Aims and methods - Factor analysis is a multivariate correlation technique frequently employed to characterise the aggregation of abnormalities underlying the metabolic syndrome (MS), but scarcely used in obese adolescents. Aim of the study was to investigate the clustering of anthropometric and metabolic variables related to the MS in 487 obese pubertal adolescents (140 boys, 347 girls) in the range of age 11 - 18 yrs. employing the factor analysis with exploratory approach. Results - Principal component analysis reduced eleven correlated physiological variables to four uncorrelated factors that explained 68.7% of the variance in the original parameters in boys, and 68.4% in girls. In boys, these factors were: obesity/hypertension, insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, and hyperglycaemia, with elements related to obesity and fat distribution loaded also in dyslipidaemia and isulin resistance. In girls no commonalities were detected, but elements of dyslipidaemia and insulin resistance were loaded in a single factor, whereas elements of obesity and hypertension were loaded in separate factors. Conclusions - The identification of four independent factors suggests a multiple physiological origin of the MS also in youngsters. The measures of adiposity were correlated with development of hypertension, insulin resistance and dyslipidemic phenomena in boys only, whereas in girls anthropometric measures were not correlated with any tested component of the MS, possibly disclosing the protective effect of female sex hormones in the juvenile age span.
Factor analysis of metabolic syndrome components in severely obese girls and boys.
Lafortuna CL;Adorni F;
2009
Abstract
Aims and methods - Factor analysis is a multivariate correlation technique frequently employed to characterise the aggregation of abnormalities underlying the metabolic syndrome (MS), but scarcely used in obese adolescents. Aim of the study was to investigate the clustering of anthropometric and metabolic variables related to the MS in 487 obese pubertal adolescents (140 boys, 347 girls) in the range of age 11 - 18 yrs. employing the factor analysis with exploratory approach. Results - Principal component analysis reduced eleven correlated physiological variables to four uncorrelated factors that explained 68.7% of the variance in the original parameters in boys, and 68.4% in girls. In boys, these factors were: obesity/hypertension, insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, and hyperglycaemia, with elements related to obesity and fat distribution loaded also in dyslipidaemia and isulin resistance. In girls no commonalities were detected, but elements of dyslipidaemia and insulin resistance were loaded in a single factor, whereas elements of obesity and hypertension were loaded in separate factors. Conclusions - The identification of four independent factors suggests a multiple physiological origin of the MS also in youngsters. The measures of adiposity were correlated with development of hypertension, insulin resistance and dyslipidemic phenomena in boys only, whereas in girls anthropometric measures were not correlated with any tested component of the MS, possibly disclosing the protective effect of female sex hormones in the juvenile age span.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


