Background: Aging-related disease risk is exacerbated by obesity and physical inactivity. It is unclear how weight loss and increased activity improve risk in older adults. We aimed to determine the effects of diet-induced weight loss with and without exercise on insulin sensitivity, VO2peak, body composition, and physical function in older obese adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To determine the effect of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) on skeletal muscle and liver insulin sensitivity, insulin clearance, inflammation and adipokines.
Methods: Insulin-resistant adults without rheumatic disease were randomized to 13 weeks of HCQ (400 mg/day) versus placebo (double-blinded). Primary outcomes were changes in skeletal muscle and liver insulin sensitivity assessed by hyperinsulinaemic-euglycaemic clamp and stable-isotope tracer methods.
Background: The severity of pulmonary hypertension (PH) is monitored by measuring pulmonary vascular resistance, which is a steady-state measurement and ignores the pulsatile load encountered by the right ventricle (RV). Pulmonary vascular impedance (PVZ) can depict both steady-state and pulsatile forces, and thus may better predict clinical outcomes. We sought to calculate PVZ in patients with PH associated with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction who were administered inhaled sodium nitrite to better understand the acute effects on afterload.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is converging evidence that insulin plays a role in food-reward signaling in the brain and has effects on enhancing cognition. Little is known about how these effects are altered in individuals with insulin resistance. The present study was designed to identify the relationships between insulin resistance and functional brain connectivity following a meal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The impact of daily physical activity (PA) on the cardiometabolic risk of bariatric surgery patients is not known.
Objective: We examined the influence of physical activity and sedentary behavior on modifying cardiometabolic risk after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery.
Setting: University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and East Carolina University bariatric surgery centers.
Objective: To determine effects of physical activity (PA) with diet-induced weight loss on energy metabolism in adults with severe obesity.
Methods: Adults with severe obesity (n = 11) were studied across 6 months of intervention, then compared with controls with less severe obesity (n = 7) or normal weight (n = 9). Indirect calorimetry measured energy metabolism during exercise and rest.
Both Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery and exercise can improve insulin sensitivity in individuals with severe obesity. However, the impact of RYGB with or without exercise on skeletal muscle mitochondria, intramyocellular lipids, and insulin sensitivity index (SI) is unknown. We conducted a randomized exercise trial in patients (n = 101) who underwent RYGB surgery and completed either a 6-month moderate exercise (EX) or a health education control (CON) intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery causes profound weight loss and improves insulin sensitivity (S(I)) in obese patients. Regular exercise can also improve S(I) in obese individuals; however, it is unknown whether exercise and RYGB surgery-induced weight loss would additively improve S(I) and other cardiometabolic factors.
Methods: We conducted a single-blind, prospective, randomized trial with 128 men and women who recently underwent RYGB surgery (within 1-3 months).
We hypothesized that acute lipid-induced insulin resistance would be attenuated in high-oxidative muscle of lean trained (LT) endurance athletes due to their enhanced metabolic flexibility and mitochondrial capacity. Lean sedentary (LS), obese sedentary (OS), and LT participants completed two hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp studies with and without (glycerol control) the coinfusion of Intralipid. Metabolic flexibility was measured by indirect calorimetry as the oxidation of fatty acids and glucose during fasted and insulin-stimulated conditions, the latter with and without lipid oversupply.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Endocrinol Metab
January 2014
Purpose: Skeletal muscle insulin resistance (IR) often precedes hyperglycemia and type 2 diabetes. However, variability exists within different skeletal muscle types and can be influenced by 3 primary steps of control: glucose delivery, transport, and phosphorylation. We performed dynamic positron emission tomography imaging studies to determine the extent to which heterogeneity in muscle type and control of insulin action contribute to IR.
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