Wayne Wisemandle
Wright State University
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Featured researches published by Wayne Wisemandle.
International Journal of Obesity | 1999
Ellen W. Demerath; Bradford Towne; Wayne Wisemandle; John Blangero; Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Roger M. Siervogel
BACKGROUND: Recent evidence has suggested that leptin concentration is associated with gonadal hormone levels, and that changes in leptin concentration may trigger the onset of reproductive function in children. However, the concurrent changes in body composition during puberty make the independent associations between leptin and gonadal hormone concentrations in children difficult to resolve.METHODS: To investigate the nature of associations between leptin levels and pubertal maturation, serum concentrations of leptin, estradiol, and testosterone and body composition measures were examined in a sample of 152 healthy pre-pubertal, pubertal, and post-pubertal children.RESULTS: Leptin concentration was nearly three-fold higher in post-pubertal girls than in pre-pubertal girls, but was relatively similar in pre- and post-pubertal boys. Significant sex differences in leptin concentration existed in pre-pubertal, pubertal and post-pubertal children, and these remained significant after controlling for adiposity. After adjusting for total body fat, fat-free mass and age, testosterone concentration was negatively associated with leptin levels in pubertal boys, while estradiol concentration was positively associated with leptin level in pubertal girls.CONCLUSIONS: Girls have higher serum leptin concentration before, during, and after puberty than boys, even after accounting for the development of greater female adiposity. Although other factors may be involved, sexual dimorphism in leptin concentrations during puberty appears to be partly due to a stimulatory effect of estradiol on leptin concentration in females and a suppressive effect of testosterone on leptin concentration in males.
Journal of Clinical Densitometry | 2001
Tuan V. Nguyen; L. Michele Maynard; Bradford Towne; Alex F. Roche; Wayne Wisemandle; Jianrong Li; Shumei S. Guo; W. Cameron Chumlea; Roger M. Siervogel
Risk of osteoporosis in later life may be determined during adolescence and young adulthood. The present study used longitudinal data to examine the accumulation of bone mineral content (BMC) and bone mineral density (BMD) in Caucasian subjects ages 6-36 yr. Growth in BMC and BMD (measured by dual X-ray absorptiometry; Lunar, Madison, WI) of 94 males and 92 females was monitored for a mean period of 4.29 yr. The main findings were that there were no sex differences in BMC or BMD during the prepubertal stage; however, females had significantly higher BMD of the pelvis and BMC and BMD of the spine during puberty, and postpubertal males generally had significantly higher BMC and BMD than their female counterparts. In addition, the longitudinal rate of bone accumulation in both sexes increased rapidly during childhood and adolescence and was nearly complete at the end of puberty. Finally, peak BMC and BMD was achieved between the ages of 20 and 25 and occurred earlier in females than in males. The rates of growth and timing of peak bone mass as reported here define the crucial period during which intervention protocols should be developed for maximizing skeletal mass to prevent the development of osteoporosis.
Pediatrics | 2000
Wayne Wisemandle; L. Michele Maynard; Shumei S. Guo; Roger M. Siervogel
Objective. To determine the effects of timing of onset of overweight (OW) on childhood anthropometric adiposity levels using long-term serial data from the Fels Longitudinal Study. Classification. OW was defined as body mass index (BMI; kg/m2) >25, and the age at first measurement of BMI >25 was the age of onset of OW. Early onset of OW (early-OW) and late onset of OW (late-OW) were defined as having onset of OW before and after 25 years of age, respectively, whereas never OW (never-OW) was defined as never having a BMI >25. Subjects. Subjects consisted of 67 males and 47 females in early-OW groups, 62 males and 48 females in late-OW groups, and 80 males and 114 females in never-OW groups. Results. Levels of weight and BMI in early-OW males and females were significantly greater than those in never-OW and late-OW males and females beginning at the time of adiposity rebound, which generally occurs between 4 and 8 years of age. Median BMI and weight patterns between never-OW and late-OW males were similar throughout childhood. However, significant differences in median levels of BMI for never-OW and late-OW females began at 11 years of age, although onset of OW was not until >25 years of age in the latter group. Conclusions. For both males and females, adiposity rebound is likely an effective time in a childs development to detect and initiate prevention for childhood and early adulthood onset of OW. Although later-onset OW needs additional study, puberty seems to be a critical phase in the development of later adult onset of OW in females.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1998
Roger M. Siervogel; Wayne Wisemandle; L. Michele Maynard; Shumei S. Guo; Alex F. Roche; William Cameron Chumlea; Bradford Towne
Few studies have examined the relationships between measures of body composition and lipid and lipoprotein levels in long-term serial data from individuals unselected for cardiovascular disease- or obesity-related variables, and none have considered such extensive serial data as used in the current study. The aim was to examine in such individuals the associations between annual changes in lipid and lipoprotein levels and concurrent changes in total body fat, fat-free mass, percent body fat, and body mass index. Serial data from 1304 examinations of 423 adult white participants in the Fels Longitudinal Study were analyzed sex-specifically in 2 age groups, 18 through 44 years and 45 to 65 years. A regressive analytic approach utilized the long-term (4 to 20 years) serial data of individuals. Annual changes in adiposity, independent of levels of lean tissue changes, before and after age 45 for men and women were significantly correlated with corresponding annual changes in cholesterol and low density lipoprotein cholesterol. In men before age 45, changes in triglycerides and high density lipoprotein cholesterol were also significantly associated with changes in adiposity, with the relationship remaining after age 45 in high density lipoprotein cholesterol. Increases in adiposity in individuals are associated with changes in lipid and lipoprotein levels in the direction of increased risk for cardiovascular disease. Adult levels of total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein cholesterol across age and sex and high density lipoprotein cholesterol in men are responsive to changes in adiposity, independent of initial adiposity or lipid and lipoprotein levels.
American Journal of Human Biology | 1998
Shumei S. Guo; Eric Chi; Wayne Wisemandle; Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Alex F. Roche; Roger M. Siervogel
This study determines: (1) patterns of change from childhood to young adulthood in body mass index (BMI), systolic blood pressure (SBP), and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), (2) effects of elevated BMI values on changes in blood pressures (BP), (3) extent of tracking for SBP, DBP, and BMI, and (4) prediction of future risk for elevated BP from earlier values. Annual serial BP and BMI data were available for 198 white females, ages 8–22 years, enrolled in the Fels Longitudinal Study. Patterns of change in BMI were described by a random effects model with a time series model for the correlated residuals. Serial BMI measures were differentiated from age‐specific means to measure relative individual BMI levels. Serial BP were analyzed using a similar model to the BMI where relative individual BMI levels were included as an explanatory variable. There was a general increasing trend for SBP, DBP, and BMI from 8–22 years, but the rates of increase declined with age. At the same chronological age, early menarche females had a significantly greater BMI mean value than late menarche females. An average increase of 1 kg/m2 in deviation from BMI population means resulted in an average increase of 1.2 mmHg in SBP and 0.6 mmHg in DBP. Having SBP and DBP levels 1 standard deviation above mean levels, relative to females at mean levels, as early as age 9 represents an odds ratio of 2 for exceeding national 75th percentile levels of SBP and DBP at age 21. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 10: 589–598, 1998.
Applied Radiation and Isotopes | 1998
Roger M. Siervogel; Wayne Wisemandle; S. S. Guo; Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Bradford Towne; Alex F. Roche
Serial data from 507 adult participants in the Fels Longitudinal Study were used to study relationships between average annual changes in serum cholesterol levels and annual changes in total body fat, fat-free mass, percent body fat or body mass index in men and women aged 18-45 years or 45-65 years. Average annual changes in adiposity before and after 45 years of age for men and women show statistically significant, strong, positive relationships with corresponding changes in cholesterol levels.
Pediatrics | 2001
L. Michele Maynard; Wayne Wisemandle; Alex F. Roche; Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Shumei S. Guo; Roger M. Siervogel
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1998
L. M. Maynard; S. S. Guo; Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Alex F. Roche; Wayne Wisemandle; Christine M. Zeller; Bradford Towne; Roger M. Siervogel
Obesity Research | 2000
Roger M. Siervogel; Wayne Wisemandle; L. Michele Maynard; Shumei S. Guo; Wm. Cameron Chumlea; Bradford Towne
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006
Roger M. Siervogel; L. Michele Maynard; Wayne Wisemandle; Alex F. Roche; Shumei S. Guo; W. Cameron Chumlea; Bradford Towne