Go to:
Logótipo
Comuta visibilidade da coluna esquerda
Você está em: Start > Publications > View > Moderate physical exercise attenuates the alterations of feeding behaviour induced by social stress in female rats
Publication

Publications

Moderate physical exercise attenuates the alterations of feeding behaviour induced by social stress in female rats

Title
Moderate physical exercise attenuates the alterations of feeding behaviour induced by social stress in female rats
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2014
Authors
S. A. Benite-Ribeiro
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
J. M. Santos
(Author)
Other
The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. The person does not belong to the institution. Without AUTHENTICUS Without ORCID
Journal
Vol. 32
Pages: 142-149
ISSN: 0263-6484
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Scientific classification
FOS: Social sciences
Other information
Authenticus ID: P-008-QD2
Abstract (EN): Epidemiological studies have demonstrated that stress-related disorders, such as the increase on the caloric intake, are twice as common in women as in men, but surprisingly, very few studies have been tested this subject on female experimental animals. Additionally, it has been proposed that regular physical exercise can improve the deleterious effects of stress. Therefore, the present longitudinal study, performed in female rats, aimed to test the influence of chronic stress (ST) imposed by social isolation on the animals' caloric intake and to assess the effect of regular physical exercise of low intensity on this behaviour. In 4 groups of Wistars rats (control sedentary, n=6; control exercised, n=6; ST sedentary, n=6; ST exercised, n=6), body weight, food intake, abdominal fat weight, adrenal weight, corticosterone metabolites in faeces and plasma insulin levels were measured during the experimental protocol and/or at its end. The results showed that social isolation was not able to modify the amount of abdominal fat and the body weight; however, it promoted significant increases in the corticosterone metabolites and in the amount of caloric intake, which were attenuated in exercised rats. Additionally, exercised groups presented lower levels of fasting insulin than sedentary groups. Therefore, the present study demonstrated that regular physical exercise of low intensity attenuates the corticosterone metabolites and overeating behaviour triggered by social stress. © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Language: English
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
Documents
We could not find any documents associated to the publication.
Related Publications

Of the same journal

The pro-proliferative effect of insulin in human breast epithelial DMBA-transformed and non-transformed cell lines is PI3K-, mTOR- and GLUT1-dependent (2022)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Silva, C; Andrade, N; guimaraes, jt; Cardoso, E; Meireles, C; Pinto, V; Paiva, J-A; Martel, F
The interrelation between aPKC and glucose uptake in the skeletal muscle during contraction and insulin stimulation (2014)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Santos, JM; Benite Ribeiro, SA; Queiroz, G; duarte, ja
The effect of age on glucose uptake and GLUT1 and GLUT4 expression in rat skeletal muscle (2012)
Article in International Scientific Journal
dos Santos, JM; Benite Ribeiro, SA; Queiroz, G; Duarte, JA
Spatially distinct mitochondrial populations exhibit different mitofilin levels (2012)
Article in International Scientific Journal
ferreira, rmp; vitorino, r; padrao, ai; moreira-goncalves, d; alves, rmp; duarte, ja; amado, f
Age-related increases in human lymphocyte DNA damage: is there a role of aerobic fitness? (2013)
Article in International Scientific Journal
soares, jp; mota, mp; duarte, ja; collins, a; gaivao, i
Recommend this page Top
Copyright 1996-2025 © Faculdade de Direito da Universidade do Porto  I Terms and Conditions  I Acessibility  I Index A-Z
Page created on: 2025-07-15 at 14:53:47 | Privacy Policy | Personal Data Protection Policy | Whistleblowing