| Literature DB >> 35471692 |
Emily Nunan1, Carson L Wright1, Oluwayemisi A Semola1,2, Madhan Subramanian1,2, Priya Balasubramanian3,4, Pamela C Lovern1,2, Ibra S Fancher5, Joshua T Butcher6,7.
Abstract
Obesity and aging have both seen dramatic increases in prevalence throughout society. This review seeks to highlight common pathologies that present with obesity, along with the underlying risk factors, that have remarkable similarity to what is observed in the aged. These include skeletal muscle dysfunction (loss of quantity and quality), significant increases in adiposity, systemic alterations to autonomic dysfunction, reduction in nitric oxide bioavailability, increases in oxidant stress and inflammation, dysregulation of glucose homeostasis, and mitochondrial dysfunction. This review is organized by the aforementioned indices and succinctly highlights literature that demonstrates similarities between the aged and obese phenotypes in both human and animal models. As aging is an inevitability and obesity prevalence is unlikely to significantly decrease in the near future, these two phenotypes will ultimately combine as a multidimensional syndrome (a pathology termed sarcopenic obesity). Whether the pre-mature aging indices accompanying obesity are additive or synergistic upon entering aging is not yet well defined, but the goal of this review is to illustrate the potential consequences of a double aged phenotype in sarcopenic obesity. Clinically, the modifiable risk factors could be targeted specifically in obesity to allow for increased health span in the aged and sarcopenic obese populations.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Diabetes; Inflammation; Nitric oxide; Obesity; Oxidant stress; Sarcopenic obesity; Skeletal muscle
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35471692 PMCID: PMC9213608 DOI: 10.1007/s11357-022-00567-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geroscience ISSN: 2509-2723 Impact factor: 7.581
Fig. 1Schematically highlights common indices (starting with increased adiposity) that are altered in the aged and the obese. It highlights a potential domino effect of adiposity, which in both phenotypes subsequently are driven by increased ROS and systemic inflammation, ultimately contributing to vascular damage and mitochondrial dysfunction
Fig. 2Highlights the “double aged” phenotype that could be hidden within sarcopenic obesity. Namely, the additive nature of skeletal muscle dysfunction, autonomic dysfunction, increased ROS, and glucose dysregulation will drive entrenched hypertension, chronic inflammation, diabetes, and increased disability, and accelerated cognitive decline, ultimately resulting in increased mortality