X. Bi, H. Tan, S. Xing
Apr 1, 2009
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Influential Citations
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Journal
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation
Abstract
Objective: Human studies suggest that calcium-channel blockers have cardiovascular protection besides reducing blood pressure, and interleukin-18 (IL-18) levels which are elevated in obese population are associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS). The purpose of this research was to study the change of serum IL-18 levels and the effect of felodipine on it in high-fructose diet-fed rats. Methods: In this research, 30 Wistar male rats were randomized into 3 groups. A control group (no.=12) was fed with normal feeds, and high-fructose diet was given to a fructose group and a flodioine group (no.=9 in each group). All animals were fed for a period of 32 weeks, during which body weight and systolic blood pressure (BP) were measured once every 4 weeks. Felodipine (5 mg/kg/d) was then administered by gavage daily for 6 weeks to the felodipine group. Before and after treatment with felodipine, fasting plasma lipid, blood glucose, plasma insulin, and serum IL-18 were detected. Results: Body weight, systolic BP, triglycerides, fasting insulin, and the R-value of homeostasis model (HOMA-R) were significantly increased in high-fructose rats (p<0.01). Serum IL-18 levels were elevated and had significant positive correlation with HOMA-R in rats with fructose-induced MetS (p<0.01). We also found that felodipine may decrease HOMA-R and serum IL-18 levels besides reducing blood pressure (p<0.05, p<0.01). Conclusion: IL-18 plays an important role in the development of MetS, while felodipine exerts an anti-inflammatory effect on rats with fructose-induced MetS by down-regulating serum IL-18 levels.