PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Measurement of visceral fat: should we include retroperitoneal fat?

  • Chi-Sheng Hung,
  • Jen-Kuang Lee,
  • Chung-Yi Yang,
  • Hung-Ren Hsieh,
  • Wen-Ya Ma,
  • Mao-Shin Lin,
  • Pi-Hua Liu,
  • Shyang-Rong Shih,
  • Jyh-Ming Liou,
  • Lee-Ming Chuang,
  • Ming-Fong Chen,
  • Jou-Wei Lin,
  • Jung-Nan Wei,
  • Hung-Yuan Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112355
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e112355

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE: Whether retroperitoneal fat should be included in the measurement of visceral fat remains controversial. We compared the relationships of fat areas in peritoneal, retroperitoneal, and subcutaneous compartments to metabolic syndrome, adipokines, and incident hypertension and diabetes. METHODS: We enrolled 432 adult participants (153 men and 279 women) in a community-based cohort study. Computed tomography at the umbilicus level was used to measure the fat areas. RESULTS: Retroperitoneal fat correlated significantly with metabolic syndrome (adjusted odds ratio (OR), 5.651, p<0.05) and the number of metabolic abnormalities (p<0.05). Retroperitoneal fat area was significantly associated with blood pressure, plasma glycemic indices, lipid profile, C-reactive protein, adiponectin (r = -0.244, P<0.05), and leptin (r = 0.323, p<0.05), but not plasma renin or aldosterone concentrations. During the 2.94 ± 0.84 years of follow-up, 32 participants developed incident hypertension. Retroperitoneal fat area (hazard ration (HR) 1.62, p = 0.003) and peritoneal fat area (HR 1.62, p = 0.009), but not subcutaneous fat area (p = 0.14) were associated with incident hypertension. Neither retroperitoneal fat area, peritoneal fat area, nor subcutaneous fat areas was associated with incident diabetes after adjustment. CONCLUSIONS: Retroperitoneal fat is similar to peritoneal fat, but differs from subcutaneous fat, in terms of its relationship with metabolic syndrome and incident hypertension. Retroperitoneal fat area should be included in the measurement of visceral fat for cardio-metabolic studies in human.