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Plasma brain‐derived neurotrophic factor in prepubertal obese children: results from a 2‐year lifestyle intervention programme
Author(s) -
Corripio Raquel,
GónzalezClemente JoséMiguel,
Jacobo PérezSánchez,
Silvia Näf,
Lluis Gallart,
Joan Vendrell,
Assumpta Caixàs
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
clinical endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1365-2265
pISSN - 0300-0664
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2265.2012.04431.x
Subject(s) - medicine , endocrinology , context (archaeology) , brain derived neurotrophic factor , body mass index , metabolic syndrome , obesity , insulin resistance , anthropometry , neurotrophic factors , biology , paleontology , receptor
Summary Context Brain‐derived neurotrophic factor ( BDNF ) is a neurotrophin potentially involved in the pathophysiology of obesity and metabolic syndrome in adults. In children, it has scarcely been studied. Objective To analyse plasma BDNF and its relationship with metabolic syndrome components before and after 2 years of a lifestyle intervention programme in a prepubertal obese cohort. Design and setting Case–control study with a 2‐year prospective follow‐up in a referral paediatric endocrine outpatient centre. Patients and methods Seventy‐three prepubertal obese children, 8·03 ± 1·08 years old, and 47 age‐ and gender‐matched lean controls were studied. Anthropometric parameters, blood pressure, platelet count ( PLT ), oral glucose tolerance test, homoeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance ( HOMA‐IR ), lipid profile, BDNF , diet and physical activity were evaluated. Weight loss was considered if z‐score body mass index ( BMI ) decreased at least 0·5 SD . Results At baseline, BDNF tended to be lower in prepubertal obese children compared with lean controls ( P = 0·076). BDNF did not correlate with any metabolic syndrome component. After 2 years, obese patients showed an increase in BDNF . Regression model analysis adjusted by age, sex, puberty, BMI , PLT and HOMA‐IR showed that BDNF increased in subjects who lost weight ( P = 0·036), practiced sports ( P = 0·008) and had an adequate carbohydrate intake ( P = 0·032). Conclusions Plasma BDNF tends to be lower in obese prepubertal children than in lean controls, is not related to any other metabolic syndrome component and increases after a lifestyle intervention programme.