Insulin Resistance Clinical Trial
Official title:
Regulation of Intestinal (and Hepatic) Lipoprotein Secretion by Resveratrol
Resveratrol, an ingredient of red wine and available in Canada in highly purified form as an over-the-counter health supplement, has been shown to have a number of health benefits. Data from in vitro and animal studies suggest that it has beneficial effects on insulin sensitivity and lipid lowering. The investigators are not aware, however, of any mechanistic studies that have examined the effect of highly purified resveratrol in vivo on lipoprotein metabolism in humans. Given the potential therapeutic benefit of resveratrol in correcting the metabolic abnormalities of insulin resistant individuals the investigators plan to examine the effects of resveratrol on intestinal and hepatic lipoprotein production in humans.
Subjects will receive resveratrol (Transmax 1 x 500mg tablets bid for one week followed by 2
x 500mg bid for the second week (Biotivia Longevity Biologicals, New York, NY, USA) or
placebo and advised to start taking the tablets 14 days prior to the first lipoprotein
kinetics study.
For the lipoprotein kinetics study subjects will receive an infusion of stable isotope
enriched leucine and a bolus of stable isotope enriched glycerol in order to measure the
rates of fatty acid synthesis, apolipoprotein and triglyceride turnover respectively. This
in vivo stable isotope enrichment methodology has been widely established and used by
investigators around the world for more than 30 years to examine the metabolism of various
metabolites in humans.
On the first day of the 2 day admission to hospital for the lipoprotein kinetics study,
following an overnight fast, at approximately noon on day 1 of the study the subject will be
admitted to hospital and will have a 30ml fasting blood sample drawn for analysis of plasma
glucose, total plasma cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides (TG),
free fatty acids (FFA), insulin, cytokines, stable isotope enrichment and a more detailed
analysis of triglyceride rich lipoprotein (TRL) composition (lipid and apolipoprotein
content). The subject will be allowed to eat regular meals during the day but will fast
overnight after 7pm.
At 4am the subject will begin to ingest the first of 17 identical small hourly aliquots of a
liquid formula called Great Shake Plus (Hormel), each hourly dose equivalent to 1/17th of
their estimated daily caloric requirement calculated by the Harris-Benedict formula. Apart
from the shake the subject will not eat until the end of the study at 7pm that night. This
will provide a steady state fed state for the subsequent assessment of lipoprotein turnover
kinetics. At 7am 2 iv's will be inserted into a superficial vein in each forearm, one for
infusion and one for sampling.
At 7 am (the investigators will refer to this time point as 0hr of the lipoprotein turnover
study), the lipoprotein turnover study will begin. An iv bolus of deuterated-glycerol
(d5-glycerol, 75 micromol/kg) will be administered, followed by a primed-constant infusion
of deuterated leucine (L-[5,5,5-2H3]-leucine; d3-leucine, 98%, Cambridge Isotope
Laboratories, Andover, MA, USA)(10 micromol/kg bolus followed by 10 micromol/kg/hr for 10
hours). Blood samples will be collected prior to and at regular time intervals for 10 hours
after the iv bolus of d3-glycerol (for 13C-triglyceride palmitate enrichment to assess de
novo lipogenesis) and start of the constant infusion of d3-leucine (for assessment of
lipoprotein kinetics). Insulin sensitivity will be assessed by calculation of HOMA-IR.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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