Literature DB >> 8242129

Effects of exercise and stress on body fat distribution in male cynomolgus monkeys.

J M Jayo1, C A Shively, J R Kaplan, S B Manuck.   

Abstract

The effects of exercise and stress on regional and whole body adiposity were examined in an established animal model of diet-induced coronary artery atherosclerosis, the cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis). A total of 79 adult male monkeys were assigned to four experimental groups after baseline stabilization and training: (i) exercise, stress, (n = 20); (ii) exercise, no stress (n = 20); (iii) sedentary, stress (n = 20); and (iv) sedentary, no stress (n = 19). The monkeys consumed an ad libitum diet containing 188 mg cholesterol per day with 43% of calories as saturated fat. Anthropometric measurements of regional and whole body adiposity were collected throughout the study. A subset (n = 40) of animals representing all four groups underwent computerized tomography (CT) scans at the end of the study to determine amounts of total abdominal, intra-abdominal and subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue. Results indicate that, in general, stress interacted with exercise to affect anthropometric measurements of regional adiposity. In contrast, stress had independent and significant effects on the amount and distribution of abdominal fat as measured using CT. Stressed monkeys in both the exercise and sedentary groups had more intra-abdominal fat (and thus greater intra-abdominal-:subcutaneous abdominal fat ratios) than their nonstressed counterparts. There were no significant interactions between exercise and stress or exercise effects on abdominal fat distribution as measured by CT. These results support the belief that an arousal syndrome caused by chronic stress, and resulting in increased activity along the hypothalamo-adrenal axis, may play a role in the preferential deposition of fat in the abdomen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8242129

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord


  23 in total

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