Folia Medica (Sep 2019)

Impact of a High-fat Diet on the Development of Chronic Inflammation in Heart of Wistar rats

  • Iliyan V. Dimitrov,
  • Vassil I. Kamenov,
  • Nikolay P. Boyadjiev,
  • Katerina N. Georgieva,
  • Anelia V. Bivolarska,
  • Milena N. Draganova-Filipova,
  • Penka A. Angelova-Hristova,
  • Slavi Delchev,
  • Elena Daskalova,
  • Fanka Gerginska,
  • Teodora R. Stankova,
  • Vilian Gramatikov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/folmed.61.e39348
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 3
pp. 404 – 410

Abstract

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Introduction: Obesity is linked to the development of low-grade, chronic inflammation. Obesity-related inflammation appears to be a different type of inflammation, mainly due to excessive food intake and unusual homeostasis. It can be evaluated by measuring the concentration of pro- and anti-inflammatory marker molecules – C-reactive protein (CRP), serum amyloid-A (SAA) and interleukin-4.Aim: The aim of the present study is to evaluate the rate of the inflammatory process in heart, provoked by the consumption of a high-fat diet.Materials and methods: Sixty 8-week-old male Wistar rats were used in this experiment. The laboratory animals were fed orally with two different types of rodent food for 14 or 18 weeks – a high-fat diet (experimental groups) and standard rodent food (control groups). They all were kept under standard housing conditions. The levels of the pro- and anti-inflammatory markers in tissue homogenates from heart were analyzed using ELISA. Their expression in tissue samples was detected immunohistochemically by the biotin-streptavidin-peroxidase method. The total protein concentration was determined by the Lawry method.Results: CRP levels showed no significant differences when the control group was compared with the groups fed with a high-fat diet (p>0.05). The SAA levels detected were also insignificantly changed. Only the IL-4 tissue levels showed tendency to increase (p<0.05) in the high-fat diet group.Conclusions: Our experiment indicates that there is a specific reaction of the heart to a high-fat diet. It also refers to the existence of adaptive mechanisms allowing the heart to counteract the development of dietary induced inflammation.

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