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Association of Resistin with Components of Metabolic Syndrome in Our Local Population
Author(s) -
Mozaffer Rahim Hingorjo,
Muhammad Noman Rashid,
Naila Parveen,
Lubna Riaz,
Riaz Ahmed Shahid,
Zainab Hasan
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the journal of bahria university medical and dental college
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2617-9482
pISSN - 2220-7562
DOI - 10.51985/jbumdc2021131
Subject(s) - resistin , metabolic syndrome , medicine , insulin resistance , odds ratio , confidence interval , blood sugar , obesity , endocrinology , diabetes mellitus , population , blood pressure , gastroenterology , adipokine , environmental health
Objective: To investigate the association of resistin with components of metabolic syndrome (MetS) in our local population. Study design & setting: Case-control study, Medical OPD; Lyari General Hospital Karachi (from 15th July 2020 till 15th December 2020). Methodology: A total of 164 subjects (83 cases & 81 controls) between the age ranges of 35-65 years were selected. Subjects with metabolic syndrome were included in concordance with International Diabetes Federation criteria. Serum resistin levels in both cases and controls were compared. SPSS 20 was used for statistical analysis. Eighty-three patients with metabolic syndrome were enrolled and compared with 81 healthy unmatched controls. Obesity indices, blood pressure, lipid profile, fasting blood sugar, insulin resistance and serum resistin levels were evaluated. Predictive values of resistin for MetS were analyzed using odds ratios. Results: Significantly elevated levels of resistin were found in subjects with metabolic syndrome compared to healthy controls (8.23±4.43 vs 6.82±3.64 ng/mL, p<0.05). The odds ratio (95% confidence interval) for metabolic syndrome in subjects having higher resistin were: males:2.62[1.11–6.19], females: 2.81[1.05–7.49], all Ptrend<0.05.For individual components of metabolic syndrome, we found the odds ratio to be greatest for hypertension, fasting blood sugar, and insulin resistance; 2.64, 4.83, 2.85, respectively, all Ptrend<0.05. Conclusion: The present study suggests significant association of resistin with components of metabolic syndrome such as hypertension, fasting blood sugar, and insulin resistance. Compared to healthy controls, subjects with MetS had significantly higher resistin levels. Further research is required to incorporate this biomarker in clinical setting.

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