Objective: To investigate the impact of dyslipidaemia on insulin resistance in Chinese individuals in Shanghai.
Methods: 830 individuals aged over 40 years (male 300, female 530) were divided into normal and dyslipidaemia groups. The latter included 7 subgroups as follows: low high density lipoprotein (L-HDL)-subgroup I, high triglycerides (H-TG)-subgroup II, high total cholesterol or high low density lipoprotein (H-TC/H-LDL)-subgroup III, low high density lipoprotein with high triglycerides (L-HDL + H-TG)-subgroup IV, low high density lipoprotein with high total cholesterol or high low density lipoprotein (L-HDL + H-TC/H-LDL)-subgroup V, high triglycerides with high total cholesterol or high low density lipoprotein(H-TG + H-TC/H-LDL)-subgroup VI, low high density lipoprotein with high triglycerides and high total cholesterol or high low density lipoprotein (L-HDL + H-TG + H-TC/H-LDL)-subgroup VII. Homeostasis model assessment (HOMA) was applied to estimate the degree of insulin resistance (IR).
Results: (1) Adjusted with age, sex and body mass index (BMI), HOMA-IR was increased in the dyslipidaemia subgroups with high triglycerides. (2) Hypertriglyceridemia was more closely related to raised BMI and waist-hip ratio (WHR). (3) Both body fat (BMI, WHR) and triglycerides were independent risk factors accounting for HOMA-IR.
Conclusion: Hypertriglycerides could be regarded as an independent risk factor for insulin resistance.