10 results match your criteria: "Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition[Affiliation]"
Magn Reson Imaging
November 2022
Tecnologico de Monterrey, Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition and Obesity, Escuela de Medicina, 64710 Monterrey, N.L., Mexico; Tecnologico de Monterrey, Cardiovascular Medicine and Metabolomics Research Group, Escuela de Medicina, 66278 San Pedro Garza-Garcia, N.L., Mexico. Electronic address:
Background And Aims: Chronic heart failure (CHF) represents a significant cause of morbidity and mortality globally. Metabolic maladaptation has proven to be critical in the progression of this condition. Preclinical studies have shown that irisin, an adipomyokine involved in metabolic regulations, can induce positive cardioprotective effects by improving cardiac remodeling, cardiomyocyte viability, calcium delivery, and reducing inflammatory mediators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Vasc Pharmacol
September 2022
Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition and Obesity, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Escuela de Medicina, Monterrey- 64710, N.L., Mexico.
Nutrients
June 2020
Tecnologico de Monterrey, Escuela de Medicina y Ciencias de la Salud, Ave. Morones Prieto 3000, Monterrey N.L. 64710, Mexico.
Exercise is an effective strategy for preventing and treating obesity and its related cardiometabolic disorders, resulting in significant loss of body fat mass, white adipose tissue browning, redistribution of energy substrates, optimization of global energy expenditure, enhancement of hypothalamic circuits that control appetite-satiety and energy expenditure, and decreased systemic inflammation and insulin resistance. Novel exercise-inducible soluble factors, including myokines, hepatokines, and osteokines, and immune cytokines and adipokines are hypothesized to play an important role in the body's response to exercise. To our knowledge, no review has provided a comprehensive integrative overview of these novel molecular players and the mechanisms involved in the redistribution of metabolic fuel during and after exercise, the loss of weight and fat mass, and reduced inflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
November 2019
Tecnologico de Monterrey, Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition, Escuela de Medicina, Monterrey 64710, N.L., Mexico.
Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent worldwide. It has been associated with heart failure (HF) given its immunoregulatory functions. In-vitro and animal models have shown protective roles through mechanisms involving procollagen-1, JNK2, calcineurin/NFAT, NF-κB, MAPK, Th1, Th2, Th17, cytokines, cholesterol-efflux, oxLDL, and GLUT4, among others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Steroid Biochem Mol Biol
February 2020
Tecnologico de Monterrey, Escuela de Medicina y Ciencias de la Salud, Bioinformatics Research Group, Ave. Morones Prieto 3000, Colonia Los Doctores, Monterrey, Nuevo León 64710, Mexico. Electronic address:
Vitamin D deficiency is a public health concern associated with, but not limited to, skeletal anomalies, chronic diseases, immune conditions, and cancer, among others. Hypovitaminosis D is mainly associated with environmental and lifestyle factors that affect sunlight exposure. However, genetic factors also influence 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) serum concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMediators Inflamm
August 2019
Tecnologico de Monterrey, Escuela de Medicina y Ciencias de la Salud, Ave. Morones Prieto 3000, Monterrey, N.L. 64710, Mexico.
Proinflammatory cytokines and the novel myokine irisin, a cleavage product of FNDC5, have been found to play a role in obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Irisin has been shown to increase browning of adipose tissue, thermogenesis, energy expenditure, and insulin sensitivity, yet its association with inflammatory markers is still limited. Circulating irisin has been found to be increased in obesity, while in adult subjects with T2DM decreased levels have been found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
November 2018
Tecnologico de Monterrey, Escuela de Medicina y Ciencias de la Salud, Ave. Morones Prieto 3000, Monterrey N.L. 64710, Mexico.
Exercise-induced irisin, a recently discovered myokine, has been linked to insulin resistance, obesity, and other diseases in adults; however, information in children is scarce and contradictory. We analyzed the limited evidence of irisin's effects in children and adolescents, and its association with body composition, exercise training, cardiovascular risk factors, and metabolic diseases, as well as the results of dietetic interventions. Both positive and negative correlations between irisin concentrations and body mass index, fat mass, fat-free mass, and other anthropometric parameters were found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthn Health
December 1996
Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition, St Luke's/Roosevelt Hospital, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, NY 10019, USA.
Differences in body composition between black and white women have been well established. Black women have more bone and muscle mass, but less fat, as a percentage of body weight, than white women, after controlling for ethnic differences in age, body weight, and height. In addition, black women have more upper-body fat than white women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Hum Biol
January 1995
Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition, Department of Medicine, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York, New York 10025.
Bio-impedance analysis (BIA) measurements have been used to predict components of body composition. Their validation is required for populations varying in race, sex, and age. In 371 Whites, 182 Blacks and 225 Asians, single-frequency BIA at 50 kHz (RJL-100) resistance and reactance measurements were correlated with same-day measurements of total body water (TBW) by THO dilution, total body potassium (TBK) by whole body K counting, and fat-free mass (FFM) by dual-photon absorptiometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBasic Life Sci
March 1994
Center for Research in Clinical Nutrition, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital, Columbia University, New York, NY 10025.
For compartments most urgently important to clinical medicine we have satisfactory levels of measurement precision, and the clinical considerations now are the availability of the methods, and the collection of data for normal subjects. Our colleagues in physics and imaging will improve measurement precisions, but the work most needed is to refine the biological side of the measurement equation. Large numbers of measurements, carefully done with carefully calibrated and unchanging systems, exist only for the special case of measuring body calcium in women, in the large cohort of approximately 2,500 women, studied by Aloia and Cohn with neutron activation, and for body potassium, in these women, and in the larger numbers of diverse age, sex, race, and size in the Rosetta study in our laboratory.
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