Abstract
In
contrast to the accumulation of fat in the gluteo-femoral region, the
accumulation of fat around abdominal viscera and inside intraabdominal
solid organs is strongly associated with obesity-related complications
like Type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease. The association
between visceral adiposity and accelerated atherosclerosis was shown to
be independent of age, overall obesity or the amount of subcutaneous
fat. Recent evidence revealed several biological and genetic differences
between intraabdominal visceral-fat and peripheral subcutaneous-fat.
Such differences are also reflected in their contrasting roles in the
pathogenesis of obesity-related cardiometabolic problems, in either lean
or obese individuals. The functional differences between visceral and
the subcutaneous adipocytes may be related to their anatomical location.
Visceral adipose tissue and its adipose-tissue resident macrophages
produce more proinflamatory cytokines like tumor necrosis factor-alpha
(TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) and less adiponectin. These
cytokines changes induce insulin resistance and play a major role in the
pathogenesis of endothelial dysfunction and subsequent atherosclerosis.
The rate of visceral fat accumulation is also different according to
the individual's gender and ethnic background; being more prominent in
white men, African American women and Asian Indian and Japanese men and
women. Such differences may explain the variation in the cardiometabolic
risk at different waist measurements between different populations.
However, it is unclear how much visceral fat reduction is needed to
induce favorable metabolic changes. On the other hand, peripheral fat
mass is negatively correlated with atherogenic metabolic risk factors
and its selective reduction by liposuction does improve cardiovascular
risk profile. The increasing knowledge about body fat distribution and
its modifiers may lead to the development of more effective treatment
strategies for people with/or at high risk for Type 2 diabetes and
coronary artery disease. These accumulating observations also urge our
need for a new definition of obesity based on the anatomical location of
fat rather than on its volume, especially when cardiometabolic risk is
considered. The term "Metabolic Obesity", in reference to visceral fat
accumulation in either lean or obese individuals may identify those at
risk for cardiovascular disease better than the currently used
definitions of obesity.
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