What the Health?

Wellness news and notes

Archive for February 14th, 2013

The skinny on fat storage from Yale

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As many of us crack into our Valentine’s Day chocolates, Yale University is releasing a new study on how fat is stored in the body. According to the research, published online Feb. 14 in the journal Developmental Cell, fat is stored in the body in two distinct ways. And while this finding may not help people shed excess pounds, it may shed light on how to prevent health problems associated with weight gain.

“We need a better understanding of how cells actually package fat,” said Tobias Walther, associate professor of cell biology at Yale and senior author of the study, in a press release put out by Yale on Thursday. “The cell’s inability to process all the excess energy — not the fat itself — is what causes most health problems.”

According to the study, unused metabolic energy triggers the production of triacylglycerol and the creation of fat in the form of lipid droplets. Mammals have developed specialized fat cells called adipose tissue to store this energy. It is the rapid expansion of these lipid droplets while storing excess calories that cause the bulging waists and thighs that plague dieters. Health problems occur when cells become overwhelmed with lipids and lose their ability to store energy. The result is inflammation, insulin resistance, fatty liver, and other health problems associated with obesity.

The Yale researchers, working with Robert Farese at the University of California-San Francisco, found that not all lipid droplets are the same. One type of lipid droplet was small and does not expand. A second type of lipid droplet, however, has triacylglycerol enzymes on its surface that allows it to expand.

Walther said that exploring ways to prevent failure of cells’ ability to accommodate excess energy may be a more an effective way to tackle the health problems associated with obesity than simply trying to get rid of fat itself.

Florian Wilfling of Yale is first author of the paper.

Flu decreases to “moderate” levels in Connecticut

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Good news, Connecticut — you might be able to canoodle with your sweetie this Valentine’s Day without fear of catching the flu.

The state Department of Public Health says that flu activity in Connecticut has decreased to “moderate levels,” based on flu surveillance data for the week ending Feb. 9. That week, 7.3 percent of total emergency room visits were attributed to fever. That’s down more than a percentage point from the previous week, when 8.4 percent of ER visits were attributed to the illness.

The percentage of outpatient visits by those with influenza-like illness was 2.1 percent in this most recent week — down a smidgen from 3.3 percent the week before.

Even though flu is on the decline, this has been a particularly rough season, with more than 4,399 confirmed cases of flu — more than quadruple last season. Also, 1,725 people have hospitalized with flu and there have been a total of 27 flu-associated deaths. Most of those deaths were in individual grater than 65 years of age.

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