4.7 Article

Longitudinal Changes in Fat Mass and the Hippocampus

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OBESITY
卷 28, 期 7, 页码 1263-1269

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/oby.22819

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  1. Australian Government Research Training Program Domestic and Fee-Offset Scholarship

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Objective This study aimed to investigate cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between fat mass (i.e., body mass index [BMI], waist circumference [WC], and waist to hip ratio [WTHR]) and hippocampal volumes. Methods UK Biobank participants (N = 20,395) aged 40 to 70 years (mean follow-up = 7.66 years), were included and categorized into one of four groups, which represented their baseline fat mass status and trajectory of change by follow-up assessment: normal weight to overweight/obesity, overweight/obesity to normal weight (ON), normal weight stable (NS), or overweight/obesity stable (OS). Regression models used NS (WC < 80 cm in women and < 94 cm in men; WTHR < 0.85 in women and < 0.90 in men; BMI < 25 kg/m(2) in women and men) as the reference group. Hippocampal volumes were automatically segmented using the FMRIB Software Library. Results Compared with NS, OS (BMI: B = -62.23 [SE = 16.76]; WC: B = -145.56 [SE = 16.97]; WTHR: B = -101.26 [SE = 19.54]) and ON (BMI: B = -61.1 [SE = 30.3]; WC: B = -93.77 [SE = 24.96]; WTHR: B = -69.92 [SE = 26.22]) had significantly lower hippocampal volumes. Conclusions The detrimental effects of overweight/obesity may extend beyond the duration of overweight/obesity itself.

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