Proposed conceptual model for the adiponectin paradox. Among healthy
young and middle-aged adults, obesity and low-grade inflammation are associated
with hypoadiponectinemia, and each is associated with reduced insulin
sensitivity. In such individuals, low circulating adiponectin portends a greater
risk of cardiovascular disease. By contrast, in the setting of prevalent
cardiovascular disease, heart failure, chronic kidney disease and advanced age,
leanness more generally reflects involuntary weight loss / cachexia –
which may be accompanied by smaller, differentiated adipocytes – and
this is associated with higher plasma adiponectin. Increased production from
non-adipose tissues or through direct stimulation by natriuretic peptides,
decreased elimination, or other mechanisms associated with high-grade
inflammation, may also contribute to elevation in circulating adiponectin
levels. Such increased adiponectin levels, whether as markers of underlying
illness severity, decreased signaling efficacy (adiponectin resistance) or,
possibly, direct pro-inflammatory or other adverse actions, are related to a
heightened risk of cardiovascular complications and mortality. Last, heart and
vascular expression of T-cadherin also appears to regulate adiponectin levels,
apart from mediating its actions. *In healthy elders, the association has been
shown to be bidirectional, that is, both low and high adiponectin levels are
associated with increased risk.