Adipocyte blood flow: influence of age, anatomic location, and dietary manipulation

Abstract
Adipocyte blood flow in four distinct adipose tissue depots has been measured in conscious, unrestrained, male Sprague-Dawley rats by using the microsphere technique together with cellularity determinations. Blood flow was determined in young rats (90 days old, 387 g mean body wt), spontaneously obese rats (450 days old, 713 g mean body wt), and long-term calorically restricted rats (450 days old, 390 g mean body wt), therefore allowing the comparison of the relative effects of age and fat mass on adipose tissue blood flow. Results of these experiments indicate that while cardiac index remained constant, cardiac output increased in only the obese group, concomitant with increased body fat mass. Spontaneously obese rats exhibited increased adipose tissue depot weight, fat cell lipid, and fat cell size compared with young and restricted groups. Despite significant differences in cell volume, blood flow per cell was remarkably similar between young and obese rats. Long-term caloric restriction, however, was associated with decreased flow per cell. Interdepot comparisons of flow per unit surface area (mm2) or per unit volume (pl) indicate that mesenteric cells receive significantly more blood than cells of the other depots. Our results suggest that adipocyte blood flow is dependent in part on anatomic location, may be further influenced by age or dietary manipulation, and is not a limiting factor in the enlargement of adipocytes during the development of spontaneous obesity.