Muscle sympathetic nerve traffic was significantly greater in overweight (43.2 bursts/100 heartbeats) and obese (50.4) individuals compared to normoweight controls (37.0) (P<0.01).
Meta-Analysis (n=1,438)
Does the obese and overweight state increase muscle sympathetic nerve traffic compared to normoweight individuals?
Obesity and overweight are characterized by sympathetic overactivity that correlates with BMI, blood pressure, and lipid profile, but not with glucose/insulin profile.
Absolute Event Rate: 50.4% vs 37%
p-value: p=<0.01
Nerve traffic recordings (muscle sympathetic nerve traffic MSNA) have shown that sympathetic activation may occur in obesity. However, the small sample size of the available studies, presence of comorbidities, heterogeneity of the subjects examined represented major weaknesses not allowing to draw definite conclusions. This is the case for the overweight state. The present meta-analysis evaluated 1438 obese or overweight subjects recruited in 45 microneurographic studies. The analysis was primarily based on MSNA quantification in obesity and overweight, excluding as concomitant conditions hypertension, metabolic syndrome, and other comorbidities. Assessment was extended to the relationships of MSNA with other neuroadrenergic markers, such as plasma norepinephrine and heart rate, anthropometric variables, as body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio, presence/absence of obstructive sleep apnea, and metabolic profile. Compared with normoweights MSNA was significantly greater in overweight and more in obese individuals (37.0±4.1 versus 43.2±3.5 and 50.4±5.0 burts/100 heartbeats, P<0.01). This was the case even in the absence of obstructive sleep apnea. MSNA was significantly directly related to body mass index and waist-to-hip ratio ( r=0.41 and r=0.64, P<0.04 and <0.01, respectively), clinic blood pressure ( r=0.68, P<0.01), total cholesterol, LDL (low-density lipoprotein) cholesterol, and triglycerides ( r=0.91, r=0.94, and r=0.80, respectively, P<0.01) but unrelated to plasma insulin, glucose, and homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance. No significant correlation was found between MSNA, heart rate, and norepinephrine. Thus, obesity and overweight are characterized by sympathetic overactivity which mirrors the severity of the clinical condition and reflects metabolic alterations, with the exclusion of glucose/insulin profile. Neither heart rate nor norepinephrine appear to represent faithful markers of the muscle sympathetic overdrive.
Grassı et al. (Mon,) conducted a meta-analysis in Obesity and overweight (n=1,438). Obesity and overweight vs. Normoweight was evaluated on Muscle sympathetic nerve traffic (MSNA) (bursts/100 heartbeats) (p=<0.01). Muscle sympathetic nerve traffic was significantly greater in overweight (43.2 bursts/100 heartbeats) and obese (50.4) individuals compared to normoweight controls (37.0) (P<0.01).