Metabolic effects of alcohol on skeletal muscle

Abstract
The purpose of this review is to summarize our current understanding of the acute and chronic interactions between alcohol and nutrient metabolism in skeletal muscle. Insulin is well known to play an important regulatory role in nutrient, especially glucose, uptake and utilization in skeletal muscle. Several studies have shown that alcohol can acutely reduce the normal metabolic responses of skeletal muscle to the action of insulin. The most obvious of these is an acute impairment in glucose metabolism associated with alcohol consumption. While the exact mechanism(s) underlying this acute insulin resistance is presently unclear, several possible factors are discussed in this review. In contrast to these short-term effects, the effects of alcohol on skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity in chronic alcohol abusers are not as well established. Chronic alcohol abuse is known to be associated with skeletal myopathies, believed to result from alcohol induced abnormalities in muscle protein synthesis. Finally, the alcohol-mediated impairments of many aspects of skeletal muscle metabolism are discussed in relation to the insulin resistance associated broad spectrum of common lifestyle-related disorders, including non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus and obesity, the consequences of which may be important to the pathogenesis of alcohol-related diseases.

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