Arab Times

‘Skin patch melts ‘love-handles’ in mice’

Obese minority children less likely to have weight-loss surgery

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WASHINGTON, Sept 16, (Agencies): US researcher­s have developed a skin patch that can melt fat in mice, and future tests will reveal whether it could treat obesity and diabetes in people, a study said Friday.

The patch uses nanotechno­logy to raise the body’s metabolism and transform energystor­ing white fat into energy-burning brown fat, according to the report in ACS Nano, a publicatio­n of the American Chemical Society.

After four weeks, mice saw a 20 percent reduction in body fat where the patch was applied.

“Many people will no doubt be excited to learn that we may be able to offer a noninvasiv­e alternativ­e to liposuctio­n for reducing love handles”, said study co-author Li Qiang, assistant professor of pathology and cell biology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York.

“What’s much more important is that our patch may provide a safe and effective means of treating obesity and related metabolic disorders such as diabetes”.

Researcher­s have been searching for a way to transform white fat into brown fat, which is more common in newborns and protects the body from cold temperatur­es.

Drugs are available to promote this process, called browning, but they must be given as pills or injections, which exposes the body to side effects such as stomach upset, weight gain and bone fractures, Qiang said.

But the patch appeared to deliver the drugs directly to the fat tissue, avoiding these complicati­ons in rodents.

The drugs were encased in nanopartic­les, each about 250 nanometers in diameter, 400 times tinier than a human hair.

These nanopartic­les were loaded into a finger-tip sized skin patch containing dozens of microscopi­c needles that pierced the skin.

This released drugs gradually into the nearby tissue “in a sustained way instead of spreading the drug throughout the body quickly”, said patch designer and study coauthor Zhen Gu, PhD, associate professor of joint biomedical engineerin­g at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and North Carolina State University.

The drugs used were rosiglitaz­one (Avandia) and a beta-adrenergic receptor agonist (CL 316243) that works well in mice but not in humans, said the report.

Patches were applied to the mice’s abdomens, and were replaced every three days for a total of four weeks.

Mice that were treated with either of the two drugs showed 20 percent less fat in the affected area than mice given two empty patches.

Treated mice “also had significan­tly lower fasting blood glucose levels than untreated mice”, and about 20 percent higher oxygen consumptio­n, a sign of increased metabolism.

More work is needed before the approach can be tested in humans.

Researcher­s say they are studying which drugs — or combinatio­n of drugs — might work best to boost fat browning and metabolism.

Obese white teens in the US are much more likely obese black or Hispanic teens to be treated with weight loss surgery, according to a recent study.

That’s despite the fact that minority kids are disproport­ionately affected by rising childhood obesity rates in the US.

Bariatric surgery, which includes several approaches to shrinking the stomach so patients eat less, has been shown to help with weight loss and reversing health conditions that come with obesity, such as diabetes and high blood pressure. Current guidelines recommend the procedure for adolescent­s with serious or severe obesity who haven’t been able to lose weight with other treatments.

While 4.5 million children and adolescent­s in the US are obese, few teens undergo bariatric surgery, the study team reports in Journal of Adolescent Health. And white teens are more than twice as likely as their minority counterpar­ts to have the procedure.

“We’ve known for a long time that health disparitie­s exist in adults, but people don’t think about it with children and teens”, said senior author Dr Kanika Bowen-Jallow,a pediatric surgeon at University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

“You wouldn’t suspect it because we have coverage for children through their parent’s insurance or Medicaid, so 90 percent of kids should be covered”, she told Reuters Health in a phone interview. “But in reality, there is a difference”.

Pediatric obesity rates are on the rise, with 33 percent of children considered overweight and 9 percent considered severely obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 ??  ?? Lebanese men and women take part in the fourth edition of the ‘Khod Nafas’ (take a breath) Yoga Festival in the capital Beirut on Sept
16. (AFP)
Lebanese men and women take part in the fourth edition of the ‘Khod Nafas’ (take a breath) Yoga Festival in the capital Beirut on Sept 16. (AFP)

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