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Circulation. 2002;106:289-291
Published online before print July 1, 2002, doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000025241.01418.4D
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(Circulation. 2002;106:289.)
© 2002 American Heart Association, Inc.


Brief Rapid Communications

Fish-Rich Diet, Leptin, and Body Mass

Mikolaj Winnicki, MD, PhD; Virend K. Somers, MD, PhD; Valentina Accurso, MD; Bradley G. Phillips, PharmD; Massimo Puato, MD; Paolo Palatini, MD; Paolo Pauletto, MD

From the University of Padova (V.A., M.P., P. Palatini, P. Pauletto), Padova, Italy; the University of Iowa (B.G.P.), Iowa City; the Medical University Gdansk (M.W.), Gdansk, Poland; and the Mayo Clinic (M.W., V.K.S., V.A.), Rochester, Minn.

Correspondence to Virend K. Somers, MD, PhD, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55902. E-mail somers.virend{at}mayo.edu

Background Leptin has been implicated in cardiovascular disease. A diet rich in fish has been associated with decreased cardiac and vascular risk.

Methods and Results We examined the relationship between diet and leptin in 2 related homogeneous African tribal populations of Tanzania. One tribe consumes freshwater fish as their main diet component (n=279), and the other tribe consumes a primarily vegetarian diet (n=329). In multivariate analysis, plasma leptin levels were associated with type of diet (F=14.3, P<0.001), independent of age, body mass index, body fat, alcohol consumption, or insulin. Both male (2.5±2 [fish diet] versus 11.2±2.4 [vegetarian diet] ng/mL, P=0.017) and female (5.0±1.9 [fish diet] versus 11.8±1.4 [vegetarian diet] ng/mL, P=0.007) fish eaters had lower plasma leptin levels than did their vegetable diet counterparts, even though body mass index values were virtually identical.

Conclusions A diet rich in fish is associated with lower plasma leptin, independent of body fat. These findings may have implications for understanding the reduced cardiovascular risk in subjects on a high-fish diet.


Key Words: diet • fatty acids • risk factors




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