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Adipose Tissue Hypertrophy, An Aberrant Biochemical Profile and Distinct Gene Expression in Lipedema

Authors :
Rene Hägerling
Anna Wang
Maija Hollmén
Aikaterini Stylianaki
Nicole Lindenblatt
Epameinondas Gousopoulos
Gunther Felmerer
Philipp Ströbel
Source :
Journal of Surgical Research. 253:294-303
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background Lipedema is a common adipose tissue disorder affecting women, characterized by a symmetric subcutaneous adipose tissue deposition, particularly of the lower extremities. Lipedema is usually underdiagnosed, thus remaining an undertreated disease. Importantly, no histopathologic or molecular hallmarks exist to clearly diagnose the disease, which is often misinterpreted as obesity or lymphedema. Materials and methods The aim of the present study is to characterize in detail morphologic and molecular alterations in the adipose tissue composition of lipedema patients compared with healthy controls. Detailed histopathologic and molecular characterization was performed using lipid and cytokine quantification as well as gene expression arrays. The analysis was conducted on anatomically matched skin and fat tissue biopsies as well as fasting serum probes obtained from 10 lipedema and 11 gender and body mass index–matched control patients. Results Histologic evaluation of the adipose tissue showed increased intercellular fibrosis and adipocyte hypertrophy. Serum analysis showed an aberrant lipid metabolism without changes in the circulating adipokines. In an adipogenesis gene array, a distinct gene expression profile associated with macrophages was observed. Histologic assessment of the immune cell infiltrate confirmed the increased presence of macrophages, without changes in the T-cell compartment. Conclusions Lipedema presents a distinguishable disease with typical tissue architecture and aberrant lipid metabolism, different to obesity or lymphedema. The differentially expressed genes and immune cell infiltration profile in lipedema patients further support these findings.

Details

ISSN :
00224804
Volume :
253
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Surgical Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d98db5fe7d5acd180bfb17581050a6b4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2020.03.055