Quantification Of The Capacity For Cold-Induced Thermogenesis In Young Men With And Without Obesity

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM(2019)

引用 34|浏览36
暂无评分
摘要
Objective: Cold exposure increases energy expenditure (EE) and could have a role in combating obesity. To understand this potential, we determined the capacity for cold-induced thermogenesis (CIT), the EE increase above the basal metabolic rate at the individualized coldest tolerable temperature before overt shivering.Design: During a 13-day inpatient protocol, we quantitated the EE of 12 lean men and 9 men with obesity at various randomly ordered ambient temperatures in a room calorimeter. Subjects underwent brown fat imaging after exposure to their coldest tolerable temperature.Results: CIT capacity was 300 +/- 218 kcal/d (mean +/- SD) or 17 +/- 11% in lean men and 125 +/- 146 kcal/d or 6 +/- 7% in men with obesity (P = 0.01). The temperature below which EE increased, lower critical temperature (T-lc), was warmer in lean men than men with obesity (22.9 +/- 1.2 vs 21.1 +/- 1.7 degrees C, P = 0.03), but both had similar skin temperature (T-skin) changes and coldest tolerable temperatures. Whereas lean subjects had higher brown fat activity, skeletal muscle activity increased synchronously with CIT beginning at the T(lc )in both groups, indicating that muscle is recruited for CIT in parallel with brown fat, not sequentially after nonshivering thermogenesis is maximal.Conclusions: Despite greater insulation from fat, men with obesity had a narrower range of tolerable cool temperatures available for increasing EE and less capacity for CIT than lean men, likely as a result of greater basal heat production and similar perception to T-skin,T- cooling. Further study of the reduced CIT capacity in men with obesity may inform treatment opportunities for obesity.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要