Publication
Title
Impact of exercise-nutritional state interactions in patients with type 2 diabetes
Author
Abstract
Introduction This study examines the role of nutritional status during exercise training in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus by investigating the effect of endurance-type exercise training in the fasted versus the fed state on clinical outcome measures, glycemic control, and skeletal muscle characteristics in male type 2 diabetes patients. Methods Twenty-five male patients (glycated hemoglobin (HbA1(c)), 57 +/- 3 mmol center dot mol(-1) (7.4% +/- 0.3%)) participated in a randomized 12-wk supervised endurance-type exercise intervention, with exercise being performed in an overnight-fasted state (n = 13) or after consuming breakfast (n = 12). Patients were evaluated for glycemic control, blood lipid profiles, body composition and physical fitness, and skeletal muscle gene expression. Results Exercise training was well tolerated without any incident of hypoglycemia. Exercise training significantly decreased whole-body fat mass (-1.6 kg) and increased high-density lipoprotein concentrations (+2 mg center dot dL(-1)), physical fitness (+1.7 mL center dot min(-1)center dot kg(-1)), and fat oxidation during exercise in both groups (P-TIME < 0.05), with no between-group differences (P-TIME x GROUP > 0.05). HbA1(c) concentrations significantly decreased after exercise training (P-TIME < 0.001), with a significant greater reduction after consuming breakfast (-0.30% +/- 0.06%) compared with fasted state (-0.08% +/- 0.06%; mean difference, 0.21%; P-TIME x GROUP = 0.016). No interaction effects were observed for skeletal muscle genes related to lipid metabolism or oxidative capacity. Conclusions Endurance-type exercise training in the fasted or fed state do not differ in their efficacy to reduce fat mass, increase fat oxidation capacity, and increase cardiorespiratory fitness and high-density lipoprotein concentrations or their risk of hypoglycemia in male patients with type 2 diabetes. HbA1(c) seems to be improved more with exercise performed in the postprandial compared with the postabsorptive state.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Medicine and science in sports and exercise. - Madison, Wis., 1980, currens
Publication
Madison, Wis. : 2020
ISSN
0195-9131 [print]
1530-0315 [online]
DOI
10.1249/MSS.0000000000002165
Volume/pages
52 :3 (2020) , p. 720-728
ISI
000514884400025
Pubmed ID
31652237
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
UAntwerpen
Research group
Publication type
Subject
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 12.11.2020
Last edited 24.08.2024
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