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. 1996 May;45(5):645-51.
doi: 10.1016/s0026-0495(96)90037-2.

Mechanisms of cachexia induced by T-cell leukemia in the rat

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Mechanisms of cachexia induced by T-cell leukemia in the rat

S Roe et al. Metabolism. 1996 May.

Abstract

Body wasting (cachexia) is a common feature of cancer and a major cause of morbidity and mortality. The mechanisms underlying cachexia are largely unknown, and studies in experimental animals have focused mainly on solid tumors. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to quantify and investigate cachexia in experimentally induced T-cell leukemia in the rat. Induction of leukemia by serial passage (injection of cervical lymph node suspension) resulted in a rapid increase in white blood cell (WBC count, hypertrophy of the spleen (by day 11), and severe morbidity within 17 to 18 days. Body weight gain and food intake declined steadily in leukemic animals from day 12, although weight loss was significantly greater in pair-fed, nonleukemic animals. However, leukemic rats had a lower body fat content and higher water content than pair-fed animals on day 18, so the measurement of body weight significantly underestimated the severity of cachexia. Resting oxygen consumption (VO2), measured during the light phase, declined in pair-fed animals from day 13, but was elevated in leukemic rats on days 12 to 18 by 25% (P < .05, one-way ANOVA) compared with pair-fed rats and by 7% (P < .05, one-way ANOVA) relative to free-feeding controls. Hypermetabolism was associated with an increase in brown adipose tissue (BAT) activity (74% and 89%, respectively, P < .05, one-way ANOVA) in leukemic rats compared with control and pair-fed groups. Effects of leukemia on VO2 and BAT were prevented by administration of the adrenergic antagonist, propranolol. These results indicate that T-cell leukemia in the rat results in rapid and severe cachexia, which is largely due to marked hypophagia, but is also accompanied by inappropriately high rates of energy expenditure that are mediated by sympathetic activation of BAT thermogenesis.

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