The mechanism behind the meal-induced increase in energy expenditure in humans and its reduction in obesity was examined in 15 normal-weight and seven obese subjects. The subjects were studied by indirect calorimetry in the basal state and during 2 hours after a mixed meal corresponding to 40% of the 24-hour basal energy requirement. Artificial thermal insulation was applied over the abdominal area before the study in seven of the normal-weight subjects. Thermistor catheters were inserted into a hepatic vein, the pulmonary artery, and a systemic artery for blood sampling and recording of blood temperatures. Basal hepatic venous drainage of heat in relation to the splanchnic oxygen uptake in the normal-weight subjects was low (12 +/- 1 J/mL O2) and became even lower after the meal (5 +/- 3 J/mL). In the obese individuals and the insulated subjects, blood-drained splanchnic heat amounted to 19 to 21 J/mL oxygen both before and after the meal. The postprandial increase in whole body energy expenditure was diminished both in the obese (12% +/- 1% above basal) and in the insulated subjects (15% +/- 1%) compared with the noninsulated controls (22% +/- 2%). In normal-weight subjects, there is a leakage of heat across the abdominal wall. Reduction or prevention of this leakage by artificial thermal insulation or by obesity is accompanied by a reduction of the postprandial increase in energy expenditure.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0026-0495(92)90190-l | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!