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Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology 2012-Feb

Arteriolar function in visceral adipose tissue is impaired in human obesity.

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Melissa G Farb
Lisa Ganley-Leal
Melanie Mott
Yanmei Liang
Bahadir Ercan
Michael E Widlansky
Sherman J Bigornia
Antonino J Fiscale
Caroline M Apovian
Brian Carmine

Sleutelwoorden

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The purpose of this study was to characterize the relationship between adipose tissue phenotype and depot-specific microvascular function in fat.

RESULTS

In 30 obese subjects (age 42±11 years, body mass index 46±11 kg/m(2)) undergoing bariatric surgery, we intraoperatively collected visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue and characterized depot-specific adipose phenotypes. We assessed vasomotor function of the adipose microvasculature using videomicroscopy of small arterioles (75-250 μm) isolated from different fat compartments. Endothelium-dependent, acetylcholine-mediated vasodilation was severely impaired in visceral arterioles, compared to the subcutaneous depot (P<0.001 by ANOVA). Nonendothelium dependent responses to papaverine and nitroprusside were similar. Endothelial nitric oxide synthase inhibition with N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester reduced subcutaneous vasodilation but had no effect on severely blunted visceral arteriolar responses. Visceral fat exhibited greater expression of proinflammatory, oxidative stress-related, hypoxia-induced, and proangiogenic genes; increased activated macrophage populations; and had a higher capacity for cytokine production ex vivo.

CONCLUSIONS

Our findings provide clinical evidence that the visceral microenvironment may be intrinsically toxic to arterial health providing a potential mechanism by which visceral adiposity burden is linked to atherosclerotic vascular disease. Our findings also support the evolving concept that both adipose tissue quality and quantity may play significant roles in shaping cardiovascular phenotypes in human obesity.

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