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Physiologic Plasticity of Intramyocardial Lipid Storage

Patterns and Plasticity of Orthotopic and Ectopic Fat Deposition and Associations With Insulin Sensitivity: A Magnetic-resonance-imaging and -Spectroscopy Study in Lean and Obese Individuals: Methodological Part

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01921075
Enrollment
9
Registered
2013-08-13
Start date
2010-01-31
Completion date
2011-12-31
Last updated
2013-08-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Lipid Metabolism

Keywords

physiology, normal function

Brief summary

The main goal of the present study was to provide a technical basis for future studies assessing the role of cardiac lipids. More specifically, non-invasive MR-Spectroscopy (MRS) techniques will be used in this study to: 1. assess the methodological reproducibility of MRS-measurements of cardiac lipids in humans 2. investigate physiological variations of cardiac lipids by measuring day-to-day changes under identical conditions 3. determining diurnal variations of cardiac lipids in humans

Detailed description

Background Obesity is a well known risk factor for the development of glucose intolerance, type 2 diabetes mellitus and, consequently, diabetic complications like cardiovascular disease. Importantly, obesity is not only associated with lipid accumulation in adipose tissue (orthotopic fat deposition), but also in non-adipose tissues (ectopic fat deposition). Clinical studies have repetitively shown that muscular and hepatic lipid accumulation as well as elevated visceral adipose tissue is associated with the development of central and peripheral insulin resistance. In addition, recent data from animal studies show increasing evidence that two other organs, the heart and the pancreas, may also be involved in the pathophysiological processes of reduced insulin sensitivity. While reduced insulin secretion in the course of type 2 diabetes has been well documented, the importance of pancreatic fat deposition as an early step in this process has only recently been suggested based on animal models. Conversely, ischemic heart disease is one of the most dangerous complications of diabetes mellitus, its prevention thereby being a cornerstone of current diabetes management. Recent data suggest that changes in the lipid metabolism of the heart and associated epi- and myocardial lipid deposition may be earliest signs of diabetic cardiopathy. Magnetic-Resonance-Imaging (MRI) and -Spectroscopy (MRS) are among the most versatile methods for non-invasive studies of human tissue and/or metabolism in vivo and in situ. The excellent soft tissue contrast of MRI has already led to the implementation of this method for the assessment of whole body lipid accumulation, whereas MRS has successfully been applied to study lipid metabolism of skeletal muscle and liver. The extended application of this method towards heart and pancreas will allow a comprehensive investigation of orthotopic and ectopic fat deposition in humans and its association with the development of insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus. The methodological part of the study will focus on the physiologic plasticity of cardiac lipids in order to assess: i) methodological reproducibility ii) intra-individual physiological reproducibility by measuring day-to-day variations as well as variations during the day. Objective i) Adapting and optimizing the single-voxel MRS sequence that is currently used for muscle and liver, such that respiratory and cardiac double-triggering enables spectroscopy of the cardiac muscle. ii) Validate the methodology under different standardized physiologic conditions. Methods Cardiac lipids are determined during five independent MR-examinations distributed over two days separated by one or two weeks. Both days included a measurement in the morning after an overnight fast (\>8h) and one in the afternoon (8h after breakfast, 3.5h after lunch). To determine methodological reproducibility, the afternoon measurement was repeated on one of the two days (1h break). Preparation of the volunteers included perpetuation of their normal diet, but restricted physical activity for two preceding days. Cardiac lipids were determined by single-voxel MR-Spectroscopy.

Interventions

OTHERnormal dietary behavior

normal dietary behavior during examination days

Non-invasive diagnostic procedure

Sponsors

Takeda
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
MALE
Age
18 Years to 30 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* male * age 18-30 * BMI \<25 * healthy * written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

* contraindications to MRI examinations (claustrophobia, implanted devices (pacemaker, insulin pump, neurostimulators))

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Intramyocardial lipid contentat baseline (morning of examination day 1)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Intramyocardial lipid contentevening of examination day 1, i.e. 8 hours after baseline
Intra-individual variation of intramyocardial lipid contentevening of examination day one, i.e. 8 hours after baselineDifference between evening and morning measurement within examination day one
Intra-individual difference of intramyocardial lipid content (morning) over one weekmorning of examination day one, i.e. 7 days after baselineDifference between morning measurements of examination day 1 and examination day 2

Countries

Switzerland

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026