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Brown adipose tissue thermogenesis in polycystic ovary syndrome

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 21:17 authored by Soulmaz Shorakae, Eveline Jona, Barbora de CourtenBarbora de Courten, Gavin Lambert, Elisabeth Lambert, Sarah Phillips, Iain Clarke, Helena Teede, Belinda Henry
Objective: Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is associated with increased obesity with a greater propensity to weight gain and a lack of sustainable lifestyle interventions. Altered brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis is a potential contributor to obesity in PCOS. BAT activity and modulation have not been studied in PCOS. This observational study explored BAT thermogenesis and its associations in women with and without PCOS. Participants and methods: Cutaneous temperature was recorded from supraclavicular (indicator of BAT activity) and upper arm regions using dataloggers (SubCue, Calgary, Canada) in a cross-sectional substudy, nested within a randomized control trial, of community-recruited premenopausal women with (n = 47, Rotterdam diagnostic criteria) and without (n = 11) PCOS. Results: Complete temperature data were available in 44 PCOS (mean age: 30.0 ± 6.2, mean BMI: 29.3 ± 5.5) and 11 non-PCOS (mean age: 33.0 ± 7.0, mean BMI: 25 ± 3) women. Women with PCOS had lower supraclavicular skin temperature compared to controls overall (33.9 ± 0.7 vs 34.5 ± 1, P < 0.05) and during sleep (34.5 ± 0.6 vs 35.2 ± 0.9, P < 0.001). In the PCOS group, supraclavicular skin temperature overall and over sleep and waking hours correlated inversely with testosterone (r = −0.41 P < 0.05, r = −0.485 P < 0.01 and r = −0.450 P < 0.01 respectively). Testosterone levels explained approximately 15%, 30% and 20% of the variability in supraclavicular skin temperature overall and over sleep and waking hours in women with PCOS, respectively. Conclusion: Women with PCOS have lower BAT activity compared to controls. BAT thermogenesis is negatively associated with androgen levels in PCOS.

Funding

Polycystic ovary syndrome - targeting the sympathetic nervous system to improve outcomes

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

Journal

Clinical Endocrinology

Volume

90

Issue

3

Start page

425

End page

432

Total pages

8

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Former Identifier

2006117694

Esploro creation date

2022-10-09

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