Prevention of Metabolic Impairment by Dietary Nitrate in Overweight Male Mice Improves Stroke Outcome
Ellen Vercalsteren, Dimitra Karampatsi, Carolina Buizza, Gesine Paul, Jon O. Lundberg, Thomas Nyström, Vladimer Darsalia, Cesare Patrone

TL;DR
Dietary nitrate helps overweight mice recover better from stroke by improving metabolism and reducing brain inflammation, even if it doesn't stop obesity.
Contribution
Dietary nitrate improves stroke recovery in overweight mice by reducing neuroinflammation despite not preventing obesity.
Findings
Dietary nitrate reduced weight gain and prevented hyperglycemia in overweight mice.
Nitrate improved functional recovery after stroke without affecting infarct size.
Nitrate decreased post-stroke neuroinflammation by reducing microglial infiltration.
Abstract
Background/objectives: Being overweight increases the predisposition to obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D), which significantly elevate stroke risk and the likelihood of severe post-stroke disability. Dietary nitrate (NO3−) supplementation can mitigate obesity and metabolic impairments, making it a promising approach to halt overweight people from developing overt obesity/T2D, thereby potentially also improving stroke outcome. We determined whether NO3− supplementation prevents overweight mice from progressing into obesity and T2D and whether this intervention improves stroke outcome. Methods: An overweight condition was induced via 6 weeks of a high-fat diet (HFD), after which animals were randomized to either a HFD or a HFD with NO3− supplementation. After 24 weeks, when HFD-mice without NO3− developed obesity and T2D, all animals were subjected to transient middle cerebral artery…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms · Neurological Disease Mechanisms and Treatments · Nitric Oxide and Endothelin Effects
