14 research outputs found
Hepatic Fatty Acid Oxidation Restrains Systemic Catabolism during Starvation
The liver is critical for maintaining systemic energy balance during starvation. To understand the role of hepatic fatty acid Ī²-oxidation on this process, we generated mice with a liver-specific knockout of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (Cpt2Lā/ā), an obligate step in mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid Ī²-oxidation. Fasting induced hepatic steatosis and serum dyslipidemia with an absence of circulating ketones, while blood glucose remained normal. Systemic energy homeostasis was largely maintained in fasting Cpt2Lā/ā mice by adaptations in hepatic and systemic oxidative gene expression mediated in part by PparĪ± target genes including procatabolic hepatokines Fgf21, Gdf15, and Igfbp1. Feeding a ketogenic diet to Cpt2Lā/ā mice resulted in severe hepatomegaly, liver damage, and death with a complete absence of adipose triglyceride stores. These data show that hepatic fatty acid oxidation is not required for survival during acute food deprivation but essential for constraining adipocyte lipolysis and regulating systemic catabolism when glucose is limiting
Evaluation and Management of Symptomatic Vasospasm following Endoscopic Endonasal Resection of Pediatric Adamantinomatous Craniopharyngioma
Background. Cerebral vasospasm is a well-described pathology following subarachnoid hemorrhage and trauma in children; however, very few cases have been published following craniopharyngioma resection in children. Those that were published were associated with significant morbidity or mortality at hospital discharge. Case Summary. Here, we report the challenging clinical course of a pediatric patient who developed delayed cerebral vasospasm following craniopharyngioma resection. It was first noted on postoperative day 13. The patient was managed with induced hypertension, hypervolemia, and intra-arterial vasodilator therapy (nicardipine). This patient made a full recovery without new focal deficits at hospital discharge. Conclusion. In contrast to previously reported similar pediatric cases, this patient with cerebral vasospasm after craniopharyngioma resection made a full recovery without new focal neurologic deficits. To our knowledge, this is the first occurrence of a patient with this clinical course
Loss of Adipose Fatty Acid Oxidation Does Not Potentiate Obesity at Thermoneutrality
Ambient temperature affects energy intake and expenditure to maintain homeostasis in a continuously fluctuating environment. Here, mice with an adipose-specific defect in fatty acid oxidation (Cpt2Aā/ā) were subjected to varying temperatures to determine the role of adipose bioenergetics in environmental adaptation and body weight regulation. Microarray analysis of mice acclimatized to thermoneutrality revealed that Cpt2Aā/ā interscapular brown adipose tissue (BAT) failed to induce the expression of thermogenic genes such as Ucp1 and Pgc1Ī± in response to adrenergic stimulation, and increasing ambient temperature exacerbated these defects. Furthermore, thermoneutral housing induced mtDNA stress in Cpt2Aā/ā BAT and ultimately resulted in a loss of interscapular BAT. Although the loss of adipose fatty acid oxidation resulted in clear molecular, cellular, and physiologic deficits in BAT, body weight gain and glucose tolerance were similar in control and Cpt2Aā/ā mice in response to a high-fat diet, even when mice were housed at thermoneutrality
Neonatal exposure to hypoxia induces early arterial stiffening via activation of lysyl oxidases
Abstract Hypoxia in the neonatal period is associated with early manifestations of adverse cardiovascular health in adulthood including higher risk of hypertension and atherosclerosis. We hypothesize that this occurs due to activation of lysyl oxidases (LOXs) and the remodeling of the large conduit vessels, leading to early arterial stiffening. Newborn C57Bl/6 mice were exposed to hypoxia (FiO2Ā =ā11.5%) from postnatal day 1 (P1) to postnatal day 11 (P11), followed by resumption of normoxia. Controls were maintained in normoxia. Using in vivo (pulse wave velocity; PWV) and ex vivo (tensile testing) arterial stiffness indexes, we determined that mice exposed to neonatal hypoxia had significantly higher arterial stiffness compared with normoxia controls by young adulthood (P60), and it increased further by P120. Echocardiography performed at P60 showed that mice exposed to hypoxia displayed a compensated dilated cardiomyopathy. Western blotting revelated that neonatal hypoxia accelerated ageārelated increase in LOXL2 protein expression in the aorta and elevated LOXL2 expression in the PA at P11 with a delayed decay toward normoxic controls. In the heart and lung, gene and protein expression of LOX/LOXL2 were upregulated at P11, with a delayed decay when compared to normoxic controls. Neonatal hypoxia results in a significant increase in arterial stiffness in early adulthood due to aberrant LOX/LOXL2 expression. This suggests an acceleration in the mechanical decline of the cardiovascular system, that contributes to increased risk of hypertension in young adults exposed to neonatal hypoxia that may increase susceptibility to further insults
Loss of Hepatic Mitochondrial Long-Chain Fatty Acid Oxidation Confers Resistance to Diet-Induced Obesity and Glucose Intolerance
The liver has a large capacity for mitochondrial fatty acid Ī²-oxidation, which is critical for systemic metabolic adaptations such as gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis. To understand the role of hepatic fatty acid oxidation in response to a chronic high-fat dietĀ (HFD), we generated mice with a liver-specific deficiency of mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid Ī²-oxidation (Cpt2L-/- mice). Paradoxically, Cpt2L-/- mice were resistant to HFD-induced obesity and glucose intolerance with an absence of liver damage, although they exhibited serum dyslipidemia, hepatic oxidative stress, and systemic carnitine deficiency. Feeding an HFD induced hepatokines in mice, withĀ a loss of hepatic fatty acid oxidation that enhanced systemic energy expenditure and suppressed adiposity. Additionally, the suppression in hepatic gluconeogenesis was sufficient to improve HFD-induced glucose intolerance. These data show that inhibiting hepatic fatty acid oxidation results in a systemic hormetic response that protects mice from HFD-induced obesity and glucose intolerance.publishe
Perioperative Management of Pediatric Patients with Moyamoya Arteriopathy
Pediatric patients with moyamoya arteriopathy are at high risk for developing new onset transient or permanent neurologic deficits secondary to cerebral hypoperfusion, particularly in the perioperative period. It is therefore essential to carefully manage these patients in a multidisciplinary, coordinated effort to reduce the risk of new permanent neurologic deficits. However, little has been published on perioperative management of pediatric patients with moyamoya, particularly in the early postoperative period during intensive care unit admission. Our pediatric neurocritical care team sought to create a multidisciplinary periprocedural evidence- and consensus-based care pathway for high-risk pediatric patients with moyamoya arteriopathy undergoing anesthesia for any reason to decrease the incidence of periprocedural stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA). We reviewed the literature to identify risk factors associated with perioperative stroke or TIA among patients with moyamoya and to gather data supporting specific perioperative management strategies. A multidisciplinary team from pediatric anesthesia, neurocritical care, nursing, child life, neurosurgery, interventional neuroradiology, neurology, and hematology created a care pathway for children with moyamoya undergoing anesthesia, classifying them as either high or standard risk, and applying an individualized perioperative management plan to high-risk patients. The incidence of neurologic sequelae before and after pathway implementation will be compared in future studies