Insulin Resistance in Morbid Obesity
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 51 (1) , 144-151
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.51.1.144
Abstract
Obesity is a frequent cause of insulin resistance and poses a major risk for diabetes. Abnormal fat deposition within skeletal muscle has been identified as a mechanism of obesity-associated insulin resistance. We tested the hypothesis that dietary lipid deprivation may selectively deplete intramyocellular lipids, thereby reversing insulin resistance. Whole-body insulin sensitivity (by the insulin clamp technique), intramyocellular lipids (by quantitative histochemistry on quadriceps muscle biopsies), muscle insulin action (as the expression of Glut4 glucose transporters), and postprandial lipemia were measured in 20 morbidly obese patients (BMI = 49 ± 8 [mean ± SD] kg · m−2) and 7 nonobese control subjects. Patients were restudied 6 months later after biliopancreatic diversion (BPD; n = 8), an operation that induces predominant lipid malabsorption, or hypocaloric diet (n = 9). At 6 months, BPD had caused the loss of 33 ± 10 kg through lipid malabsorption (documented by a flat postprandial triglyceride profile). Despite an attained BMI still in the obese range (39 ± 8 kg · m−2), insulin resistance (23 ± 3 μmol/min per kg of fat-free mass; P < 0.001 vs. 53 ± 13 of control subjects) was fully reversed (52 ± 11 μmol/min per kg of fat-free mass; NS versus control subjects). In parallel with this change, intramyocellular—but not perivascular or interfibrillar—lipid accumulation decreased (1.63 ± 1.06 to 0.22 ± 0.44 score units; P < 0.01; NS vs. 0.07 ± 0.19 of control subjects), Glut4 expression was restored, and circulating leptin concentrations were normalized. In the diet group, a weight loss of 14 ± 12 kg was accompanied by very modest changes in insulin sensitivity and intramyocellular lipid contents. We conclude that lipid deprivation selectively depletes intramyocellular lipid stores and induces a normal metabolic state (in terms of insulin-mediated whole-body glucose disposal, intracellular insulin signaling, and circulating leptin levels) despite a persistent excess of total body fat mass.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Swedish obese subjects (SOS) – an intervention study of obesity. Two-year follow-up of health-related quality of life (HRQL) and eating behavior after gastric surgery for severe obesityInternational Journal of Obesity, 1998
- Diet-induced muscle insulin resistance in rats is ameliorated by acute dietary lipid withdrawal or a single bout of exercise: parallel relationship between insulin stimulation of glucose uptake and suppression of long-chain fatty acyl-CoADiabetes, 1997
- Mechanisms of liver and muscle insulin resistance induced by chronic high-fat feedingDiabetes, 1997
- Surgical treatment of morbid obesityBritish Journal of Surgery, 1995
- The Relation between Insulin Sensitivity and the Fatty-Acid Composition of Skeletal-Muscle PhospholipidsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Metabolic Implications of Body Fat DistributionDiabetes Care, 1991
- Regional distribution of body fat, plasma lipoproteins, and cardiovascular disease.Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc., 1990
- Effects of weight loss on mechanisms of hyperglycemia in obese non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitusDiabetes, 1986
- Bilio-pancreatic bypass for obesity: II. Initial experience in manBritish Journal of Surgery, 1979
- Insulin Binding to Monocytes and Insulin Action in Human Obesity, Starvation, and RefeedingJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1978