Aerobic Exercise Attenuates Epidermal Hyperplasia in an Obesity-Associated Psoriasiform Dermatitis Model
Yoshihiro Matsuda, Shin Morizane, Daiki Takezaki, Yuma Sakamoto, Nobuyasu Baba, Masanori Iseki, Yoshio Kawakami, Tatsushi Shiomi, Tomoyuki Mukai

TL;DR
Aerobic exercise reduces skin thickening in an obesity-related skin disease model, even without reducing inflammation.
Contribution
This study reveals that aerobic exercise can reduce epidermal hyperplasia in obesity-associated psoriasis without affecting inflammatory cytokines.
Findings
Obesity worsens psoriasiform dermatitis in mice.
Aerobic exercise reduces epidermal hyperplasia in obese mice.
Exercise does not significantly alter inflammatory cytokine levels in the skin.
Abstract
Obesity is an important risk factor for psoriasis, and clinical studies indicate that exercise interventions can improve disease severity. However, the mechanisms by which exercise influences psoriatic pathogenesis remain insufficiently understood. To investigate the effects of aerobic exercise on obesity-associated psoriasis, wild-type mice were fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 7 weeks to induce obesity and subsequently underwent moderate-intensity treadmill running for 3 weeks. Psoriasiform dermatitis was induced by daily topical application of imiquimod (IMQ) to the skin for five consecutive days. HFD increased body weight, epididymal fat mass, and serum cholesterol. HFD-fed mice developed more severe IMQ-induced psoriatic skin changes compared with normal diet-fed mice. Treadmill exercise modestly reduced body weight gain and attenuated epidermal hyperplasia in HFD-fed mice. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis · Spondyloarthritis Studies and Treatments · Dermatology and Skin Diseases
