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Obesity in African-Americans: The role of physiology.

Citation
Gower, B. A., and L. A. Fowler. “Obesity In African-Americans: The Role Of Physiology.”. Journal Of Internal Medicine, pp. 295-304.
Center University of Alabama at Birmingham
Author B A Gower, L A Fowler
Keywords African American, carbohydrate, Diet, glycaemic load, insulin, insulin sensitivity, obesity
Abstract

The disproportionate obesity in African American (AA) women has a physiologic basis and can be explained by the interactive effects of insulin secretion, insulin clearance, insulin sensitivity and the glycaemic load of the diet. This review will present data supporting a physiologic basis for obesity propensity in obesity-prone AA women that resides in their unique metabolic/endocrine phenotype: high beta-cell responsiveness, low hepatic insulin extraction and relatively high insulin sensitivity, which together result in a high exposure of tissues and organs to insulin. When combined with a high-glycaemic (HG) diet (that stimulates insulin secretion), this underlying propensity to obesity becomes manifest, as ingested calories are diverted from energy production to storage. Our data indicate that both weight loss and weight loss maintenance are optimized with low-glycaemic (LG) vs HG diet in AA. Whether greater obesity in AA is mechanistically related to their greater prevalence of type 2 diabetes is debatable. This review provides data indicating that obesity is not strongly related to insulin resistance in AA. Rather, insulin resistance in AA is associated with relatively low adipose tissue in the leg, consistent with a genetic predisposition to impaired lipid storage. Greater bioenergetic efficiency has been reported in AA and, via resultant oxidative damage, could plausibly contribute to insulin resistance. In summary, it is proposed here that a subset of AA women are predisposed to obesity due to a specific metabolic/endocrine phenotype. However, greater diabetes risk in AA has an independent aetiology based on impaired lipid storage and mitochondrial efficiency/oxidative stress.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Journal of internal medicine
Volume
288
Issue
3
Number of Pages
295-304
Date Published
09/2020
ISSN Number
1365-2796
DOI
10.1111/joim.13090
Alternate Journal
J Intern Med
PMID
32350924
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