Attenuation of Metabolic Syndrome by EPA/DHA Ethyl Esters in Testosterone-Deficient Obese Rats.
Nikhil S BhandarkarSenthil Arun KumarJarad MartinLindsay BrownSunil K PanchalPublished in: Marine drugs (2018)
Inducing testosterone deficiency, as the standard treatment of prostate cancer, may cause metabolic disorders including insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, central obesity, cardiovascular diseases, and type 2 diabetes. This study measured responses to testosterone deficiency in high-carbohydrate, high-fat (H) diet-fed rats. We then tested whether eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)/docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) ethyl esters (Omacor) reversed these metabolic changes. Male Wistar rats (8⁻9 weeks old) were divided into eight groups with four groups fed corn starch and four groups fed H diet. For each diet, one group received diet only; one group was orchidectomized; one group was given leuprolide (gonadotrophin-releasing hormone agonist, 2 mg/kg every 4th week); and the last group was treated with leuprolide and their diet was supplemented with 3% Omacor for the last eight weeks. The protocol was for 16 weeks. Leuprolide worsened metabolic syndrome symptoms and cardiovascular function, and orchidectomy produced greater responses. In H fed leuprolide-treated rats, Omacor decreased systolic blood pressure and left ventricular diastolic stiffness, reduced infiltration of inflammatory cells and collagen deposition in the heart, and reduced lipid accumulation and inflammatory cell infiltration without improving liver damage. These results suggest that Omacor has potential to attenuate metabolic complications in prostate cancer patients with induced testosterone deprivation.
Keyphrases
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- insulin resistance
- replacement therapy
- prostate cancer
- type diabetes
- blood pressure
- left ventricular
- physical activity
- bariatric surgery
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- heart failure
- cardiovascular disease
- radical prostatectomy
- glycemic control
- fatty acid
- skeletal muscle
- gestational age
- uric acid
- high fat diet induced
- cardiovascular risk factors
- smoking cessation
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- randomized controlled trial
- heart rate
- single cell
- clinical trial
- high glucose
- induced apoptosis
- newly diagnosed
- cell cycle arrest
- cell therapy
- weight gain
- left atrial
- pi k akt
- acute coronary syndrome
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- placebo controlled