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Christina Koutsari, Rita Basu, Robert A. Rizza, K. Sreekumaran Nair, Sundeep Khosla, Michael D. Jensen, Nonoxidative Free Fatty Acid Disposal Is Greater in Young Women than Men, The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Volume 96, Issue 2, 1 February 2011, Pages 541–547, https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2010-1651
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abstract
Large increases in systemic free fatty acid (FFA) availability in the absence of a corresponding increase in fatty acid oxidation can create a host of metabolic abnormalities. These adverse responses are thought to be the result of fatty acids being shunted into hepatic very low-density lipoprotein-triglyceride production and/or intracellular lipid storage and signaling pathways because tissues are forced to increase nonoxidative FFA disposal.
The objective of the study was to examine whether variations in postabsorptive nonoxidative FFA disposal within the usual range predict insulin resistance and hypertriglyceridemia.
We measured: systemic FFA turnover using a continuous iv infusion of [9–10, 3H]palmitate; substrate oxidation with indirect calorimetry combined with urinary nitrogen excretion; whole-body and peripheral insulin sensitivity with the labeled iv glucose tolerance test minimal model.
the study was conducted at the Mayo Clinic General Clinical Research Center.
Participants included healthy, postabsorptive, nonobese adults (21 women and 21 men).
There were no interventions.
Nonoxidative FFA disposal (micromoles per minute), defined as the FFA disappearance rate minus fatty acid oxidation.
Women had 64% greater nonoxidative FFA disposal rate than men but a better lipid profile and similar insulin sensitivity. There was no significant correlation between nonoxidative FFA disposal and whole-body sensitivity, peripheral insulin sensitivity, or fasting serum triglyceride concentrations in men or women.
Healthy nonobese women have greater rates of nonoxidative FFA disposal than men, but this does not appear to relate to adverse health consequences. Understanding the sex-specific interaction between adipose tissue lipolysis and peripheral FFA removal will help to discover new approaches to treat FFA-induced abnormalities.