Effects of Vitamin D Supplementation and a Cafeteria Diet on Various Parameters in the Next Generation of Rats with Metabolic Syndrome.

Nutrients

Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Faculty of Health Sciences, Erciyes University, Kayseri 38280, Türkiye.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Metabolic Syndrome (MetS) is a growing global health issue linked to unhealthy diets high in fats and simple carbs, which negatively impact various health markers.
  • A study investigated the effects of vitamin D supplementation on MetS parameters in parent rats with high-fructose diets and their offspring, revealing that vitamin D improved health markers in both generations.
  • Results showed that vitamin D supplementation led to lower levels of harmful substances like glucose and cholesterol in parent rats, and also benefited their offspring, indicating potential epigenetic effects despite an unhealthy diet.

Article Abstract

Background/objectives: Metabolic Syndrome (MetS) is an increasingly widespread public health problem worldwide. MetS is associated with a cafeteria diet characterized by high fat and high simple carbohydrates. A cafeteria diet significantly affects serum glucose, creatine, urea, triglyceride, cholesterol and MetS parameters such as ALT, AST and ALP. Due to its epigenetic effects, vitamin D is important in controlling MetS parameters and minimizing MetS findings in subsequent generations.

Methods: In this study, the effect of weekly 0.3 mL (1.000 IU/week) vitamin D intervention on MetS parameters was investigated in parental rats developing high-fructose MetS and their offspring. Offspring of MetS rats receiving and not receiving vitamin D supplementation were divided into four different groups and exposed to a cafeteria diet and vitamin D supplementation for eight weeks.

Results: It was shown that parental rats in the intervention group had lower serum urea, glucose, creatine, total cholesterol, ALP, AST and ALT levels ( < 0.05). Serum urea, glucose, creatine, ALT, AST, ALP, triglyceride, total cholesterol levels and body weights were lower and HDL levels were higher in the offspring ( < 0.05). However, initial serum ALT and AST values were higher in the offspring of MetS parent rats receiving vitamin D supplementation and in the offspring of rats not receiving supplementation than in the offspring of supplemented parents.

Conclusions: In conclusion, it was found that vitamin D supplementation improved MetS parameters in parent rats, positively affected MetS parameters in offspring rats despite an inadequate diet, and positively affected some MetS parameters by affecting epigenetic pathways in offspring born to MetS mothers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11547993PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu16213781DOI Listing

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