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Published in: Head & Face Medicine 1/2007

Open Access 01-12-2007 | Hypothesis

Mechanical homeostasis regulating adipose tissue volume

Author: Paul Svedman

Published in: Head & Face Medicine | Issue 1/2007

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Abstract

Background

The total body adipose tissue volume is regulated by hormonal, nutritional, paracrine, neuronal and genetic control signals, as well as components of cell-cell or cell-matrix interactions. There are no known locally acting homeostatic mechanisms by which growing adipose tissue might adapt its volume.

Presentation of the hypothesis

Mechanosensitivity has been demonstrated by mesenchymal cells in tissue culture. Adipocyte differentiation has been shown to be inhibited by stretching in vitro, and a pathway for the response has been elucidated. In humans, intermittent stretching of skin for reconstructional purposes leads to thinning of adipose tissue and thickening of epidermis – findings matching those observed in vitro in response to mechanical stimuli. Furthermore, protracted suspension of one leg increases the intermuscular adipose tissue volume of the limb. These findings may indicate a local homeostatic adipose tissue volume-regulating mechanism based on movement-induced reduction of adipocyte differentiation. This function might, during evolution, have been of importance in confined spaces, where overgrowth of adipose tissue could lead to functional disturbance, as for instance in the turtle. In humans, adipose tissue near muscle might in particular be affected, for instance intermuscularly, extraperitoneally and epicardially. Mechanical homeostasis might also contribute to protracted maintainment of soft tissue shape in the face and neck region.

Testing of the hypothesis

Assessment of messenger RNA-expression of human adipocytes following activity in adjacent muscle is planned, and study of biochemical and volumetric adipose tissue changes in man are proposed.

Implications of the hypothesis

The interpretation of metabolic disturbances by means of adipose tissue might be influenced. Possible applications in the head and neck were discussed.
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Metadata
Title
Mechanical homeostasis regulating adipose tissue volume
Author
Paul Svedman
Publication date
01-12-2007
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Head & Face Medicine / Issue 1/2007
Electronic ISSN: 1746-160X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1746-160X-3-34

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