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Diabetes Care, Vol 21, Issue 12 2069-2076, Copyright © 1998 by American Diabetes Association
Genes versus environment. The relationship between dietary fat and total and central abdominal fat
K Samaras, PJ Kelly, MN Chiano, N Arden, TD Spector and LV Campbell
Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, Australia.
OBJECTIVE: The influence of diet on body fat has not been quantified
independently of genetic influences, although both are held to contribute
to regulation of body fat stores. This study examined 1) the relationship
between recent diet and total body and central abdominal fat in middle-aged
female twins independent of genetic and important environmental factors and
2) evidence of interaction between diet and genetic predisposition.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Measurements in 436 healthy female twins (aged
58 +/- 10 years) included dietary intake by food frequency questionnaire
(validated against a 7-day food diary, n = 162), BMI, total body and
central abdominal fat by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, and
environmental covariates (smoking habit, hormone replacement, and physical
activity) by standardized questionnaire. Dietary energy underreporters were
excluded. RESULTS: Intake of dietary fat (total and subtype) and
carbohydrates was not related to BMI or to total or central fat, confirmed
in quintile analysis. With genetic and environmental factors controlled in
90 monozygotic pairs, differences in the intake of energy, fat, or protein
were not related to intrapair differences in total and central body fat.
However, a minor inverse relationship between carbohydrate intake and total
adiposity was confirmed (r = -0.25, P = 0.02). In paired analyses, the twin
with the higher intake of total sugars had significantly lower total body
and central abdominal adiposity. There was no evidence of a
gene-environment interaction between intake of fat or carbohydrates
contributing to greater body fat mass in subjects genetically predisposed
to obesity. CONCLUSIONS: Using validated dietary measures and direct
measures of body fat and excluding underreporters, no relationship between
dietary fat and body fat was found in middle-aged women, particularly after
controlling for genetic and some environmental factors. The role of dietary
factors in determining total body and central abdominal fat appears to have
been overestimated in past cross-sectional studies.

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Copyright © 1998 by the American Diabetes Association.
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