4.4 Review

Obesity and inflammation: the effects of weight loss

Journal

NUTRITION RESEARCH REVIEWS
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 117-133

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0954422408138732

Keywords

Obesity; Adipose tissue; Inflammation; Weight-loss interventions

Funding

  1. Department of Education and Learning (DEL)

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Following the discovery of TNF-alpha and leptin as secretory products of adipocytes in the early 1990s. subsequent obesity research focused on the new functional role of adipose tissue. as an active endocrine or.-an. Many more inflammatory peptides have been linked to adiposity, which ultimately characterised obesity as a state of low-grade systemic inflammation, or 'metaflammation' which may link obesity to its co-morbidities. The aim of the present review is to examine the effects of weight loss on inflammation in overweight and obese, but otherwise healthy, Populations. Studies were broadly classified into four types (diet, physical activity, diet and physical activity combined, and surgical interventions) and discussed according to the method used to induce weight loss. All studies measured at least one obesity-related inflammatory marker (ORIM). The overall finding from the present review is that weight loss does improve inflammation in terms of both the inflammatory (C-reactive protein, TNF-alpha, IL-6 and leptin) and anti-inflammatory (adiponectin) ORIM. Within this, the greatest improvements in ORIM are observed in studies achieving a weight loss of at least 10%. However, a number of methodological issues have been identified its potential limitations within the literature including the sex and age of subjects, sample size, study duration and the assessment of body composition. In conclusion, although a period of weight loss per se is capable of reversing the unfavourable inflammatory profile evident in the obese state, further Studies are required to determine the time needed, in which a reduced weight is maintained, in order to benefit from improved inflammatory status long term.

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