Gut microbe may be key to metabolic health and leanness in overweight/obesity
Abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila linked to lower glucose, blood fats, and healthier body fat distribution
2015-06-23
(Press-News.org) The gut microbe Akkermansia muciniphila may hold the key to better metabolic health and healthier body fat distribution in people who are overweight or obese, reveals a small study published online in the journal Gut.
The microbe seems to be linked to lower levels of fasting blood glucose and fats--key factors involved in the development of diabetes and heart disease--and healthier distribution of body fat, the findings indicate.
In healthy people A. muciniphila makes up around 3-5% of the gut's bacterial ecosystem and is associated with a diet rich in insoluble fibre.
The evidence to date suggests that a wide range of gut microbes and the chemical processes that sustain life--metabolism--have an important role in the development of obesity and potentially harmful metabolic disorders.
A. muciniphila has already been linked to healthier glucose metabolism and leanness in mice, but it has not been clear whether this also applies to people.
The researchers therefore wanted to find out if the microbe was linked to bacterial diversity in the gut and a lower health risk profile in people who were overweight/obese.
They assessed levels of gut A. muciniphila and other bacteria, as well as fasting blood glucose and blood fats, and indicators of body fat distribution--waist:hip ratio and the amount of fat beneath the skin--in 49 obese or overweight adults.
These assessments were made before and after a dietary intervention: 6 weeks of a low calorie diet with extra protein and fibre followed by 6 weeks of a stabilisation diet. Calorie restriction is known to alter the composition of gut bacteria.
They found that at the start of the dietary intervention, those with evidence of abundant A. muciniphila in their guts had lower fasting blood glucose and insulin levels, a smaller waist:hip ratio, and a smaller fat cell volume beneath their skin than those with low levels of the microbe.
Those who had abundant A. muciniphila as well as a greater diversity of microbes in their gut to start with, had the healthiest metabolic profile--particularly for fasting blood glucose, triglycerides (blood fats), and body fat distribution.
After 6 weeks of calorie restriction, those with a greater abundance of A. muciniphila to start with showed stronger improvement in their metabolic profile and body fat distribution than those with lower levels.
Calorie restriction was associated with a reduction in the abundance of A. muciniphila across the board, but these levels still remained 100 times higher in people in whom the microbe was more abundant to start with.
The researchers suggest that the by-products of A. muciniphila may act as a fuel for other beneficial gut bacteria.
"A. muciniphila produces a variety of fermentation products," they write. "These may serve as energy sources for other bacteria and the host. It is possible that through this cross-feeding, A. muciniphila may contribute to the expansion of other beneficial species, while it may itself have a direct effect on host metabolism, consistent with rodent studies," they add.
The researchers conclude that A. muciniphila warrants further investigation to see whether it could have some potential as a treatment for insulin resistance--the precursor to type 2 diabetes?and whether it might be used as an indicator of the likely success of dietary interventions.
INFORMATION:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-06-23
Squatting in 'skinny' jeans for a protracted period of time can damage muscle and nerve fibres in the legs, making it difficult to walk, reveals a case study published online in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.
Doctors describe a case of a 35 year old woman who arrived at hospital with severe weakness in both her ankles. The previous day she had been helping a relative move house, and had spent many hours squatting while emptying cupboards.
She had been wearing tight 'skinny' jeans and recalled that these had felt increasingly tight and uncomfortable ...
2015-06-23
New findings may help ease concerns for women with lupus who are interested in having a child. A new study concludes that most women with lupus whose disease is not very active will have a safe pregnancy. The results are to publish online June 22 in Annals of Internal Medicine.
It was previously suggested that women with lupus avoid pregnancy because of serious complications to their own health and the health of the baby. As more knowledge became available, doctors told women with lupus to wait until symptoms were under control, but until now, it was still uncertain whether ...
2015-06-23
BOSTON -- An expert panel convened by the Institute of Medicine clarified the cognitive aging process by making a distinction from Alzheimer disease and related dementias, and provided recommendations to enhance cognitive health in older adults. Now a new article published in Annals of Internal Medicine highlights key points of that report and serves as a guide for health care professionals seeking to improve the quality of life of older adults by maintaining brain health.
Practitioners define "cognition" as mental functions encompassing attention, thinking, understanding, ...
2015-06-23
As a new physician in Galway, Ireland, and then as a nephrology fellow at the Stanford University School of Medicine, Michelle O'Shaughnessy, MD, began to wonder whether similar treatment plans for all patients whose kidneys had failed was necessarily the best practice.
"I was struck by my patients, who were often young and on dialysis at the age of 23 or 24," O'Shaughnessy said, referring to patients whose kidneys had failed because of glomerulonephritis, a group of rare disorders that damage the kidney's ability to filter the blood.
"I thought there should be other ...
2015-06-23
The results of a prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of patients undergoing elective pulmonary resection was designed to evaluate the effects of statin therapy. Unfortunately, because of difficulties in enrolling patients who had never taken statins, the study was terminated early, and the sample size was smaller than anticipate. Trends in the data suggesting differences between groups failed to reach statistical significance except in a post-hoc analysis. The accompanying Editorial Commentary by Dr. Betty Tong emphasizes the potential importance ...
2015-06-22
The microbiome of the human intestine consists of a variety of bacteria that assist in digestion, immune regulation, and other processes that are critical for human health. A subset of these bacteria produces urease, an enzyme that converts the waste product urea into ammonia. Ammonia supports a variety of physiological process. However, individuals with liver disease have excess ammonia in the blood, a condition referred to as hyperammonemia, that can cause neurotoxicity and hepatic encephalopathy. Current treatments for hyperammonemia-associated symptoms are limited and ...
2015-06-22
(Boston)-- A major treatment breakthrough for total body scarring of the skin that occurs in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc), also known as scleroderma, may soon be available for the estimated 300,000 Americans who suffer with this condition. Currently, no treatment is available.
Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) researchers worked with 15 SSc patients who were treated with either one or two doses of fresolimumab, a new, unapproved drug therapy that targets a chemical mediator in the body known as TGF-beta. After seven weeks of treatment, the researchers ...
2015-06-22
DURHAM, N.C. -- Researchers have analyzed size data for rodents worldwide to distinguish the truly massive mice and giant gerbils from the regular-sized rodents. They found that the furry animals with chisel-like teeth are 17 times more likely to evolve to nightmarish proportions on islands than elsewhere.
The results are in keeping with an idea called the 'island rule,' which previous studies claimed didn't apply to rodents. The study appears online in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Duke University biologists Paul Durst and Louise Roth analyzed data ...
2015-06-22
PHILADELPHIA -- House calls, a long-running option dating back to the early days of medicine, can be used in a new way to improve geriatric care and lower costs, says a report issued last week from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).
Using first year results from Penn Medicine's Truman G. Schnabel In-Home Primary Care Program and its partners in the Mid Atlantic Consortium, Medstar Washington Hospital Center and Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) along with the 16 other IAH practices nationwide, CMS announced last week more than $25 million was saved ...
2015-06-22
For severely obese people, bariatric surgery may have a benefit besides dramatic weight loss: it can also substantially reduce urinary incontinence.
A new investigation led by UC San Francisco is the first to examine the longer-term effects of the surgical procedure on incontinence three years after bariatric surgery. The study appears online June 22 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
'Our findings showing another important long-term benefit to bariatric surgery might help to motivate people who are severely overweight,' said first author Leslee L. Subak, M.D., a UCSF professor ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Gut microbe may be key to metabolic health and leanness in overweight/obesity
Abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila linked to lower glucose, blood fats, and healthier body fat distribution