AI Article Synopsis

  • A study investigated factors that influence diet-induced obesity (DIO) and resistance to it (DR) in male Sprague-Dawley rats over a 3-month high-energy diet.
  • Two-thirds of the rats developed DIO, consuming 16% more calories, while the remaining third maintained weight similar to chow-fed controls, indicating a natural resistance to weight gain despite the same caloric intake.
  • After switching back to a regular diet, DIO rats took 14 weeks to lose excess weight and showed no insulin resistance, whereas DR rats experienced significant reductions in body weight and insulin levels, indicating differing metabolic adaptations between the two groups.

Article Abstract

A search was made for predisposing factors and sequelae of diet-induced obesity (DIO) or resistance to DIO (DR). During 3 mo on a high-energy (CM) diet, two-thirds of the male Sprague-Dawley rats ate 16% more calories over the first 30 days and developed DIO. The remaining one-third were DR, gaining the same amount of weight as chow-fed controls. Basal and norepinephrine (NE)-stimulated in vivo O2 consumption, performed before rats were placed on the CM diet, was the same in those rats that later became DR or DIO after 3 mo on the CM diet. DR rats were 4% lighter, whereas DIO rats were equal to chow-fed rats before their exposure to the CM diet. When CM-fed rats were switched to chow, DIO rats took 14 wk to reduce their body and retroperitoneal fat pad weights to those of chow-fed controls, whereas DR rats gained only 40% of the body weight, and fat pads were 34% lighter than controls. After 14 wk, DIO rats were neither hyperinsulinemic nor insulin resistant, whereas DR rats had 64% reduced areas under their insulin curves after intravenous glucose (1 g/kg) compared with controls. Unlike younger rats, animals here had inconsistent plasma NE responses to intravenous glucose. Therefore the CM diet produces DR and DIO states that tend to become self-perpetuating once established.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.1989.256.3.R766DOI Listing

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