Recent clinical studies have shown that acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are characterised by disturbances in the balance between dietary intake and energy expenditure 1, 2 as well as by a negative nitrogen balance 3. Since weight loss prior to and during hospitalisation for an acute exacerbation has been related to poor outcome in terms of mortality and readmission rate 4, 5, it is important to prevent or treat this complication. It is yet unclear to what extent factors contributing to weight loss, during acute disease exacerbations, are similar to stable disease. Elevated energy requirement of physical activity has been implicated during stable disease 6 but is unlikely to be an important factor during acute disease, when the activity level is probably very low. Hypoxia is otherwise implicated as a potential trigger of reduced dietary intake and metabolic alterations during acute exacerbations, while in stable disease, there is no strong relationship between resting arterial oxygen tension and nutritional status.
Hypobaric hypoxia, as applied in high-altitude studies, clearly induces weight loss and is an interesting human model to investigate the influence of acute hypoxia. There is evidence that the altitude limit for the maintenance of body weight in humans is ∼5,000 m7. Acute transfer from sea level to altitude usually results in weight loss, but the rate of weight loss diminishes when the food supply is adequate. Reduced dietary intake is initially the result of a reduced meal size because of a rapid increase in satiety during the meal 8. Part of the effect of reduced meal size on daily dietary intake can be compensated for by an increase in meal frequency. At altitudes of ≥7,000 m, acute mountain symptoms result in suppression of hunger and the desire to eat 8, possibly related to a reduction in appetite through leptin, a key mediator in the neuroendocrine regulation of food intake 9. The effect of hypobaric hypoxia on resting metabolic rate is unclear. High-altitude studies are limited by the fact that subjects are often highly trained and have a physical activity related energy expenditure that is comparable to that of endurance athletes. A more specific study on nitrogen balance during a prolonged stay at 5,000 m showed no impairment of protein digestibility 10. However, glycine metabolism, as measured with glycine (15N), changed as a function of altitude exposure. Urinary excretion of 15N from intravenous glycine administration, as a fraction of urinary nitrogen, increased from 20.6% after 4 days to 38.0% after 13 days at altitude (p<0.05). It was hypothesised that the increased 15N excretion was due to increased oxidation of glycine as a function of altitude exposure. Others have also observed an altitude-induced increase in capillary leakage resulting in a renal loss of amino acids 11.
Experimental models subjecting animals to a hypoxic environment, i.e. that of Iioka et al. 12 in the current issue of this journal, are comparable to an altitude of 5,000 m with regards to the hypoxia created. To avoid effects of hypoxia-induced hypophagia, the rats studied were given total parenteral nutrition (TPN). Nevertheless, exposure to hypoxia caused a negative nitrogen balance, which was mainly due to increased urinary nitrogen excretion. A reduction in oxygen availability, especially in the acute situation, probably results in a reduction of physical activity. Reduction of physical activity diminishes the need for proteins and/or results in short-term muscle atrophy. The observed reduction in the net-nitrogen retention in the rats during acute hypoxia, as reflected by the increased levels of urinary nitrogen loss, could be an effect of “detraining”. In a previous issue of this journal, Pison et al. 13 described the effect of hypoxia on intermediary metabolism. They used a comparable rat model that was standardised for marked hypophagia, by investigating the effects of acute starvation. They reported that, in contrast to hypercatabolic states, hypoxia did not affect amino-acid adaptation to starvation. However, they also observed insulin resistance and reduced lipolysis. These metabolic adaptations point towards the potential adverse effects of metabolic overload by hyperalimentation under such hypoxic circumstances.
The study of Iioka et al. 12 shows that rh insulin-like growth factor (rhIGF‐1) can prevent the acute net catabolic effect of hypoxia, as reflected in a negative nitrogen balance, but that compared to normoxic conditions, weight gain is less pronounced. A combined therapeutic approach of both nutritional support and IGF was needed to induce a net anabolic effect. The authors suggest that further studies are warranted to determine whether an intervention consisting of TPN and rhIGF‐1 can be applied to the setting of acute exacerbation with hypoxaemia for chronic respiratory disease. Although this is a tempting option, it is very difficult to translate “straight forward” experimental models to complex and heterogeneous conditions like acute exacerbations. Conversely, the charm of the model in terms of timing and type of nutritional support limits extrapolation. Clinical management of acute hypoxic exacerbations will primarily be directed to reverse hypoxia. Vermeeren et al. 1 reported that after normalisation of arterial blood gases, dietary intake generally improves spontaneously. It is as yet unclear whether a positive energy balance can be reached in patients that remain hypoxic by oral nutritional support per se. TPN is not a common modality in respiratory disease. The gastrointestinal tract is generally intact and enteral nutrition outweighs both costs and risks of TPN. However, besides the observed effects under hypoxic condition, there are other arguments for considering rhIGF‐1 treatment during acute exacerbations. Medical treatment of acute exacerbations commonly includes high-dose systemic glucocorticoids. Saudny-Unterberger et al. 3 showed that the severity of a negative nitrogen balance during acute exacerbations of COPD is associated with systemic glucocorticoids in a dose-dependent fashion. Acute treatment with high-dose glucorticosteroids decreases IGF‐1 and IGF‐2 expression in the rat diaphragm and gastrocnemius 14. In vitro and experimental studies have shown that IGF treatment can reverse detrimental effects of corticosteroid-induced muscle wasting 15, 16.
Further clinical studies are warranted to investigate whether insulin-like growth factor‐1 may also be of value for offsetting adverse effects of glucocorticoids in the short-term, as observed during acute exacerbations.
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