Conference Paper 2020

Investigating obesity-associated brain inflammation using quantitative water content mapping

{There is growing evidence that obesity is associated with inflammation in the brain, which could contribute to the pathogenesis of obesity. In humans, it is challenging to detect brain inflammation in vivo. Recently, quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI) has emerged as a tool to characterize pathophysiological processes in the brain with reliable and reproducible measures. Proton density imaging provides quantitative assessment of the brain water content, which is affected in different pathologies including inflammation. We enrolled 115 normal weight, overweight and obese men and women (body mass index (BMI) range 20.1-39.7 kg/m2, age range 20-75 years, 60\textpercent men) to acquire cerebral water content mapping in vivo using MRI at 3 Tesla. We investigated potential associations between brain water content with anthropometric measures of obesity, body fat distribution and whole-body metabolism. No global changes in water content were associated with obesity. However, higher water content values in the cerebellum, limbic lobe and sub-lobular region was detected in participants with higher BMI, independent of age. More specifically, the dorsal striatum, hypothalamus, thalamus, fornix, anterior limb of the internal capsule and posterior thalamic radiation showed the strongest relationship with BMI, independent of age. In a subgroup with available measurements (n\textequals50), we identified visceral adipose tissue to be the strongest tested link between higher water content values and obesity. Persons with metabolic syndrome had the highest water content values in the hypothalamus and the fornix. There is accumulating evidence that inflammation of the hypothalamus contributed to obesity-associated insulin resistance in that area. Whether brain inflammation is a cause or consequence of obesity in humans still needs to be investigated using a longitudinal study design. Using qMRI, we were able to detect marked water content changes in young and older obese adults, which is most likely due to chronic low-grade inflammation.}

Author(s): Kullmann, S and Abbas, Z and Machann, J and Shah, NJ and Scheffler, K and Birkenfeld, AL and Häring, H-U and Fritsche, A and Heni, M and Preissl, H
Journal: {Journal of Neuroendocrinology}
Volume: 32
Pages: 1--13
Year: 2020
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Bibtex Type: Conference Paper (inproceedings)
Address: West Palm Beach, FL, USA
DOI: 10.1111/jne.12907
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@inproceedings{item_3251908,
  title = {{Investigating obesity-associated brain inflammation using quantitative water content mapping}},
  journal = {{Journal of Neuroendocrinology}},
  abstract = {{There is growing evidence that obesity is associated with inflammation in the brain, which could contribute to the pathogenesis of obesity. In humans, it is challenging to detect brain inflammation in vivo. Recently, quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI) has emerged as a tool to characterize pathophysiological processes in the brain with reliable and reproducible measures. Proton density imaging provides quantitative assessment of the brain water content, which is affected in different pathologies including inflammation. We enrolled 115 normal weight, overweight and obese men and women (body mass index (BMI) range 20.1-39.7 kg/m2, age range 20-75 years, 60\textpercent men) to acquire cerebral water content mapping in vivo using MRI at 3 Tesla. We investigated potential associations between brain water content with anthropometric measures of obesity, body fat distribution and whole-body metabolism. No global changes in water content were associated with obesity. However, higher water content values in the cerebellum, limbic lobe and sub-lobular region was detected in participants with higher BMI, independent of age. More specifically, the dorsal striatum, hypothalamus, thalamus, fornix, anterior limb of the internal capsule and posterior thalamic radiation showed the strongest relationship with BMI, independent of age. In a subgroup with available measurements (n\textequals50), we identified visceral adipose tissue to be the strongest tested link between higher water content values and obesity. Persons with metabolic syndrome had the highest water content values in the hypothalamus and the fornix. There is accumulating evidence that inflammation of the hypothalamus contributed to obesity-associated insulin resistance in that area. Whether brain inflammation is a cause or consequence of obesity in humans still needs to be investigated using a longitudinal study design. Using qMRI, we were able to detect marked water content changes in young and older obese adults, which is most likely due to chronic low-grade inflammation.}},
  volume = {32},
  pages = {1--13},
  publisher = {Oxford University Press},
  address = {West Palm Beach, FL, USA},
  year = {2020},
  slug = {item_3251908},
  author = {Kullmann, S and Abbas, Z and Machann, J and Shah, NJ and Scheffler, K and Birkenfeld, AL and H\"aring, H-U and Fritsche, A and Heni, M and Preissl, H}
}