Age-related obesity and inflammaging in cats
Miki Kobayashi, Motoo Kobayashi

TL;DR
Aging in cats is linked to obesity and chronic inflammation, which can lead to diseases like diabetes and fatty liver, but healthy habits can help prevent these issues.
Contribution
This paper explores the connection between age-related obesity, inflammaging, and SASP in cats, emphasizing preventive strategies.
Findings
Severely obese cats show increased pro-inflammatory markers and decreased adiponectin.
Aged obese cats exhibit fatty liver and macrophage infiltration in enlarged adipocytes.
Healthy lifestyle interventions can delay age-related diseases in cats.
Abstract
Aging is characterized by chronic systemic inflammation accompanied by cellular senescence, immunosenescence, organ dysfunction, and age-related diseases. A chronic low-grade pro-inflammatory state known as “inflammaging” accelerates age-related diseases such as obesity, diabetes, vascular diseases, and certain types of cancer. Senescent cells drive age-related tissue dysfunction partially by inducing a chronic senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) associated with various diseases. Obesity and insulin resistance change with advancing age and are linked to low-grade chronic inflammation, leading to age-related diseases. Obesity results in significant changes in the adipokine profile, such as reduced levels of anti-inflammatory adipokines, e.g., adiponectin. Cats are more prone to obesity than dogs owing to the unique characteristics of their glucose and lipid metabolism.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Medicine and Surgery · Adipose Tissue and Metabolism · Diabetes and associated disorders
