The effects of exercise modalities on adiposity in obese rats

Authors

  • Guilherme Fleury Fina Speretta Federal University of São Carlos; Center of Biological and Health Sciences; Department of Physical Education; Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolism Applied to Exercise
  • Marisa Cristina Rosante Federal University of São Carlos; Center of Biological and Health Sciences; Department of Physical Education; Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolism Applied to Exercise
  • Fernanda Oliveira Duarte Federal University of São Carlos; Department of Physiological Sciences; Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
  • Richard Diego Leite State University of Rio de Janeiro; Physiological Sciences Department; Laboratory for Clinical and Experimental Research in Vascular Biology
  • Anderson Diogo de Souza Lino Federal University of São Carlos; Center of Biological and Health Sciences; Department of Physical Education; Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolism Applied to Exercise
  • Rafael Arquias Andre Federal University of São Carlos; Center of Biological and Health Sciences; Department of Physical Education; Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolism Applied to Exercise
  • João Guilherme de Oliveira Silvestre Federal University of São Carlos; Center of Biological and Health Sciences; Department of Physical Education; Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolism Applied to Exercise
  • Heloisa Sobreiro Selistre de Araujo Federal University of São Carlos; Department of Physiological Sciences; Laboratory of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
  • Ana Claudia Garcia de Oliveira Duarte Federal University of São Carlos; Center of Biological and Health Sciences; Department of Physical Education; Laboratory of Nutrition and Metabolism Applied to Exercise

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2012(12)19

Keywords:

Obesity, Adipocytokines, Exercise, Visceral Fat

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of both swimming and resistance training on tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-10 expression, adipocyte area and lipid profiles in rats fed a high-fat diet. METHODS: The study was conducted over an eight-week period on Wistar adult rats, who were divided into six groups as follows (n = 10 per group): sedentary chow diet, sedentary high-fat diet, swimming plus chow diet, swimming plus high-fat diet, resistance training plus chow diet, and resistance training plus high-fat diet. Rats in the resistance training groups climbed a vertical ladder with weights on their tails once every three days. The swimming groups swam for 60 minutes/day, five days/week. RESULTS: The high-fat diet groups had higher body weights, a greater amount of adipose tissue, and higher tumor necrosis factor-alpha expression in the visceral adipose tissue. Furthermore, the high-fat diet promoted a negative change in the lipid profile. In the resistance training high-fat group, the tumor necrosis factor-alpha expression was lower than that in the swimming high-fat and sedentary high-fat groups. Moreover, smaller visceral and retroperitoneal adipocyte areas were found in the resistance training high-fat group than in the sedentary high-fat group. In the swimming high-fat group, the tumor necrosis factor-alpha expression was lower and the epididymal and retroperitoneal adipocyte areas were smaller compared with the sedentary high-fat group. CONCLUSION: The results showed that both exercise modalities improved the lipid profile, adiposity and obesity-associated inflammation in rats, suggesting their use as an alternative to control the deleterious effects of a high-fat diet in humans.

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Published

2012-12-01

Issue

Section

Basic Research

How to Cite

The effects of exercise modalities on adiposity in obese rats . (2012). Clinics, 67(12), 1469-1477. https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2012(12)19