Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Obesity and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) (a sensitive marker of inflammatory activity) are associated with most chronic diseases. Abdominal adiposity along with age is the strongest determinant of baseline CRP levels in healthy sub...

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Main Authors: Irkulla Sashidhar, Ujam Bedri, Gaze David, Kumar Devinder, Mendall Michael A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2013-02-01
Series:Journal of Inflammation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journal-inflammation.com/content/10/1/5
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spelling doaj-332abbf0f1d94981b239d6b18dc2e9962020-11-24T21:44:39ZengBMCJournal of Inflammation1476-92552013-02-01101510.1186/1476-9255-10-5Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repairIrkulla SashidharUjam BedriGaze DavidKumar DevinderMendall Michael A<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Obesity and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) (a sensitive marker of inflammatory activity) are associated with most chronic diseases. Abdominal adiposity along with age is the strongest determinant of baseline CRP levels in healthy subjects. The mechanism of the association of serum CRP with disease is uncertain. We hypothesized that baseline serum CRP is a marker of inflammatory responsiveness to injury and that abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of this responsiveness. We studied the effect of abdominal adiposity, age and other environmental risk factors for chronic disease on the CRP response to a standardised surgical insult, unilateral hernia repair to not only test this hypothesis but to inform the factors which must be taken into account when assessing systemic inflammatory responses to surgery.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>102 male subjects aged 24-94 underwent unilateral hernia repair by a single operator. CRP was measured at 0, 6, 24 and 48 hrs. Response was defined as the peak CRP adjusted for baseline CRP.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Age and waist:hip ratio (WHR) were associated both with basal CRP and CRP response with similar effect sizes after adjustment for a wide-range of covariates. The adjusted proportional difference in CRP response per 10% increase in WHR was 1.50 (1.17-1.91) p = 0.0014 and 1.15(1.00-1.31) p = 0.05 per decade increase in age. There was no evidence of important effects of other environmental cardiovascular risk factors on CRP response.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Waist:hip ratio and age need to be considered when studying the inflammatory response to surgery. The finding that age and waist:hip ratio influence baseline and post-operative CRP levels to a similar extent suggests that baseline CRP is a measure of inflammatory responsiveness to casual stimuli and that higher age and obesity modulate the generic excitability of the inflammatory system leading to both higher baseline CRP and higher CRP response to surgery. The mechanism for the association of baseline CRP and waist:hip ratio to chronic disease outcomes could be through this increase in inflammatory system excitability.</p> http://www.journal-inflammation.com/content/10/1/5InflammationC-reactive proteinWaist: hip ratioInjury
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Irkulla Sashidhar
Ujam Bedri
Gaze David
Kumar Devinder
Mendall Michael A
spellingShingle Irkulla Sashidhar
Ujam Bedri
Gaze David
Kumar Devinder
Mendall Michael A
Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
Journal of Inflammation
Inflammation
C-reactive protein
Waist: hip ratio
Injury
author_facet Irkulla Sashidhar
Ujam Bedri
Gaze David
Kumar Devinder
Mendall Michael A
author_sort Irkulla Sashidhar
title Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
title_short Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
title_full Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
title_fullStr Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
title_full_unstemmed Abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the C-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
title_sort abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of the c-reactive response to injury in subjects undergoing inguinal hernia repair
publisher BMC
series Journal of Inflammation
issn 1476-9255
publishDate 2013-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Obesity and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) (a sensitive marker of inflammatory activity) are associated with most chronic diseases. Abdominal adiposity along with age is the strongest determinant of baseline CRP levels in healthy subjects. The mechanism of the association of serum CRP with disease is uncertain. We hypothesized that baseline serum CRP is a marker of inflammatory responsiveness to injury and that abdominal adiposity is the main determinant of this responsiveness. We studied the effect of abdominal adiposity, age and other environmental risk factors for chronic disease on the CRP response to a standardised surgical insult, unilateral hernia repair to not only test this hypothesis but to inform the factors which must be taken into account when assessing systemic inflammatory responses to surgery.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>102 male subjects aged 24-94 underwent unilateral hernia repair by a single operator. CRP was measured at 0, 6, 24 and 48 hrs. Response was defined as the peak CRP adjusted for baseline CRP.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Age and waist:hip ratio (WHR) were associated both with basal CRP and CRP response with similar effect sizes after adjustment for a wide-range of covariates. The adjusted proportional difference in CRP response per 10% increase in WHR was 1.50 (1.17-1.91) p = 0.0014 and 1.15(1.00-1.31) p = 0.05 per decade increase in age. There was no evidence of important effects of other environmental cardiovascular risk factors on CRP response.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Waist:hip ratio and age need to be considered when studying the inflammatory response to surgery. The finding that age and waist:hip ratio influence baseline and post-operative CRP levels to a similar extent suggests that baseline CRP is a measure of inflammatory responsiveness to casual stimuli and that higher age and obesity modulate the generic excitability of the inflammatory system leading to both higher baseline CRP and higher CRP response to surgery. The mechanism for the association of baseline CRP and waist:hip ratio to chronic disease outcomes could be through this increase in inflammatory system excitability.</p>
topic Inflammation
C-reactive protein
Waist: hip ratio
Injury
url http://www.journal-inflammation.com/content/10/1/5
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AT kumardevinder abdominaladiposityisthemaindeterminantofthecreactiveresponsetoinjuryinsubjectsundergoinginguinalherniarepair
AT mendallmichaela abdominaladiposityisthemaindeterminantofthecreactiveresponsetoinjuryinsubjectsundergoinginguinalherniarepair
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