Abstract

Inflammation can arise in response to a variety of stimuli, including infectious agents, tissue injury, autoimmune diseases, and obesity. Some of these responses are acute and resolve, while others become chronic and exert a sustained impact on the host, systemically, or locally. Obesity is now recognized as a chronic low-grade, systemic inflammatory state that predisposes to other chronic conditions including metabolic syndrome (MetS). Although obesity has received considerable attention regarding its pathophysiological link to chronic cardiovascular conditions and type 2 diabetes, the musculoskeletal (MSK) complications (i.e., muscle, bone, tendon, and joints) that result from obesity-associated metabolic disturbances are less frequently interrogated. As musculoskeletal diseases can lead to the worsening of MetS, this underscores the imminent need to understand the cause and effect relations between the two, and the convergence between inflammatory pathways that contribute to MSK damage. Muscle mass is a key predictor of longevity in older adults, and obesity-induced sarcopenia is a significant risk factor for adverse health outcomes. Muscle is highly plastic, undergoes regular remodeling, and is responsible for the majority of total body glucose utilization, which when impaired leads to insulin resistance. Furthermore, impaired muscle integrity, defined as persistent muscle loss, intramuscular lipid accumulation, or connective tissue deposition, is a hallmark of metabolic dysfunction. In fact, many common inflammatory pathways have been implicated in the pathogenesis of the interrelated tissues of the musculoskeletal system (e.g., tendinopathy, osteoporosis, and osteoarthritis). Despite these similarities, these diseases are rarely evaluated in a comprehensive manner. The aim of this review is to summarize the common pathways that lead to musculoskeletal damage and disease that result from and contribute to MetS. We propose the overarching hypothesis that there is a central role for muscle damage with chronic exposure to an obesity-inducing diet. The inflammatory consequence of diet and muscle dysregulation can result in dysregulated tissue repair and an imbalance toward negative adaptation, resulting in regulatory failure and other musculoskeletal tissue damage. The commonalities support the conclusion that musculoskeletal pathology with MetS should be evaluated in a comprehensive and integrated manner to understand risk for other MSK-related conditions. Implications for conservative management strategies to regulate MetS are discussed, as are future research opportunities.

Highlights

  • TO METABOLIC SYNDROME AND OBESITYMetabolic syndrome (MetS) is a cluster of conditions— visceral obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and elevated fasting glucose—that increase an individual’s risk for diabetes and cardiovascular complications (Alberti and Zimmet, 1998; Manuel et al, 2014)

  • Metabolic dysregulation initiates an inflammatory cascade, whereby an Studies presented in this review implicate several pathways that may be critical for the onset and progression of systemic inflammation due to metabolic disturbance and musculoskeletal damage

  • Investigations targeting specific pathways in the context of metabolic disturbance and MSK disease will provide much needed mechanistic insights to better understand the consequences of diet-induced obesity

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a cluster of conditions— visceral obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and elevated fasting glucose—that increase an individual’s risk for diabetes and cardiovascular complications (Alberti and Zimmet, 1998; Manuel et al, 2014). Today, westernized societies have an abundance of food (food security) and many individuals have little need to perform physical activity This combination has led to excessive nutrient storage, placing significant stress on our metabolic pathways, and leading to an increase in the prevalence of disease stemming from metabolic dysfunction (Miranda et al, 2005). MSK disease is of particular concern, for example, as osteoarthritis-related walking disability significantly increases risk for all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events, when controlling for other cofounders (Hawker et al, 2014). This suggests that MSK disability associated with MetS can contribute to the worsening of MetS through sedentary behavior. Impaired muscle integrity, persistent atrophy, and lipid accumulation in muscle are risk factors for tendinopathy (Meyer and Ward, 2016), osteoporosis (Ormsbee et al, 2014), osteoarthritis (Lee et al, 2012), and integrity of a motion segment, such as the leg (Figure 2)

A ROLE FOR METABOLIC DISTURBANCE IN MOTION SEGMENT TISSUE DAMAGE
AIM AND SCOPE OF REVIEW
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