Irwin David C, Garat Chrystelle V, Crossno Joseph T, MacLean Paul S, Sullivan Timothy M, Erickson Paul F, Jackman Matthew R, Harral Julie W, Reusch Jane E B, Klemm Dwight J
Division of Cardiovascular Pulmonary Research, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado, USA ; Division of Cardiology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado, USA ; These authors contributed equally to this research.
Division of Cardiovascular Pulmonary Research, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado, USA ; Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado, USA ; These authors contributed equally to this research.
Pulm Circ. 2014 Dec;4(4):638-53. doi: 10.1086/678510.
Obesity is causally linked to a number of comorbidities, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, renal dysfunction, and cancer. Obesity has also been linked to pulmonary disorders, including pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). It was long believed that obesity-related PAH was the result of hypoventilation and hypoxia due to the increased mechanical load of excess body fat. However, in recent years it has been proposed that the metabolic and inflammatory disturbances of obesity may also play a role in the development of PAH. To determine whether PAH develops in obese rats in the absence of hypoxia, we assessed pulmonary hemodynamics and pulmonary artery (PA) structure in the diet-resistant/diet-induced obesity (DR/DIO) and Zucker lean/fatty rat models. We found that high-fat feeding (DR/DIO) or overfeeding (Zucker) elicited PA remodeling, neomuscularization of distal arterioles, and elevated PA pressure, accompanied by right ventricular (RV) hypertrophy. PA thickening and distal neomuscularization were also observed in DIO rats on a low-fat diet. No evidence of hypoventilation or chronic hypoxia was detected in either model, nor was there a correlation between blood glucose or insulin levels and PAH. However, circulating inflammatory cytokine levels were increased with high-fat feeding or calorie overload, and hyperlipidemia and oxidant damage in the PA wall correlated with PAH in the DR/DIO model. We conclude that hyperlipidemia and peripheral inflammation correlate with the development of PAH in obese subjects. Obesity-related inflammation may predispose to PAH even in the absence of hypoxia.
肥胖与多种合并症存在因果关联,包括心血管疾病、糖尿病、肾功能不全和癌症。肥胖还与肺部疾病有关,包括肺动脉高压(PAH)。长期以来,人们认为肥胖相关的PAH是由于过多体脂增加机械负荷导致通气不足和缺氧的结果。然而,近年来有人提出肥胖的代谢和炎症紊乱也可能在PAH的发生发展中起作用。为了确定在无缺氧情况下肥胖大鼠是否会发生PAH,我们在抗饮食诱导肥胖(DR/DIO)和Zucker瘦/胖大鼠模型中评估了肺血流动力学和肺动脉(PA)结构。我们发现高脂喂养(DR/DIO)或过度喂养(Zucker)会引发PA重塑、远端小动脉新肌化以及PA压力升高,并伴有右心室(RV)肥大。在低脂饮食的DIO大鼠中也观察到了PA增厚和远端新肌化。在这两种模型中均未检测到通气不足或慢性缺氧的证据,血糖或胰岛素水平与PAH之间也没有相关性。然而,高脂喂养或热量超载会使循环炎症细胞因子水平升高,并且在DR/DIO模型中,PA壁中的高脂血症和氧化损伤与PAH相关。我们得出结论,高脂血症和外周炎症与肥胖受试者PAH的发生发展相关。即使在无缺氧的情况下,肥胖相关炎症也可能易患PAH。