| Literature DB >> 33527749 |
Nicholas T Broskey1,2,3, Walter J Pories3,4, Terry E Jones3,5, Charles J Tanner1,2,3, Donghai Zheng1,2,3, Ronald N Cortright1,2,3, Zhen W Yang1,2, Nkaujyi Khang1,2, Josh Yang6, Joseph A Houmard1,2,3, G Lynis Dohm3,6.
Abstract
Fasting plasma lactate concentrations are elevated in individuals with metabolic disease. The aim of this study was to determine if the variance in fasting lactate concentrations were associated with factors linked with cardiometabolic health even in a young, lean cohort. Young (age 22 ± 0.5; N = 30) lean (BMI (22.4 ± 0.4 kg/m2 ) women were assessed for waist-to-hip ratio, aerobic capacity (VO2 peak), skeletal muscle oxidative capacity (near infrared spectroscopy; fat oxidation from muscle biopsies), and fasting glucose and insulin (HOMA-IR). Subjects had a mean fasting lactate of 0.9 ± 0.1 mmol/L. The rate of deoxygenation of hemoglobin/myoglobin (R2 = .23, p = .03) in resting muscle and skeletal muscle homogenate fatty acid oxidation (R2 = .72, p = .004) were inversely associated with fasting lactate. Likewise, cardiorespiratory fitness (time to exhaustion during the VO2 peak test) was inversely associated with lactate (R2 = .20, p = .05). Lactate concentration was inversely correlated with HDL:LDL (R2 = .57, p = .02) and positively correlated with the waist to hip ratio (R2 = .52, p = .02). Plasma lactate was associated with various indices of cardiometabolic health. Thus, early determination of fasting lactate concentration could become a common biomarker used for identifying individuals at early risk for metabolic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: aerobic fitness; lactate; metabolism; mitochondria; skeletal muscle
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33527749 PMCID: PMC7851428 DOI: 10.14814/phy2.14729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Physiol Rep ISSN: 2051-817X