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Nutrition 2012-Jan

Dietary intake of medium- and long-chain triacylglycerols ameliorates insulin resistance in rats fed a high-fat diet.

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Shin Terada
Sayuri Yamamoto
Seiji Sekine
Toshiaki Aoyama

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Excessive accumulation of visceral fat is strongly associated with insulin resistance. The present investigation examined the effects of dietary intake of medium- and long-chain triacylglycerols (MLCTs), which have been shown to induce significantly lower visceral fat accumulation in rats and humans, on high-fat diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance in rats. These effects were then compared with those observed in long-chain triacylglycerol (LCT)-fed rats.

METHODS

After an 8-wk feeding of a high-fat diet, which induced severe whole-body insulin resistance, male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a standard diet containing LCTs or MLCTs for 6 wk. After the dietary treatment, an oral glucose tolerance test was performed.

RESULTS

Although body weight and total intra-abdominal fat mass did not differ between the two groups, mesenteric fat weight in the MLCT-fed group was significantly lower than that in the LCT group (P < 0.05). The increase in plasma insulin concentrations, but not in glucose, after glucose administration (area under the curve) was significantly smaller in the MLCT group than in the LCT group (P < 0.01) and was significantly associated with mesenteric fat weight (P < 0.05). MLCT-fed rats had significantly higher plasma adiponectin concentrations compared with LCT rats (P < 0.05). Adiponectin concentrations were negatively correlated with the area under the curve for plasma insulin (P < 0.05) and tended to be inversely related to mesenteric fat weight (P = 0.08).

CONCLUSIONS

These results suggest that dietary intake of MLCTs may improve insulin resistance in rats fed a high-fat diet, at least in part through increased adiponectin concentrations caused by a lower mesenteric fat mass.

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