Influence of short-term dietary weight loss on cortisol secretion and metabolism in obese men
Influence of short-term dietary weight loss on cortisol secretion and metabolism in obese men
OBJECTIVES: Obesity is associated with increased inactivation of cortisol by hepatic A-ring 5alpha- and 5beta-reductases, impaired hepatic regeneration of cortisol from cortisone by 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11HSD1), but increased subcutaneous adipose 11HSD1 activity enhancing local cortisol levels in fat. Cause and effect between obesity and abnormal cortisol metabolism is untested.
DESIGN: Acute weight loss was induced by very low calorie diet (VLCD) or starvation in obese men. METHODS: Otherwise healthy males (aged 20-55 years; body mass index (BMI) 30-40 kg/m2) were studied after 6 days on a weight maintenance diet; then after either 6 days of starvation (n=6) or 3 weeks of VLCD (2.55 MJ; n=6); then after 1 week of weight maintenance; and finally after 2 weeks of being allowed to feed ad libitum. Plasma samples were obtained from indwelling cannulae at 0930 h and 1815 h and a 24 h urine collection was completed for analysis of cortisol metabolites by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry.
RESULTS: Data are mean+/-S.E.M. BMI fell (kg/m3) from 34.8+/-0.8 at baseline to 31.8+/-1.4 on VLCD and 32.7+/-1.1 on starvation. Starvation caused a rise in plasma cortisol (at 0930 h from 143+/-17 to 216+/-11 nM, P<0.001) but no change in total urinary cortisol metabolites. VLCD did not alter plasma cortisol and markedly reduced cortisol metabolite excretion (from 15.8+/-1.1 mg/day at baseline to 7.0+/-1.1 mg/day, P<0.001). Relative excretion of 5alpha-reduced cortisol metabolites fell on both diets, but there were no changes in cortisol/cortisone metabolite ratios reflecting 11HSD activities.
CONCLUSIONS: Weight loss with VLCD in obesity reverses up-regulation of hepatic A-ring reductases and normalises cortisol production rate; in contrast, starvation produces acute stress and further activation of cortisol secretion. We suggest that activation of cortisol secretion is not an irreversible intrinsic abnormality in obese patients, and speculate that dietary content has an important influence on the neuroendocrine response to weight loss.
185-194
Johnstone, Alexandra M.
6e6ad8c7-a214-4792-a0fa-fd3455213dd1
Faber, Peter
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Andrew, Ruth
a127d25d-819a-46bb-88e1-68d7ade4fb0f
Gibney, Eileen R.
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Elia, Marinos
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Lobley, Gerald
fb77eba7-2378-4136-add8-7fff49114db0
Stubbs, R. James
e683bc6e-07ac-4808-b721-6dfe4c8112cf
Walker, Brian R.
9001dafb-5471-4f7f-a073-c482d78f5125
2004
Johnstone, Alexandra M.
6e6ad8c7-a214-4792-a0fa-fd3455213dd1
Faber, Peter
f0ae92d4-e429-4bf7-8efb-828249f32b54
Andrew, Ruth
a127d25d-819a-46bb-88e1-68d7ade4fb0f
Gibney, Eileen R.
2f257add-83b3-49a7-b3a6-103869369428
Elia, Marinos
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Lobley, Gerald
fb77eba7-2378-4136-add8-7fff49114db0
Stubbs, R. James
e683bc6e-07ac-4808-b721-6dfe4c8112cf
Walker, Brian R.
9001dafb-5471-4f7f-a073-c482d78f5125
Johnstone, Alexandra M., Faber, Peter, Andrew, Ruth, Gibney, Eileen R., Elia, Marinos, Lobley, Gerald, Stubbs, R. James and Walker, Brian R.
(2004)
Influence of short-term dietary weight loss on cortisol secretion and metabolism in obese men.
European journal of endocrinology, 150 (2), .
(doi:10.1530/eje.0.1500185).
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Obesity is associated with increased inactivation of cortisol by hepatic A-ring 5alpha- and 5beta-reductases, impaired hepatic regeneration of cortisol from cortisone by 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11HSD1), but increased subcutaneous adipose 11HSD1 activity enhancing local cortisol levels in fat. Cause and effect between obesity and abnormal cortisol metabolism is untested.
DESIGN: Acute weight loss was induced by very low calorie diet (VLCD) or starvation in obese men. METHODS: Otherwise healthy males (aged 20-55 years; body mass index (BMI) 30-40 kg/m2) were studied after 6 days on a weight maintenance diet; then after either 6 days of starvation (n=6) or 3 weeks of VLCD (2.55 MJ; n=6); then after 1 week of weight maintenance; and finally after 2 weeks of being allowed to feed ad libitum. Plasma samples were obtained from indwelling cannulae at 0930 h and 1815 h and a 24 h urine collection was completed for analysis of cortisol metabolites by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry.
RESULTS: Data are mean+/-S.E.M. BMI fell (kg/m3) from 34.8+/-0.8 at baseline to 31.8+/-1.4 on VLCD and 32.7+/-1.1 on starvation. Starvation caused a rise in plasma cortisol (at 0930 h from 143+/-17 to 216+/-11 nM, P<0.001) but no change in total urinary cortisol metabolites. VLCD did not alter plasma cortisol and markedly reduced cortisol metabolite excretion (from 15.8+/-1.1 mg/day at baseline to 7.0+/-1.1 mg/day, P<0.001). Relative excretion of 5alpha-reduced cortisol metabolites fell on both diets, but there were no changes in cortisol/cortisone metabolite ratios reflecting 11HSD activities.
CONCLUSIONS: Weight loss with VLCD in obesity reverses up-regulation of hepatic A-ring reductases and normalises cortisol production rate; in contrast, starvation produces acute stress and further activation of cortisol secretion. We suggest that activation of cortisol secretion is not an irreversible intrinsic abnormality in obese patients, and speculate that dietary content has an important influence on the neuroendocrine response to weight loss.
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Published date: 2004
Additional Information:
Clinical Studies
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Local EPrints ID: 25673
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25673
ISSN: 0804-4643
PURE UUID: 31697021-53bb-4e06-96d0-6dd80398c6d3
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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:04
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Author:
Alexandra M. Johnstone
Author:
Peter Faber
Author:
Ruth Andrew
Author:
Eileen R. Gibney
Author:
Gerald Lobley
Author:
R. James Stubbs
Author:
Brian R. Walker
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