People with short upper legs are more likely to have glucose
intolerance or diabetes
That was reported at the American Heart Association’s 43rd
Annual Conference on Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology and Prevention.
The study seems to support the hypothesis that factors
influencing growth in the womb and during childhood may contribute to the
development of impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes, says Keiko Asao, M.D.,
M.P.H., and a Ph.D. candidate at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md.
Impaired glucose tolerance is also called insulin resistance. It’s a metabolic
disorder in which the body cannot efficiently turn blood sugar (glucose) into
energy.
“Leg length is not the issue. Some factor that affects leg
length may also affect the development of diabetes,” Asao says. “The issue is
how good a marker is upper leg length? Our findings suggest a possible
relationship between early growth and chronic disease later in life.”
Researchers used data on 8,738 black, white and Hispanic men and
women from the Centers for Disease Control’s Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III). The participants were grouped by race and
gender, then compared based on their upper leg length (ULL) and glucose
tolerance: normal glucose tolerance, impaired glucose tolerance and whether they
had diabetes.
“We found an inverse relationship between upper leg length and
having either diabetes or insulin resistance, meaning shorter ULL was associated
with the two metabolic conditions,” Asao says. The average ULL for men and
women with normal glucose tolerance was 40.2 centimeters (cm), compared to 39.1
cm for those with impaired glucose tolerance and 38.3 cm for the diabetic group.
After adjusting for other risk factors, the inverse association
remained for white women and Mexican-American women, but not for blacks or men.
For each centimeter less of ULL, white women were 19 percent more likely to have
diabetes, and Mexican-American women were 13 percent more likely to have it.
Body stature is determined by both environmental and genetic
factors. Upper leg length is considered a marker for growth in childhood,
especially before puberty, says Asao.
While standing height is correlated with upper leg length, it is
not linked to higher risk for diabetes or insulin resistance once other factors
are considered, she says. “We did investigate the ratio of upper leg length to
standing height and found that it is significantly associated with diabetes and
insulin resistance. Upper leg length, more so than standing height, is a marker
of growth specific to a certain time period of life.”
From gestation through childhood, bodies grow in a somewhat
predictable fashion in the order of head, trunk and legs. “Newborn babies have
a larger proportion of head to the total length of their body. Along the path
of development and growth, that proportion gets smaller. Much of the increase
in leg length occurs after birth, during childhood,” she explains.
Two previous studies in Europe that looked at overall leg length
and stature found an association between shortness and a higher risk of
developing diabetes and insulin resistance. “This is the first study to examine
this question in the U.S. population, and the first to concentrate on upper leg
length (ULL),” she says.
The researchers adjusted for age, body weight, and family history
of diabetes, education, income, physical activity levels and lung function.
Source: Diabetes In Control Dot Com: Co-authors are WH Linda Kao, Ph.D., M.H.S.; Kesha Baptiste-Roberts, Ph.D., M.P.H.; Karen Bandeen-Roche, Ph.D.; Thomas Erlinger, M.D., M.P.H.; and Frederick Brancati, M.D., M.H.S. American Heart Association Conference 7th March 2003.
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