Prediabetes Associates With Musculoskeletal Alterations Independent of Total Body Adiposity
Alan Fappi, Clifton J. Holmes, Chao Cao, Vasavi Shabrish, Aman P. Aher, Karen Shen, Paul K. Commean, Dwight A. Towler, Dominic N. Reeds, Gretchen A. Meyer, Bettina Mittendorfer

TL;DR
Prediabetes is linked to changes in muscles and bones, even when body fat levels are the same.
Contribution
Shows metabolic issues in prediabetes affect musculoskeletal health beyond body fat.
Findings
Prediabetic individuals had lower muscle mass and bone density compared to controls.
Muscle fibers were smaller and macrophages fewer in prediabetic participants.
Intramyocellular lipid content was significantly higher in the prediabetic group.
Abstract
Excess adiposity is a major risk factor for insulin resistance, prediabetes, and Type 2 diabetes and increases the risk for sarcopenia and osteosarcopenia later in life. It has been proposed that altered metabolic function and musculoskeletal status in people with obesity are directly linked, presumably because they share common pathophysiological mechanisms. However, the effect of metabolic dysfunction, independent of adiposity, on musculoskeletal status is unknown. We performed a comprehensive assessment of musculoskeletal status in people with overweight/obesity and prediabetes (n = 12; 72% women; age: 67 ± 6 years; weight: 81 ± 11 kg; mean ± SD) and a control group of sex‐, age‐ and adiposity‐matched participants with normoglycaemia (n = 18; 67% women; age: 65 ± 6 years; weight: 81 ± 12 kg). Appendicular muscle mass expressed relative to the sarcopenia threshold (−5.6% ± 2.5% vs.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · Bone health and osteoporosis research · Body Composition Measurement Techniques
