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Effects of a Hypercaloric and Hypocaloric Diet on Insulin-Induced Microvascular Recruitment, Glucose Uptake, and Lipolysis in Healthy Lean Men. | LitMetric

Effects of a Hypercaloric and Hypocaloric Diet on Insulin-Induced Microvascular Recruitment, Glucose Uptake, and Lipolysis in Healthy Lean Men.

Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol

From the Department of Internal Medicine (A.L.E., R.I.M., J.W., D.H.v.R., M.D., M.H.H.K., E.H.S.), Amsterdam UMC, location VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: July 2020

Objective: In mice fed a high-fat diet, impairment of insulin signaling in endothelium is an early phenomenon that precedes decreased insulin sensitivity of skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, and liver. We assessed in humans whether short-term overfeeding affects insulin-induced microvascular recruitment in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue before changes occur in glucose uptake and lipolysis. Approach and Results: Fifteen healthy males underwent a hypercaloric and subsequent hypocaloric diet intervention. Before, during, and after the hypercaloric diet, and upon return to baseline weight, all participants underwent (1) a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp to determine insulin-induced glucose uptake and suppression of lipolysis (2) contrast-enhanced ultrasonography to measure insulin-induced microvascular recruitment in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. In addition, we assessed insulin-induced vasodilation of isolated skeletal muscle resistance arteries by pressure myography after the hypercaloric diet in study participants and controls (n=5). The hypercaloric diet increased body weight (3.5 kg; <0.001) and fat percentage (3.5%; <0.001) but did not affect glucose uptake nor lipolysis. The hypercaloric diet increased adipose tissue microvascular recruitment (=0.041) and decreased the ratio between skeletal muscle and adipose tissue microvascular blood volume during hyperinsulinemia (=0.019). Insulin-induced vasodilation of isolated skeletal muscle arterioles was significantly lower in participants compared with controls (<0.001). The hypocaloric diet reversed all of these changes, except the increase in adipose tissue microvascular recruitment.

Conclusions: In lean men, short-term overfeeding reduces insulin-induced vasodilation of skeletal muscle resistance arteries and shifts the distribution of tissue perfusion during hyperinsulinemia from skeletal muscle to adipose tissue without affecting glucose uptake and lipolysis. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02628301.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/ATVBAHA.120.314129DOI Listing

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