprised a fat-blood pressure (BP)-glucose three-factor structure (total variance explained: 68.8% and 69.7% at baseline and follow-up, respectively). Among adolescents with MetS-negative at baseline, 3.2-4.4% had incident MetS after 2.2 years. Among adolescents with MetS-positive at baseline, 52.0-61.9% experienced MetS remission, and 38.1-48.0% experienced MetS persistence. Increased systolic BP (SBP) was associated with a high MetS incidence risk, while decreased levels of SBP and glucose were associated with MetS remission. Compared with adolescents with a normal metabolic status at baseline, those with an initial abdominal obesity and increased triglycerides level had a 15.0- and 5.7-fold greater risk for persistent abnormality, respectively. Abdominal obesity and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol are two abnormal MetS components that highly persist during adolescence, and are the intervention targets for reducing the future risk of cardiometabolic disorders.
Keyphrases
- metabolic syndrome
- risk factors
- blood pressure
- depressive symptoms
- insulin resistance
- type diabetes
- randomized controlled trial
- physical activity
- weight loss
- single cell
- cardiovascular disease
- heart failure
- adipose tissue
- rna seq
- mental health
- heart rate
- weight gain
- skeletal muscle
- cross sectional
- atrial fibrillation
- middle aged
- current status