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Low‐Intensity Exercise Routine for a Long Period of Time Prevents Osteosarcopenic Obesity in Sedentary Old Female Rats, by Decreasing Inflammation and Oxidative Stress and Increasing GDF‐11
Beatriz Mena‐Montes, David Hernández-Álvarez, Gibrán Pedraza-Vázquez, Rafael Toledo-Pérez, Raúl Librado‐Osorio, Jorge A. García, Adriana Alarcón‐Aguilar, Roberto Lazzarini‐Lechuga, Óscar Rosas‐Carrasco, Mina Königsberg, Norma Edith López‐Díazguerrero, Armando Luna‐López
Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity · 2021 · ▲ 14 citations
Abstract
The loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength is known as sarcopenia; it is characterized as a progressive and generalized muscle disorder associated with aging. This deterioration can seriously compromise the elderly's health and reduce their quality of life. In addition to age, there are other factors that induce muscle mass loss, among which are sedentary lifestyle, chronic diseases, inflammation, and obesity. In recent years, a new clinical condition has been observed in older adults that affects their physical capacities and quality of life, which is known as osteosarcopenic obesity (OSO). Osteoporosis, sarcopenia, and obesity coexist in this condition. Physical exercise and nutritional management are the most widely used interventions for the treatment and prevention of sarcopenia. However, in older adults, physical exercise and protein intake do not have the same outcomes observed in younger people. Here, we used a low-intensity exercise routine for a long period of time (LIERLT) in order to delay the OSO appearance related to sedentarism and aging in female Wistar rats. The LIERLT routine consisted of walking at 15 m/min for 30 min, five days a week for 20 months. To evaluate the effects of the LIERLT routine, body composition was determined using DXA-scan, additionally, biochemical parameters, inflammatory profile, oxidative protein damage, redox state, and serum concentration of GDF-11 at different ages were evaluated (4, 8, 12, 18, 22, and 24 months). Our results show that the LIERLT routine delays OSO phenotype in old 24-month-old rats, in a mechanism involving the decrease in the inflammatory state and oxidative stress. GDF-11 was evaluated as a protein related to muscle repair and regeneration; interestingly, rats that perform the LIERLT increased their GDF-11 levels.
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- 10.1155/2021/5526665
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- 2026-06-23 MST
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APA
Mena‐Montes, B., Hernández-Álvarez, D., Pedraza-Vázquez, G., Toledo-Pérez, R., Librado‐Osorio, R., García, J.A., Alarcón‐Aguilar, A., Lazzarini‐Lechuga, R., Rosas‐Carrasco, �., Königsberg, M., López‐Díazguerrero, N.E., & Luna‐López, A. (2021). Low‐Intensity Exercise Routine for a Long Period of Time Prevents Osteosarcopenic Obesity in Sedentary Old Female Rats, by Decreasing Inflammation and Oxidative Stress and Increasing GDF‐11. <em>Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity</em>. https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/5526665
Vancouver
Mena‐Montes B, Hernández-Álvarez D, Pedraza-Vázquez G, Toledo-Pérez R, Librado‐Osorio R, García JA, et al. Low‐Intensity Exercise Routine for a Long Period of Time Prevents Osteosarcopenic Obesity in Sedentary Old Female Rats, by Decreasing Inflammation and Oxidative Stress and Increasing GDF‐11. Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity. 2021. doi:10.1155/2021/5526665.
BibTeX
@article{beatriz2021LowInt,
title = {Low‐Intensity Exercise Routine for a Long Period of Time Prevents Osteosarcopenic Obesity in Sedentary Old Female Rats, by Decreasing Inflammation and Oxidative Stress and Increasing GDF‐11},
author = {Beatriz Mena‐Montes and David Hernández-Álvarez and Gibrán Pedraza-Vázquez and Rafael Toledo-Pérez and Raúl Librado‐Osorio and Jorge A. García and Adriana Alarcón‐Aguilar and Roberto Lazzarini‐Lechuga and Óscar Rosas‐Carrasco and Mina Königsberg and Norma Edith López‐Díazguerrero and Armando Luna‐López},
journal = {Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity},
year = {2021},
doi = {10.1155/2021/5526665},
}
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