首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Journal of the National Medical Association >Acculturation and psychosocial stress show differential relationships to insulin resistance (HOMA) and body fat distribution in two groups of blacks living in the US Virgin Islands.
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Acculturation and psychosocial stress show differential relationships to insulin resistance (HOMA) and body fat distribution in two groups of blacks living in the US Virgin Islands.

机译:适应能力和社会心理压力显示了生活在美属维尔京群岛的两组黑人与胰岛素抵抗(HOMA)和体内脂肪分布的不同关系。

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摘要

The objective of this study was to determine whether acculturation and psychosocial stress exert differential effects on body fat distribution and insulin resistance among native-born African Americans and African-Caribbean immigrants living in the US Virgin Islands (USVI). Data collected from a non-diabetic sample of 183 USVI-born African Americans and 296 African-Caribbean immigrants age > 20 on the island of St. Croix, USVI were studied. Information on demographic characteristics, acculturation and psychosocial stress was collected by questionnaire. Anthropometric measurements were taken, and serum glucose and insulin were measured from fasting blood samples. Insulin resistance was estimated by the homeostasis model assessment (HOMA) method. The results showed that in multivariate regression analyses, controlling for age, education, gender, BMI, waist circumference, family history of diabetes, smoking and alcohol consumption, acculturation was independently related to logarithm of HOMA (InHOMA) scores among USVI-born African Americans, but not among African-Caribbean immigrants. In contrast, among USVI-born African Americans psychosocial stress was not significantly related to InHOMA, while among African-Caribbean immigrants psychosocial stress was independently related to InHOMA in models that included BMI, but not in those which included waist circumference. This study suggests that acculturation and psychosocial stress may have a differential effect on body fat distribution and insulin resistance among native-born and immigrant blacks living in the US Virgin Islands.
机译:这项研究的目的是确定适应能力和心理压力是否对居住在美属维尔京群岛(USVI)的原住民的非洲裔美国人和非加勒比移民的体脂分布和胰岛素抵抗产生不同的影响。研究人员从非糖尿病样本中收集的数据进行了研究,这些样本来自USVI圣克鲁斯岛上的183名USVI出生的非洲裔美国人和296名年龄在20岁以上的296名非洲-加勒比移民。通过问卷收集有关人口统计学特征,适应性和社会心理压力的信息。进行人体测量,并从空腹血样中测量血清葡萄糖和胰岛素。通过稳态模型评估(HOMA)方法评估胰岛素抵抗。结果表明,在多变量回归分析中,控制年龄,教育程度,性别,BMI,腰围,糖尿病家族史,吸烟和饮酒的人,适应性与出生于美国VIVI的非裔美国人的HOMA(InHOMA)分数的对数独立相关。 ,但不在非洲-加勒比移民中。相反,在包括BMI在内的模型中,在USVI出生的非裔美国人中,心理社会压力与InHOMA没有显着相关,而在非加勒比移民中,心理社会压力与InHOMA独立相关,但在包括腰围的模型中则没有。这项研究表明,适应能力和心理压力可能对生活在美属维尔京群岛的本地黑人和移民黑人的体内脂肪分布和胰岛素抵抗产生不同的影响。

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