%0 Journal Article %T Elevated C-Reactive Protein, Abdominal Obesity, and Glucose Tolerance Status in Japanese-Brazilians %A Marly A. Cardoso %A Frank B. Hu %A Suely G.A. Gimeno %A La¨¦rcio J. Franco %A Am¨¦lia T. Hirai %A Sandra R.G. Ferreira %A for the Japanese-Brazilian Diabetes Study GroupP %J The Open Endocrinology Journal %D 2007 %I %R 10.2174/1874216500701010001] %X Although evidences indicate that C-reactive protein (CRP) levels are independent predictors of type 2 diabetes (DM), some studies either did not support this association or examine it extensively throughout the stages of glucose tolerance. In a cross-sectional population-based survey, we investigated the relation between CRP and the risk of newly diagnosed impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and DM among Japanese-Brazilians (374 men and 464 women). In agegender¨Cadjusted analyses, the risks of IGT and type 2 diabetes were significantly higher in the highest CRP tertile as compared with participants with a normal glucose tolerance status (P for trend = 0.0001 in both conditions). After further adjustments for confounding factors, including waist circumference, only the odds of having IGT in the highest CRP tertile was still significant (odds ratio 1.87 [95% CI 1.04¨C3.37). Our results suggest that low-grade inflammation increases the risk of IGT in Japanese-Brazilians but that some of the risk is confounded by abdominal adiposity. %U http://www.benthamscience.com/open/toej/articles/V001/1TOEJ.htm