The Liposuction-Induced Effects on Adiponectin and Selected Cytokines Are Not Affected by Exercise Training in Women

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Citações na Scopus
10
Tipo de produção
article
Data de publicação
2014
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ISSN da Revista
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Editora
HINDAWI PUBLISHING CORPORATION
Autores
ARTIOLI, Guilherme Giannini
PAINELLI, Vitor de Salles
SAITO, Fabio Lopes
ROSCHEL, Hamilton
LANCHA JUNIOR, Antonio Herbert
Citação
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY, article ID 315382, 6p, 2014
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
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Resumo
It has been suggested that the abrupt liposuction-induced decrease in adipose tissue could affect adipokine secretion pattern. We hypothesized that exercise training could positively impact adipokine metabolism following liposuction. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of liposuction on inflammation-related adipokines in women who were either exercise-trained or remained sedentary after surgery. Thirty-six healthy normal-weight women underwent an abdominal liposuction and two months after surgery were randomly allocated into two groups: trained (TR, n = 18, four-month exercise program) and nontrained (NT, n = 18). Inflammation-related adipokine serum levels (TNF-alpha, IL-6, IL-10, and adiponectin) and abdominal and thigh subcutaneous adipose tissue (scAT) mRNA levels were assessed before (PRE) and six months after surgery (POST6). TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-10 serum levels were unchanged in both groups. In contrast, TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-10 mRNA levels in scAT were increased, whereas adiponectin scAT mRNA and serum levels were decreased at POST6 (P < 0.05, main effect for time). No changes were observed in mRNA levels of MCP-1, CD14, and CD68 in any of the groups. In conclusion, liposuction downregulates adiponectin scAT gene expression and serum levels and upregulates scAT gene expression of inflammation-related genes six months after surgery in normal-weight women, irrespective of exercise training.
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Referências
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