The effect of pre-resection obesity on post-resection body composition after 75% small bowel resection in rats

In patients with short bowel syndrome, an elevated pre-resection Body Mass Index may be protective of post-resection body composition. We hypothesized that rats with diet-induced obesity would lose less lean body mass after undergoing massive small bowel resection compared to non-obese rats. Rats (C...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2021-06, Vol.11 (1), p.13009-13009, Article 13009
Hauptverfasser: Patel, Neesha S., Yanala, Ujwal R., Aravind, Shruthishree, Reidelberger, Roger D., Thompson, Jon S., Carlson, Mark A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In patients with short bowel syndrome, an elevated pre-resection Body Mass Index may be protective of post-resection body composition. We hypothesized that rats with diet-induced obesity would lose less lean body mass after undergoing massive small bowel resection compared to non-obese rats. Rats (CD IGS; age = 2 mo; N = 80) were randomly assigned to either a high-fat (obese rats) or a low-fat diet (non-obese rats), and fed ad lib for six months. Each diet group then was randomized to either underwent a 75% distal small bowel resection (massive resection) or small bowel transection with re-anastomosis (sham resection). All rats then were fed ad lib with an intermediate-fat diet (25% of total calories) for two months. Body weight and quantitative magnetic resonance-determined body composition were monitored. Preoperative body weight was 884 ± 95 versus 741 ± 75 g, and preoperative percent body fat was 35.8 ± 3.9 versus 24.9 ± 4.6%; high-fat vs . low fat diet, respectively ( p  
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-021-92510-7