The effects of moderate alterations in adrenergic activity on acute appetite regulation in obese women: A randomised crossover trial.

Human Nutrition, School of Medicine, 3526University of Glasgow, United Kingdom. Department of Rehabilitation and Sport Sciences, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, 375756Bournemouth University, United Kingdom. College of Medical Veterinary and Life Science, Institute of Cardiovascular & Medical Sciences, 3526University of Glasgow, United Kingdom. Centre for Sport and Exercise Science and Medicine, University of Brighton, United Kingdom. Department of Applied Sciences, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, 5995Northumbria University, United Kingdom. Human Performance Laboratory, Department of Life & Health Sciences, School of Sciences and Engineering, 121343University of Nicosia, Cyprus. School of Life Sciences, 6123University of Nottingham Medical School, Queen's Medical Centre, United Kingdom. University Department of Pathological Biochemistry, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, United Kingdom.

Nutrition and health. 2020;(4):311-322

Abstract

BACKGROUND Previous evidence has demonstrated that serum leptin is correlated with appetite in combination with, but not without, modest exercise. AIM: The present experiments investigated the effects of exogenous adrenaline and α/β adrenoceptor blockade in combination with moderate exercise on serum leptin concentrations, appetite/satiety sensations and subsequent food intake in obese women. METHODS A total of 10 obese women ((mean ± SEM), age: 50 (1.9) years, body mass index 36 (4.1) kg/m2, waist 104.8 (4.1) cm) participated in two separate, double-blind randomised experimental trials. Experiment 1: moderate exercise after α/β adrenergic blocker (labetalol, 100 mg orally) versus moderate exercise plus placebo; experiment 2: adrenaline infusion for 20 minutes versus saline infusion. Appetite/satiety and biochemistry were measured at baseline, pre- and immediately post-intervention, then 1 hour post-intervention (i.e., before dinner). Food intake was assessed via ad libitum buffet-style dinner. RESULTS No differences were found in appetite/satiety, subsequent food intake or serum leptin in any of the studies (experiment 1 or experiment 2). In experiment 1, blood glucose was higher (p < 0.01) and plasma free fatty acids lower (p = 0.04) versus placebo. In experiment 2, plasma free fatty acids (p < 0.05) increased after adrenaline versus saline infusion. CONCLUSIONS Neither inhibition of exercise-induced adrenergic activity by combined α/β adrenergic blockade nor moderate increases in adrenergic activity induced by intravenous adrenaline infusion affected acute appetite regulation.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Randomized Controlled Trial

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