Inflammatory "adiposopathy" in major amputation patients

Christine R Mauro, Binh T Nguyen, Peng Yu, Ming Tao, Ian Gao, Michael A Seidman, Louis L Nguyen, C Keith Ozaki, Christine R Mauro, Binh T Nguyen, Peng Yu, Ming Tao, Ian Gao, Michael A Seidman, Louis L Nguyen, C Keith Ozaki

Abstract

Background: Much has been made of obesity's health impact, largely founded on data regarding patient weight and circulating adipose-derived mediator levels. Paradoxically, a "healthy obese" state exists, but substantial knowledge gaps also exist regarding human adipose-phenotype determinants. Surgical major amputation (AMP) patients are the "sickest-of-the-sick." Conversely, elective knee replacement (TKR) is reserved for patients who expect continued health and longevity. To delineate human adipose biology variability and clinical determinants, we studied fresh subcutaneous adipose from AMP patients, using TKR patients as controls. We hypothesized that AMP patients would display a pro-inflammatory adipokine signature, and that certain clinical conditions (diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, high BMI, uremia) would independently drive elevated adipose inflammation.

Methods: AMP (n = 29) and TKR (n = 20) adipose tissue samples and clinical data were collected prospectively, and protein was isolated and analyzed for 8 adipose-related mediators. Statistical analyses included Wilcoxon's rank sum test, Fisher's exact test, and multiple linear regression modeling of clinical parameter predictors of mediator expression.

Results: Interleukin-(IL)-6, IL-8, leptin, resistin, and PAI-1 were differentially expressed (up to 200-fold) between AMP/TKR cohorts. Key clinical parameters that associated with protein levels of adipose phenotype included age, gender, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, renal disease, and warfarin, statin, and insulin use. BMI failed to be predictive.

Conclusions: AMP patients display adiposopathy with a pro-inflammatory adipose phenotypic signature compared with TKR controls. BMI fails to predict phenotype, yet other clinical conditions, such as age, hyperlipidemia, and renal insufficiency, do drive adipokine expression. Understanding human adipose phenotypic determinants stands as a fundamental priority when future studies dissect the interplay between adipose biology and surgical diseases/outcomes.

Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Representative Histology, Masson stained. Two representative fields (100X magnification) from trichrome stained sections from each cohort are shown. Tissue from amputation patients (panels A and B) showed rare fat necrosis (panel A) amidst relatively normal adipose tissue (panel B). Tissue from control patients (panels C and D) did not show fat necrosis in the sections examined. Scale bar = 200 μm

Source: PubMed

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