Volume 230, Issue 3 p. 195-201

Visceral fat accumulation: the missing link between psychosocial factors and cardiovascular disease?

Professor P. BJÖRNTORP

Corresponding Author

Professor P. BJÖRNTORP

Department of Medicine I, Sahlgren's Hospital, University of Göteborg, Göteborg, Sweden

Department of Medicine I, Sahlgren's Hospital, University of Göteborg, 413 45 Göteborg, Sweden.Search for more papers by this author
First published: September 1991
Citations: 201

Abstract

Abstract. Neuroendocrine responses to psychosocial pressures have been well characterized. The defence reaction is followed by increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system. Essential hypertension might be induced by such mechanisms. The defeat reaction is characterized by increased activity along the corticotropin releasing factor-adreno-corticotropin hormone-cortisol axis, resulting in the inhibition of gonadotropin secretion. Such endocrine disturbances are followed by metabolic aberrations, and probably also by the accumulation of visceral fat. Subjects with abdominal fat accumulation (high waist/hip circumference ratio, WHR) have recently been found to exhibit a number of psychosocial handicaps, together with endocrine aberrations characteristic of the defence and, in particular, the defeat reaction, as well as the associated circulatory and metabolic aberrations. Such abnormalities, including the WHR itself, are established risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes. It is postulated that increased WHR is a symptom of chronic hypothalamic arousal as a result of a defeat reaction to psychosocial pressures. This might lead to the development of disease via circulatory and metabolic derangements.

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