A 12-week aerobic exercise regime partially prevented decrements in cardiac contractile properties induced by a 24-week obesogenic diet in rats.
Does aerobic exercise prevent decrements in cardiac contractile properties in rats with diet-induced obesity?
In a rat model of diet-induced obesity, moderate aerobic exercise partially protects against obesity-induced impairments in cardiac muscle contractile function.
Decrements in contractile function resulting from obesity are thought to be major reasons for the link between obesity and cardiovascular disease, while exercise has been shown to improve cardiac muscle contractile function. The purpose of this study was to evaluate cardiac contractile properties following obesity induction and the potential protective effect of exercise. Twelve-week-old rats (n = 30) were organized into either a chow diet or a high-fat, high-sucrose (HFHS) diet group. Following 12 weeks of obesity induction the HFHS group animals were stratified and grouped into sedentary (HFHS+Sed) and exercise (HFHS+Ex) groups for an additional 12 weeks. Following 24 weeks of diet intervention, with 12 weeks of aerobic exercise (25 m/min, 30 min/day, 5 days/week) for the HFHS+Ex group, skinned cardiac fibre bundle testing was used to evaluate cardiac contractile properties. Body fat and mass were significantly greater in the HFHS-fed animals compared with the chow controls (p < 0.043). Hearts from rats in the HFHS+Sed group had significantly greater mass (p < 0.03), significantly slower maximum shortening velocity (p = 0.001), and tended to have lower calcium sensitivity (p = 0.077) and a lower proportion of α-myosin heavy chain composition (p = 0.074) than the sedentary chow animals. However, 12 weeks of moderate aerobic exercise partially prevented these decrements in contractile properties. Novelty Cardiac muscle from animals exposed to an obesogenic diet for 24 weeks had impaired contractile properties compared with controls. Obesity-induced impairment of contractile properties of the heart were partially prevented by a 12-week aerobic exercise regime.
Boldt et al. (Mon,) conducted a other in Diet-induced obesity (n=30). Aerobic exercise vs. Sedentary (HFHS+Sed) and chow diet controls was evaluated on Cardiac contractile properties (including maximum shortening velocity). A 12-week aerobic exercise regime partially prevented decrements in cardiac contractile properties induced by a 24-week obesogenic diet in rats.
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