Successful weight loss reduces endothelial activation in individuals with severe obesity participating in a multimodal weight loss program.

2021 
Abstract Introduction Endothelial dysfunction is a very common finding in obesity and metabolic syndrome. The aim of our study was to investigate if longterm weight reduction (WR) success may reverse endothelial activation in individuals with severe obesity participating in a multimodal WR program. Methods Participants with obesity (oBMI 40.3 ±7.5 kg/m2) underwent a standardized non-surgical 1-year WR program. Carotid artery studies and determination of endothelial function biomarkers were performed at baseline and after 1 year. Individuals were dichotomized in “successful WR” (% WR≥10% of initial body weight) and “failed WR” (% WR Results From 191 people with obesity, 115 achieved successful WR. Compared to controls without obesity (n=44) participants with obesity had higher carotid intima media thickness as well as higher sICAM-1, sE-selectin, MMP-9, hsCRP and IL-6 levels. After 12 months follow up delta values of inflammation and endothelial adhesion markers were significantly different between participants with obesity and successful WR and participants with obesity and failed WR, in favour of the successful WR group (mean ± standard deviation): ΔhsCRP (−5.2 mg/L ±7.8 vs. 1.1 mg/L ±5.1, P Conclusion Our data corroborate the finding that obesity leads to endothelial dysfunction. Furthermore, successful non-surgical WR may at least partially reverse endothelial activation implicating cardiovascular health benefits of WR in people with severe obesity.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    33
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []