Buff Mice Show 'Weight Training' Muscles cut Fat And enhance Metabolism
Posted on Wednesday, January 26, 2011 by Mommy Helper ผู้ช่วยคุณแม่มือใหม่
It may not be time to start pumping iron just yet, but, as strange as it sounds, there is evidence in up-to-date mice studies published in the February 6th issue of Cell Metabolism that indicates that the type of muscles that are developed by weight lifting may play a bigger role in regulating body weight than we think.
You're saying, man has a lab full of bench-pressing mice in some medical school somewhere? Although a great image, you would only be right about the medical school part. It turns out that a team of researchers at the Whitaker Cardiovascular produce of Boston University medical town (Bumc) has been bulking up their test mice using a technique that genetically turns on the type of fast skeletal muscles (type Ii) that are used for tasks like managing heavy objects.
Mice
No, really- somewhere in a lab in Boston, there was a team of muscular mice who were bulked up like weight trainers by genetic manipulation. Interestingly, the researchers didn't see what they expected.
The investigate group had foreseen, their gene tweaking to supervene in fat but strong mice, more like sumo wrestlers than body builders, since the mice were being fed a fast-food-like, high-fat and high-sucrose, diet causing them to be fat to begin with all the foreseen, problems. What they got instead was a test group that showed definite metabolic improvements when the type Ii fast muscle genetic switch was turned on and the muscles developed. "Remarkably, type Ii muscle growth was associated with an unabridged allowance in body mass, due to a large decrease in fat mass. In addition, blood tests showed that these mice became metabolically normal and their fatty liver disease rapidly resolved," said senior author Kenneth Walsh, PhD, a professor of treatment and head of Molecular Cardiology at the Whitaker Cardiovascular produce at Busm. The useful changes occurred despite the fact that the mice continued to eat the same high-calorie diet and did not display any growth in physical activity. "This work shows that type Ii muscle just doesn't allow you to pick up heavy objects, it is also leading in controlling whole body metabolism," added Walsh.
Further pathology found that the mice burned fat because of changes in the physiology and gene expression of their fat and liver cells. "Thus, it appears that the growth in type Ii muscle fiber orchestrates changes in the body through its potential to recap with these other tissues," he said.
So, here is what all of this may mean to us. We've all the time known that activities like weight lifting that form fast, type Ii muscles were good for burning fat that might otherwise turn to fat. What we didn't know was that the existence of this muscle type could have such far-reaching supervene in other metabolic areas as well, such as reducing hepatic steatosis (fatty liver). Walsh believes there might well be an extended association to humans suggesting that "strength training, in expanding to the widely prescribed therapy of durableness training, may be of singular advantage to overweight individuals."
The researchers are still busy revealing the interplay in the middle of diet, muscle type, and the body's metabolic systems. Their first investigate is clearly the starting of a longer process, and hopefully the further understanding can lead to improvements in the treatment of those in need of weight loss and further reduce conditions like diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and hypertension.
Who would have thought that paying attentiveness to a bunch of buff mice would have such far-reaching results.
Remember, too, that this article is for data purposes only. If you have or think you have a condition issue, including weight or diet issues, consult your traditional care physician for proper diagnoses and treatment.
Personal Fit Weight Loss Guide dx.doi.org/10.2121/Weight-Loss-Guide-020808
Buff Mice Show 'Weight Training' Muscles cut Fat And enhance MetabolismPosted in enhance, Metabolism, Muscles, Training, Weight |