Muscle adaptation to sleeve gastrectomy: Potential role of nutritional supplementation and physical exercise

  • Entesar Ali Saber Department of Histology and Cell Biology, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt
  • Neven Makram Aziz Department of Medical Physiology, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt
  • Mohammed Mustafa Abd El Aleem Department of Anatomy, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt
  • Maha Yehia Kamel Department of Anatomy, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt
  • Seham A Abd El-Aleem Department of Histology and Cell Biology, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt
  • Fatma Farrag Ali Department of Medical Physiology, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt
  • Doaa Mohamed Elroby Ali Department of Biochemistry, Sohag University, Faculty of Pharmacy, Sohag, Egypt
  • Amira Fathi Behery Department of Histology and Cell Biology, Minia University Faculty of Medicine, Minia, Egypt

Abstract

Skeletal muscle is metabolically and functionally flexible and contractile under normal conditions. Obesity is a risk factor that causes metabolic disorders and reduces muscle contractility. Sleeve gastrectomy (SG) has been used for surgical correction of obesity. This work aimed to investigate how obesity and its surgical correction affects skeletal muscle and the possible role of nutritional supplementation and physical exercise. Adult male albino rats were randomly divided into five groups, 8 rats per group: group Ia (control non-obese), group Ib (control obese), group II (post-operative, SG), group III (post SG + nutritional supplementation) and group IV (post SG + nutritional supplementation + physical exercise). SG resulted in cellular and metabolic degenerative disorders in the muscle including wasting, weakness and fibrosis with elevated inflammatory, oxidative and injury markers. Nutritional supplementation induced the post SG muscle regeneration indicated by high expression of insulin growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and myogenin and low expression of transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-β1). Interestingly, it improved the metabolic state of the muscle by reducing the oxidative stress, inflammatory and muscle injury markers and delaying the onset of fatigue. What is more, physical exercise along with nutritional supplementation resulted in further improvement of the muscle metabolic state and function. In conclusion, nutritional supplementations together with physical exercise after SG are essential for preserving muscle mass and contractility and improving its metabolic and functional status.

Published
2021-12-22
Section
Articles