Abstract

Objective. To investigate the impact of reduction in total fat mass (FM) and regional FMs on indices of insulin resistance and dyslipidaemia in obese women (BMI > 30 kg/m2) after a 1-year weight loss (WL) program; and, secondly, to investigate the potential predictive effect of baseline insulin resistance on reduction in total and regional FMs. Material and methods. In 35 women with > 4kg weight loss, body composition by DXA (dual X-ray absorptiometry), fasting insulin, C-Peptide, insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), insulin sensitivity (QUICKI), metabolic clearance rate (MCRestOGTT) and serum lipids were assessed. Results. Mean WL was 9.6%; trunk and leg FM were reduced proportionally (14.9–14.7%). Improvement in HOMA-IR was 34.7%, insulin 30.7%, QUICKI 8.6% and MCRest OGTT 74%. The reduction in total, trunk and leg FM were similarly correlated with improvement in indices of insulin resistance (p < 0.001–0.05) and also with initial HOMA-IR (p = 0.000–0.02). In linear regressions improvement in HOMA-IR was similarly related with these FMs (p = 0.008), and initial HOMA predicted loss of trunk FM (p = 0.01). In multivariate analysis improvement in HOMA-IR was explained by loss of total FM (R2 = 0.20, p = 0.004); improvement of QUICKI by loss of leg FM (R2 = 0.33, p < 0.001). Conclusion. Loss of leg FM and trunk FM had similar importance for the improvement in insulin resistance. Baseline HOMA-IR predicted the potential for reduction in trunk FM.

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