Publication: Plasma resistin, insulin concentration in non-diabetic and diabetic, overweight/obese Thai
Submitted Date
Received Date
Accepted Date
Issued Date
2006-05-01
Copyright Date
Announcement No.
Application No.
Patent No.
Valid Date
Resource Type
Edition
Resource Version
Language
File Type
No. of Pages/File Size
ISBN
ISSN
03009831
eISSN
Scopus ID
WOS ID
Pubmed ID
arXiv ID
Call No.
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-33750532094
Journal Title
Volume
Issue
item.page.oaire.edition
Start Page
End Page
Access Rights
Access Status
Rights
Mahidol University
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Physical Location
Bibliographic Citation
International Journal for Vitamin and Nutrition Research. Vol.76, No.3 (2006), 125-131
Citation
Siriporn Chanchay, Rungsunn Tungtrongchitr, Talabporn Harnroongroj, Benjaluck Phonrat, Orapin Rungseesakorn, Suporn Paksanont, Somchai Pooudong, Sastri Saowakontha, Chusak Varongchayakul (2006). Plasma resistin, insulin concentration in non-diabetic and diabetic, overweight/obese Thai. Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/23762.
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Authors
Journal Issue
Thesis
Title
Plasma resistin, insulin concentration in non-diabetic and diabetic, overweight/obese Thai
Alternative Title(s)
Author's Affiliation
Author's E-mail
Editor(s)
Editor's Affiliation
Corresponding Author(s)
Creator(s)
Compiler
Advisor(s)
Illustrator(s)
Applicant(s)
Inventor(s)
Issuer
Assignee
Other Contributor(s)
Series
Has Part
Abstract
This study investigated levels of fasting plasma glucose (FBS), homeostasis model of the assessment of the insulin resistance (HOMA), lipid profile, insulin, and resistin hormones in 202 individuals, divided into four groups. Two groups had type II diabetes mellitus (DM): one group had been overnourished (DM/OB) (body mass index: BMI equal or above 25) and the other had not (DM/nOB). Two additional groups not suffering from diabetes were either overnourished (nDM/OB) or of normal nutritional status (nDM/nOB). Only the DM/OB group had insulin levels elevated above the other three groups. Resistin levels had been lowest in the nDM/nOB group. When participants of the two nOB groups were pooled into one group and the subjects of the two OB groups were combined into another group, the median plasma resistin levels of the OB groups were significantly higher compared with the nOB groups. Likewise the DM groups had higher resistin levels than the nDM groups. A significant correlation of plasma resistin with BMI, waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, FBS, and HOMA score had been observed. The result suggests that plasma resistin has a role in linking central obesity and obesity-related insulin resistance to type II diabetes mellitus. © Hogrefe & Huber Publishers.