1. Cognitive dysfunction in early experimental metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease is associated with systemic inflammation and neuroinflammation
- Author
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Kristoffer Kjærgaard, Anne Catrine Daugaard Mikkelsen, Anne M. Landau, Peter Lykke Eriksen, Stephen Hamilton-Dutoit, Nils Erik Magnusson, Majken Borup Thomsen, Fenghua Chen, Hendrik Vilstrup, Rajeshwar Prosad Mookerjee, Cecilie Bay-Richter, and Karen Louise Thomsen
- Subjects
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease ,non-alcoholic steatohepatitis ,liver-brain axis ,hepatic encephalopathy ,neuroscience ,cognitive dysfunction ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
Background & Aims: Cognitive dysfunction is an increasingly recognised manifestation of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), but the mechanistic link remains unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate the hypothesis that experimental MASLD leads to cognitive dysfunction via systemic inflammation and neuroinflammation. Methods: Twenty male Sprague Dawley rats were randomised to a high-fat high-cholesterol (HFHC) diet to induce MASLD, or a standard diet (n = 10/group), for 16 weeks. Assessments included: MASLD severity (histology), neurobehaviour, inflammation (liver, plasma and cerebrospinal fluid), brain microglia and astrocyte activation, and synaptic density. Results: The HFHC diet induced MASLD with extensive steatosis and lobular inflammation without fibrosis. Several plasma cytokines were elevated (CXCL1, IL-6, IL-17, MIP-1α, MCP-1, IL-10; all p
- Published
- 2024
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