A cross section of adult full-blooded Aborigines from three small isolated communities in the desert region of northwest Australia was surveyed for diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), insulin levels, and lipoprotein lipids. Sixty-three men and 86 women from a total adult population of 330 were tested. Of the people tested, 67.6% had normal glucose tolerance, 25% had IGT, and 7.4% had diabetes. Both diabetes and IGT were strongly age related. Fasting insulin levels and insulin responses to oral glucose (elevation above basal) were elevated. Although fasting insulin rose with age, insulin response did not rise after adjustment for body mass index (BMI). Plasma triglyceride levels were high, particularly in men >35 yr old (3.13 ± 0.32 mM), but cholesterol levels were not elevated. Multiple regression analysis of fasting glucose, 2-h glucose, plasma triglyceride, fasting insulin, and insulin response for the nondiabetic subjects revealed 7) BMI was an independent risk factor for elevated 2-h glucose levels in women but not in men and was strongly related to fasting insulin concentrations in both genders; 2) fasting insulin concentration was an independent risk factor for increases in fasting glucose, insulin response, and triglyceride levels; 3) insulin response was related to the 2-h glucose level; 4) fasting and 2-h glucose levels and fasting insulin and triglyceride concentrations all rose with age in both genders, with the rate of increase generally greater in men. The most striking difference between these desert Aborigines and previously studied coastal Aborigines from the same geographical region was the significantly higher insulin response. It is possible that the more severe hyperinsulinemia in the desert Aborigines may indicate a greater degree of susceptibility to type II diabetes than in the coastal Aborigines as the duration of urbanization increases.
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Original Articles|
January 01 1988
Impaired Glucose Tolerance, Hyperinsulinemia, and Hypertriglyceridemia in Australian Aborigines From the Desert
Kerin O'Dea, PhD;
Kerin O'Dea, PhD
Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital
Victoria, Australia
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Kathy Traianedes, BAppSc;
Kathy Traianedes, BAppSc
Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital
Victoria, Australia
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John L Hopper, PhD;
John L Hopper, PhD
Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital
Victoria, Australia
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Richard G Larkins, PhD
Richard G Larkins, PhD
Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital
Victoria, Australia
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Kerin O'Dea, Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Victoria 3050, Australia.
Citation
Kerin O'Dea, Kathy Traianedes, John L Hopper, Richard G Larkins; Impaired Glucose Tolerance, Hyperinsulinemia, and Hypertriglyceridemia in Australian Aborigines From the Desert. Diabetes Care 1 January 1988; 11 (1): 23–29. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.11.1.23
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