Skip to main content About News Giving All Departments Contact Us Site Map
 University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
 
Search       
Print Friendly  
spacer Home Education Research Patient Care Faculty & Administration Resource Careers
Centers & Departments Core Facilities Post Doctoral Fellowships Research Services Clinical Research (CTSA) Technology Development Research Administration
| Home > Research > Centers & Departments > Center for Human Nutrition >
Research of Nicola Abate, MD
 Home 
 About the Center 
 Facilities 
 Faculty & Staff 
 Research 
 Dr. Scott Grundy - Director 
 Dr. Nicola Abate 
 Dr. Anil Agarwal 
 Dr. Jo Ann Carson 
 Dr. Manisha Chandalia 
 Dr. Jonathan Cohen 
 Dr. Abhimanyu Garg 
 Dr. Elizabeth Parks 
 Dr. Meena Shah 
 Dr. Vinaya Simha 
 Dr. Gloria Vega 
 Center Timeline 
 Center Features 
 Friends of the Center 
 Nutrition Programs 
 Research Conferences 
 CHN Newsletters 
  
  
 

 

Publications of Dr. Abate

Nicola Abate

 

 

 

 

Dr. Nicola Abate has made significant discoveries during his period of investigation in the Center for Human Nutrition. His research on the role of abdominal obesity on insulin resistance has forced a rethinking of this relationship. Insulin resistance is a metabolic defect in which the action of insulin on the cells of the body is deficient. The consequences of this defect are a generalized metabolic disorder called the Metabolic Syndrome. The latter is characterized by blood lipid abnormalities (high triglycerides, small LDL, and low HDL), high blood pressure, high blood glucose, and blood clotting abnormalities. It has been recognized for many years that obesity, particularly when it occurs in the upper body, is associated with insulin resistance. However, many investigators believed that most of the problem resulted from accumulation of fat within the abdominal cavity (visceral obesity). The fat outside the abdominal cavity (subcutaneous fat) was largely ignored. Dr. Abate developed a method to accurately measure both visceral fat and abdominal subcutaneous fat in human subjects using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Subsequently, using this method, he found that subcutaneous abdominal fat had more effect on insulin resistance than does visceral fat. This discovery was extended both to normal subjects and to patients with adult-onset type 2 diabetes. This important finding at first elicited disbelief on the part of much of the obesity and diabetes community, and subsequently it has been confirmed by other reputable investigators. Later, Dr. Abate and co-workers found that male subjects migrating to the United States from India are unusually insulin resistant. At the present time Dr. Abate is continuing his research in the study of the metabolic and genetic causes of insulin resistance in Asian Indians. He has recently received a 5-year grant from the National Institutes of Health to continue these studies.