Publications by authors named "G A Borkan"

Previous studies have suggested that excess body weight increases coronary disease risk by modification of the levels of other risk factors and in addition may contribute to overall risk independently. Few studies, however, have systematically characterized long-term change in risk factors with specific changes in overall weight while they have controlled for the effects of multiple potential confounders. Also, very little information is available on the differential impact of weight change on risk factor changes with advancing age.

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Previous studies in animal populations have shown that stunted neural and thymolymphatic growth early in development may result in permanently impaired neural and immune function, decreased body growth, vertebral wedging, and decreased life-span. In the human adult, small vertebral neural canal (VNC) diameters may reflect early stunted neural and immune development and impaired function that leads to decreased health (inferred by greater vertebral wedging) and life-span in the adult. VNC, which complete their growth by early childhood (age 4), are markers of early development in adults.

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Computed tomography (CT) scanning was used to assess the relationship of glucose tolerance to fat distribution in men. Three cross sections [chest (including upper arms), abdomen, and thigh] were scanned in 41 men randomly selected from the Normative Aging Study, a longitudinal study of aging. Greater amounts of fat in the upper body and greater ratios of upper-body fat to lower-body fat were significantly correlated with higher 2-h serum glucose levels after adjustment for age and body mass index.

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Computed tomography (CT) scans were taken of 21 middle-aged men (mean age 46.3 years) and 20 older men (mean age 69.4 years) to measure differences in body composition with age.

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