Modest visceral fat gain causes endothelial dysfunction in healthy humans

Abel Romero-Corral, Fatima H Sert-Kuniyoshi, Justo Sierra-Johnson, Marek Orban, Apoor Gami, Diane Davison, Prachi Singh, Snigdha Pusalavidyasagar, Christine Huyber, Susanne Votruba, Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, Michael D Jensen, Virend K Somers, Abel Romero-Corral, Fatima H Sert-Kuniyoshi, Justo Sierra-Johnson, Marek Orban, Apoor Gami, Diane Davison, Prachi Singh, Snigdha Pusalavidyasagar, Christine Huyber, Susanne Votruba, Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, Michael D Jensen, Virend K Somers

Abstract

Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of fat gain and its distribution on endothelial function in lean healthy humans.

Background: Endothelial dysfunction has been identified as an independent predictor of cardiovascular events. Whether fat gain impairs endothelial function is unknown.

Methods: A randomized controlled study was conducted to assess the effects of fat gain on endothelial function. Forty-three normal-weight healthy volunteers were recruited (mean age 29 years; 18 women). Subjects were assigned to gain weight (approximately 4 kg) (n=35) or to maintain weight (n=8). Endothelial function (brachial artery flow-mediated dilation [FMD]) was measured at baseline, after fat gain (8 weeks), and after weight loss (16 weeks) for fat gainers and at baseline and follow-up (8 weeks) for weight maintainers. Body composition was measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and abdominal computed tomographic scans.

Results: After an average weight gain of 4.1 kg, fat gainers significantly increased their total, visceral, and subcutaneous fat. Blood pressure and overnight polysomnography did not change after fat gain or loss. FMD remained unchanged in weight maintainers. FMD decreased in fat gainers (9.1+/-3% vs. 7.8+/-3.2%, p=0.003) but recovered to baseline when subjects shed the gained weight. There was a significant correlation between the decrease in FMD and the increase in visceral fat gain (rho=-0.42, p=0.004), but not with subcutaneous fat gain (rho=-0.22, p=0.15).

Conclusions: In normal-weight healthy young subjects, modest fat gain results in impaired endothelial function, even in the absence of changes in blood pressure. Endothelial function recovers after weight loss. Increased visceral rather than subcutaneous fat predicts endothelial dysfunction. (Fat Gain and Cardiovascular Disease Mechanisms; NCT00589498).

Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of interest include the following: Abel Romero-Corral, Virend K Somers and Francisco Lopez-Jimenez are recipients of a grant from Select Research for separate work related to measurement of obesity.

Copyright (c) 2010 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1. Endothelial Function in Fat Gainers
Figure 1. Endothelial Function in Fat Gainers
Comparison of brachial artery FMD at baseline, after fat gain and subsequent fat loss (recovery) (n=35).
Figure 2. Endothelial Dysfunction by Tertiles of…
Figure 2. Endothelial Dysfunction by Tertiles of Visceral Fat Gain in the Fat Gain Group
Endothelial dysfunction (percent reduction in FMD) by tertiles of visceral fat gain in fat-gainers (n=35).

Source: PubMed

3
Abonner