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NS 1400 - Biological Aspects of Obesity 1+2

Biological Aspects of Obesity

Disease

  • Condition of the body, its parts, organs, or systems or an alteration thereof

  • Primarily endocrine system with adipose tissue

  • Results from infection, parasites, nutritional, environmental, genetic, or other causes

  • Eating practices, obesogenic environments

  • Has a characteristic identifiable, marked group of signs or symptoms

  • State of being overweight

  • Deviates from normal structure or function

Obesity

  • A complex disease characterized by a disproportionate body weight for height owing to an excessive accumulation in adipose tissue/adiposity

  • Increased total body fat

  • Increased central adiposity (android obesity)

  • Meets essential criteria for a disease

  • Increases the risk of other diseases and health problems

  • Health risks are categorized as:

  • Biomechanical

  • Cardiometabolic

  • Driver of metabolic syndrome

  • High BP

  • High Triglycerides

  • Large waistline

  • High cholesterol

  • Elevated fasting blood sugar

  • Three or more of these symptoms at once can result in dangerous/life-threatening obesity

 Assessment of Body Composition

  • Diagnosis of obesity requires an assessment of body composition

  • Measure of total body adiposity

  • Direct measurements of body fat are technically challenging and expensive

  • Densitometry (ex: underwater/hydrostatic weighing)

  • Imaging-based methods

  • Body Mass Index (BMI)

  • Relative measure of total body weight to height

  • Moderately correlates with direct measurement of body fat

Imperfect measure that doesn’t account for impact of lean body mass

Anatomic Differences in Fat Deposition

  • Fat distribution influences health risks

  • Android obesity- excess central adiposity

  • Associated with greater risk of health complications

  • Gynoid obesity- excess adiposity below the waist

  • Lower health risks

Adipose Tissue

  • Classified into:

  • Subcutaneous adipose tissue

  • Visceral adipose tissue

  • Subcutaneous is larger storage department

  • Visceral surrounds internal organs

Physiology

  • The branch of biology concerned with the functioning of living organisms, and their constituent tissues and cells


Energy Homeostasis

  • Obesity results from an imbalance between caloric intake and energy expenditure

  • It is a deviation from energy homeostasis

  • Excess energy not needed is stored (and converted to fat)

Food Consumption

  • Complex array of physiological, sensory, cognitive, postingestive, and postabsorptive influences

  • Hunger → satiety → hunger…

Physiology of Body Weight Regulation

  • Involves an endocrine network involving peripheral organs and the CNS

  • Hormones help to maintain a balance between energy intake and expenditure

  • Homeostatic mechanism functions on a negative feedback system

  • Hypothalamus is the main site of sensory integration

  • Perception of hunger vs. satiety

  • Main peripheral organs:

  • Gut/gastrointestinal system- digest and absorb nutrients

  • Pancreas- facilitates digestion and regulates metabolism and appetite

  • Adipose- releases stored nutrients

Hypothalamus

  • Permeable “blood-brain barrier” allows hormones to directly interact with connected systems

  • Two sets of (functionally antagonistic) ARC neurons regulate food intake and energy balance

  • Orexigenic neurons (appetite-stimulating)

  • Anorexigenic neurons (appetite-suppressing)

Peripheral Signals

  • Leptin

  • Made by adipose tissue

  • Produced in levels proportional to whole-body fat stores

  • Inhibit food intake and increases energy expenditure

  • Insulin

  • Secreted by the pancreas upon nutrient ingestion

  • Potentiates the satiety action of leptin

  • Ghrelin

  • Gut hormones have orexigenic and anorexigenic effects

  • Ghrelin produced by the stomach stimulates food intake

Microorganisms

  • Trillions of microorganisms reside in our guts/GI tract

  • Consist of both helpful and harmful microbes (most are symbiotic)

  • Microbiota can benefit health

  • Digest indigestible foods because they yield short chain fatty acids (SCFA)

  • Regulate hormones that can ascend the hypothalamic pathway

Energy Expenditure

  • Sum of:

  • Resting energy expenditure- resting metabolic rate

  • Thermic effect of food- energy needed to metabolize meals

  • Energy spent in physical activity- most modifiable

  • Contributing factors include: age, sex, body size and composition, hormones

Physical Activity

  • Second largest contribution to total energy expenditure (after BMR, around 20%)

  • Exercise and non-exercise activity thermogenesis

  • Most modifiable component

Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)

  • Lowest contribution to energy expenditure

  • Energy expended to utilize nutrients following a meal

  • Depends on types and amounts of foods consumed

NS 1400 - Biological Aspects of Obesity 1+2

Biological Aspects of Obesity

Disease

  • Condition of the body, its parts, organs, or systems or an alteration thereof

  • Primarily endocrine system with adipose tissue

  • Results from infection, parasites, nutritional, environmental, genetic, or other causes

  • Eating practices, obesogenic environments

  • Has a characteristic identifiable, marked group of signs or symptoms

  • State of being overweight

  • Deviates from normal structure or function

Obesity

  • A complex disease characterized by a disproportionate body weight for height owing to an excessive accumulation in adipose tissue/adiposity

  • Increased total body fat

  • Increased central adiposity (android obesity)

  • Meets essential criteria for a disease

  • Increases the risk of other diseases and health problems

  • Health risks are categorized as:

  • Biomechanical

  • Cardiometabolic

  • Driver of metabolic syndrome

  • High BP

  • High Triglycerides

  • Large waistline

  • High cholesterol

  • Elevated fasting blood sugar

  • Three or more of these symptoms at once can result in dangerous/life-threatening obesity

 Assessment of Body Composition

  • Diagnosis of obesity requires an assessment of body composition

  • Measure of total body adiposity

  • Direct measurements of body fat are technically challenging and expensive

  • Densitometry (ex: underwater/hydrostatic weighing)

  • Imaging-based methods

  • Body Mass Index (BMI)

  • Relative measure of total body weight to height

  • Moderately correlates with direct measurement of body fat

Imperfect measure that doesn’t account for impact of lean body mass

Anatomic Differences in Fat Deposition

  • Fat distribution influences health risks

  • Android obesity- excess central adiposity

  • Associated with greater risk of health complications

  • Gynoid obesity- excess adiposity below the waist

  • Lower health risks

Adipose Tissue

  • Classified into:

  • Subcutaneous adipose tissue

  • Visceral adipose tissue

  • Subcutaneous is larger storage department

  • Visceral surrounds internal organs

Physiology

  • The branch of biology concerned with the functioning of living organisms, and their constituent tissues and cells


Energy Homeostasis

  • Obesity results from an imbalance between caloric intake and energy expenditure

  • It is a deviation from energy homeostasis

  • Excess energy not needed is stored (and converted to fat)

Food Consumption

  • Complex array of physiological, sensory, cognitive, postingestive, and postabsorptive influences

  • Hunger → satiety → hunger…

Physiology of Body Weight Regulation

  • Involves an endocrine network involving peripheral organs and the CNS

  • Hormones help to maintain a balance between energy intake and expenditure

  • Homeostatic mechanism functions on a negative feedback system

  • Hypothalamus is the main site of sensory integration

  • Perception of hunger vs. satiety

  • Main peripheral organs:

  • Gut/gastrointestinal system- digest and absorb nutrients

  • Pancreas- facilitates digestion and regulates metabolism and appetite

  • Adipose- releases stored nutrients

Hypothalamus

  • Permeable “blood-brain barrier” allows hormones to directly interact with connected systems

  • Two sets of (functionally antagonistic) ARC neurons regulate food intake and energy balance

  • Orexigenic neurons (appetite-stimulating)

  • Anorexigenic neurons (appetite-suppressing)

Peripheral Signals

  • Leptin

  • Made by adipose tissue

  • Produced in levels proportional to whole-body fat stores

  • Inhibit food intake and increases energy expenditure

  • Insulin

  • Secreted by the pancreas upon nutrient ingestion

  • Potentiates the satiety action of leptin

  • Ghrelin

  • Gut hormones have orexigenic and anorexigenic effects

  • Ghrelin produced by the stomach stimulates food intake

Microorganisms

  • Trillions of microorganisms reside in our guts/GI tract

  • Consist of both helpful and harmful microbes (most are symbiotic)

  • Microbiota can benefit health

  • Digest indigestible foods because they yield short chain fatty acids (SCFA)

  • Regulate hormones that can ascend the hypothalamic pathway

Energy Expenditure

  • Sum of:

  • Resting energy expenditure- resting metabolic rate

  • Thermic effect of food- energy needed to metabolize meals

  • Energy spent in physical activity- most modifiable

  • Contributing factors include: age, sex, body size and composition, hormones

Physical Activity

  • Second largest contribution to total energy expenditure (after BMR, around 20%)

  • Exercise and non-exercise activity thermogenesis

  • Most modifiable component

Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)

  • Lowest contribution to energy expenditure

  • Energy expended to utilize nutrients following a meal

  • Depends on types and amounts of foods consumed

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