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Serum sex hormone-binding globulin, a determinant of cardiometabolic disorders independent of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance in elderly men and women.
Metabolism. 2007 Oct; 56(10):1356-62.M

Abstract

Serum sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) is related to cardiometabolic disorders; but whether or not this relationship is purely secondary to hyperinsulinemia and/or obesity, which down-regulates SHBG, is unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate the association of SHBG and total testosterone with atherogenic dyslipidemias, metabolic syndrome (MS), and diabetes among predominantly elderly Turkish adults. After appropriate exclusions, 777 randomly selected male and female subjects with available measurements of both variables were eligible and were analyzed cross-sectionally, with diabetic subjects analyzed separately. Free testosterone was calculated. Metabolic syndrome was identified by the modified criteria of the Adult Treatment Panel III. Metabolic syndrome was identified in half the sample, which had a median age of 58 years. The odds of low SHBG concentrations (<45 nmol/L in men, <55 nmol/L in women) for the likelihood of 2 types of dyslipidemias, MS, and diabetes were examined by regression analyses in standard models including age, smoking status, presence of abdominal obesity, and insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance). In both sexes, low SHBG was associated independently with high triglyceride/low high-density lipoprotein dyslipidemia and with MS, at significant 2.2- to 4.5-fold odds ratios, independent of waist circumference or homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance index. Low SHBG among women was additionally associated with the likelihood of hypertriglyceridemia with elevated apolipoprotein B and-at borderline significance-with that of diabetes, again when adjusted for the same confounders. In an elderly population with prevalent MS, low SHBG levels significantly associate with high triglyceride/low high-density lipoprotein dyslipidemia, MS, and, in women alone, diabetes and a dyslipidemia marking small dense low-density lipoprotein particles, all independent of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance. Low SHBG may be an important independent factor for cardiometabolic risk, particularly in women.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Turkish Society of Cardiology, Istanbul University, 34384 Istanbul, Turkey. alt_onat@yahoo.com.trNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17884445

Citation

Onat, Altan, et al. "Serum Sex Hormone-binding Globulin, a Determinant of Cardiometabolic Disorders Independent of Abdominal Obesity and Insulin Resistance in Elderly Men and Women." Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental, vol. 56, no. 10, 2007, pp. 1356-62.
Onat A, Hergenç G, Karabulut A, et al. Serum sex hormone-binding globulin, a determinant of cardiometabolic disorders independent of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance in elderly men and women. Metabolism. 2007;56(10):1356-62.
Onat, A., Hergenç, G., Karabulut, A., Albayrak, S., Can, G., & Kaya, Z. (2007). Serum sex hormone-binding globulin, a determinant of cardiometabolic disorders independent of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance in elderly men and women. Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental, 56(10), 1356-62.
Onat A, et al. Serum Sex Hormone-binding Globulin, a Determinant of Cardiometabolic Disorders Independent of Abdominal Obesity and Insulin Resistance in Elderly Men and Women. Metabolism. 2007;56(10):1356-62. PubMed PMID: 17884445.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Serum sex hormone-binding globulin, a determinant of cardiometabolic disorders independent of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance in elderly men and women. AU - Onat,Altan, AU - Hergenç,Gülay, AU - Karabulut,Ahmet, AU - Albayrak,Sinan, AU - Can,Günay, AU - Kaya,Zekeriya, PY - 2006/09/29/received PY - 2007/05/08/accepted PY - 2007/9/22/pubmed PY - 2007/10/30/medline PY - 2007/9/22/entrez SP - 1356 EP - 62 JF - Metabolism: clinical and experimental JO - Metabolism VL - 56 IS - 10 N2 - Serum sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) is related to cardiometabolic disorders; but whether or not this relationship is purely secondary to hyperinsulinemia and/or obesity, which down-regulates SHBG, is unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate the association of SHBG and total testosterone with atherogenic dyslipidemias, metabolic syndrome (MS), and diabetes among predominantly elderly Turkish adults. After appropriate exclusions, 777 randomly selected male and female subjects with available measurements of both variables were eligible and were analyzed cross-sectionally, with diabetic subjects analyzed separately. Free testosterone was calculated. Metabolic syndrome was identified by the modified criteria of the Adult Treatment Panel III. Metabolic syndrome was identified in half the sample, which had a median age of 58 years. The odds of low SHBG concentrations (<45 nmol/L in men, <55 nmol/L in women) for the likelihood of 2 types of dyslipidemias, MS, and diabetes were examined by regression analyses in standard models including age, smoking status, presence of abdominal obesity, and insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance). In both sexes, low SHBG was associated independently with high triglyceride/low high-density lipoprotein dyslipidemia and with MS, at significant 2.2- to 4.5-fold odds ratios, independent of waist circumference or homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance index. Low SHBG among women was additionally associated with the likelihood of hypertriglyceridemia with elevated apolipoprotein B and-at borderline significance-with that of diabetes, again when adjusted for the same confounders. In an elderly population with prevalent MS, low SHBG levels significantly associate with high triglyceride/low high-density lipoprotein dyslipidemia, MS, and, in women alone, diabetes and a dyslipidemia marking small dense low-density lipoprotein particles, all independent of abdominal obesity and insulin resistance. Low SHBG may be an important independent factor for cardiometabolic risk, particularly in women. SN - 0026-0495 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17884445/Serum_sex_hormone_binding_globulin_a_determinant_of_cardiometabolic_disorders_independent_of_abdominal_obesity_and_insulin_resistance_in_elderly_men_and_women_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0026-0495(07)00194-1 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -