Understanding the Relationship Between Inflammation and Insulin Resistance in the Adipose Tissue
Obesity, Insulin Resistance
About this trial
This is an interventional other trial for Obesity focused on measuring Obesity, Insulin Resistance
Eligibility Criteria
Lean, healthy person with a body mass index (BMI) of 25 or less, or you are obese, BMI between 30 and 50, and non-diabetic.
Lean healthy controls will not be on any medication and will be undergoing elective abdominal surgery excluding those involving acute inflammation (i.e. acute cholecystitis, bowel perforation, or diverticulitis).
Obese, non-diabetic subjects will have a BMI between 30 and 50 and be taking no medications affecting glucose metabolism or lipid metabolism. These subjects will be identified from a pool of patients undergoing an elective abdominal surgical procedure such as inguinal hernia repair, laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication, planned cholecystectomy, but also bariatric surgery.
Volunteers will not be taking corticosteroid therapy or have a history of asthma, COPD or atopic syndrome. All subjects will undergo a medical history intake and a physical examination followed by an OGTT to confirm normal glucose.
Sites / Locations
- Mayo Clinic in Arizona
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Lean or Obese, Non-Diabetic
Fish oil supplementation
To determine whether eosinophil content of adipose tissue is related to insulin sensitivity. We will use euglycemic clamps, fat biopsy (obtained during a scheduled abdominal surgery) and fat aspiration for analysis of subcutaneous (Sc) and omental (OM) adipose tissue from obese, insulin resistant and lean, insulin sensitive volunteers to test the hypothesis that, as in mice, eosinophil content in human subcutaneous and omental white adipose tissue, inversely correlates with body weight, with skeletal muscle and hepatic insulin sensitivity.
Determine whether, in adipose tissue, levels of, anti-inflammatory molecules correlate with insulin sensitivity and whether these levels are altered by a treatment designed to promote resolution of inflammation. Volunteers will take a fish oil supplement for three months.