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Uric acid, carotid intima‐media thickness and body composition in prepubertal children
Author(s) -
Bassols J.,
MartínezCalcerrada J. M.,
PratsPuig A.,
CarrerasBadosa G.,
DíazRoldán F.,
Osiniri I.,
RieraPérez E.,
Zegher F.,
Ibáñez L.,
LópezBermejo A.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
pediatric obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.226
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 2047-6310
pISSN - 2047-6302
DOI - 10.1111/ijpo.12074
Subject(s) - medicine , uric acid , insulin resistance , asymptomatic , body mass index , endocrinology , intra abdominal fat , intima media thickness , hyperuricemia , waist , obesity , carotid arteries , visceral fat
Summary Background Increased uric acid is an independent biomarker for cardiovascular disease in obese adolescents and adults. Objective We investigated whether uric acid relates to carotid intima‐media thickness ( cIMT ) in prepubertal children, and whether body mass index ( BMI ) and preperitoneal fat modulate this association. Methods 359 asymptomatic prepubertal Caucasian children were stratified according to BMI categories (171 with BMI ‐ SDS  < 0; 188 with BMI ‐ SDS  ≥ 0) and according to preperitoneal fat levels (180 with preperitoneal fat <50th centile; 179 with preperitoneal fat >50th centile). Uric acid levels, insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment insulin resistance; HOMA ‐ IR ), C ‐reactive protein ( CRP ), triacylglycerol ( TG ), systolic blood pressure ( SBP ), abdominal fat and cIMT (both by ultrasound) were assessed. Results Uric acid was associated with several cardiovascular risk factors, namely higher HOMA ‐ IR , CRP , TG , BMI , waist, SBP , preperitoneal fat and cIMT (all P  < 0.001 to P  < 0.0001). Significant BMI and preperitoneal fat interactions were documented in the relationship between uric acid and cIMT (both P  < 0.05), as uric acid was preferentially related to cIMT in heavier children (β = 0.247, P  < 0.001, r 2  = 9.1%) and in children with more preperitoneal fat (β = 0.263, P  < 0.0001, r 2  = 11.9%). Conclusions Serum uric acid is associated with cIMT in asymptomatic prepubertal children. Both higher BMI and preperitoneal fat aggravate the potential risk of atherosclerotic disease imposed by higher concentrations of uric acid.

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