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Κυριακή 14 Μαΐου 2017

Removal of a high-fat diet, but not voluntary exercise, reverses obesity and diabetic-like symptoms in male C57BL/6J mice.

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Removal of a high-fat diet, but not voluntary exercise, reverses obesity and diabetic-like symptoms in male C57BL/6J mice.

Hormones (Athens). 2017 Jan;16(1):62-74

Authors: Hatzidis A, Hicks JA, Gelineau RR, Arruda NL, Monteiro De Pina I, O'Connell KE, Seggio JA

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Both the consumption of high-fat diets and exercise are known to produce alterations in metabolism and behavior. This study focuses on the effects of a change to a low-fat diet from a high-fat diet and voluntary exercise on obesity, type-2 diabetic-like symptoms, and locomotor behavior in male C57BL/6J mice.
DESIGN: Mice were initially given either a high-fat diet or regular chow, along with a cage with a running-wheel to mimic exercise, or one without, to determine to what extend exercise affects these symptoms. Then half of the mice given a high-fat diet were switched to regular chow to ascertain if the switch in diet would improve type-2 diabetic-like and obesity symptoms.
RESULTS: Wheel-running alone produced an improvement in insulin in mice continuously fed a high-fat diet (p=0.006), but running-wheels did not produce any further improvements in mice with regular chow replacement (p=0.999) or in controls (p=0.996). Replacement of a high-fat diet with regular chow led to physiological improvements in insulin (p=0.012) and leptin (p <0.001), glucose tolerance (p <0.001), and obesity (p <0.001), more so than exercise alone. Mice consuming a high-fat diet without a wheel exhibited reduced home-cage activity compared to controls after the diet switch (p=0.030), while no reduction was found in running-wheel activity between high-fat diet and regular chow consuming mice after switching diets (p=0.516).
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that exercise is only partially beneficial to improving health outcomes in mice consuming a high-fat diet, whereas incorporating a better diet, even without exercise, improves quality of health and can suppress T2DM symptoms and related conditions more so than exercise alone.

PMID: 28500829 [PubMed - in process]



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