| Literature DB >> 21113312 |
Abstract
The effect of regular aerobic exercise on body fat is negligible; however, other forms of exercise may have a greater impact on body composition. For example, emerging research examining high-intensity intermittent exercise (HIIE) indicates that it may be more effective at reducing subcutaneous and abdominal body fat than other types of exercise. The mechanisms underlying the fat reduction induced by HIIE, however, are undetermined. Regular HIIE has been shown to significantly increase both aerobic and anaerobic fitness. HIIE also significantly lowers insulin resistance and results in a number of skeletal muscle adaptations that result in enhanced skeletal muscle fat oxidation and improved glucose tolerance. This review summarizes the results of HIIE studies on fat loss, fitness, insulin resistance, and skeletal muscle. Possible mechanisms underlying HIIE-induced fat loss and implications for the use of HIIE in the treatment and prevention of obesity are also discussed.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21113312 PMCID: PMC2991639 DOI: 10.1155/2011/868305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Figure 1Plasma noradrenaline (NA) and adrenaline (AD) concentration of subjects at rest (CON) and following each 6-second sprint (EX) (mean ± SD, n = 12). *Indicates a significant difference from equivalent CON value (P < .05). (Adapted from Bracken et al. [16]).
Effect of high-intensity intermittent exercise on subcutaneous and abdominal fat, body mass, waist circumference, , and insulin sensitivity.
| Study | Subcutaneous fat (kg) | Abdominal/ trunk fat (kg) | Body mass (kg) | Waist circumference (cm) | Type of HIIE | Length of intervention | Insulin sensitivity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boudou et al. [ | ⇓18% | ⇓44% | ⇓1.9 kg (2%) | — | SSE + 5 × 2/3 min R | 8 weeks | — | ⇑58% |
| Burgomaster et al. [ | — | — | ⇔ | — | 4–6 Wingate/4.5 min R | 6 weeks | ⇑7% | — |
|
Dunn [ | ⇓2.6 kg | ⇓.12 kg (6%) | ⇓1.9 kg (3%) | ⇓3.5 cm (4%) | 60 × 8 s/12 s R | 12 weeks | ⇑18% | ⇑36% |
| Helgerud et al. [ | — | — | ⇓.8 kg (1%) | — | 15 s/15 s R | 8 weeks | ⇑6% | — |
| Helgerud et al. [ | — | — | ⇓1.5 kg (2%) | — | 4 × 4 min/4 min R | 8 weeks | ⇑7% | — |
| Mourier et al. [ | ⇓18% | ⇓48% | ⇓1.5 kg (2%) | ⇓1.00 cm (1%) | SSE + 5 × 2/3 min R | 8 weeks | ⇑41% | ⇑46% |
| Perry et al. [ | — | — | ⇓.2 kg (.03%) | — | 10 × 4 min/2 min R | 2 weeks | ⇑9% | — |
| Talanian et al. [ | — | — | — | — | 10 × 4 min/2 min R | 2 weeks | ⇑13% | — |
| Tjønna et al. [ | — | — | ⇓2.3 kg (2.5%) | ⇓5.0 cm (5%) | 4 × 4 min/3 min R | 16 weeks | ⇑26% | ⇑19% |
| Tjønna et al. [ | ⇓2.4 kg | ⇓1.5 kg (8%)# | ⇑.1 kg (.3%) | ⇓7.2 cm (7%) | 4 × 4 min/3 min R | 12 weeks | ⇑10% | ⇑29% |
| Trapp et al. [ | ⇓2.5 kg (10%) | ⇓.15 kg (10%)# | ⇓1.51 kg (2%) | — | 60 × 8 s/12 s R | 15 weeks | ⇑24% | ⇑33% |
| Tremblay et al. [ | ⇓15%* | ⇓12%* | ⇓.1 kg (.1%) | — | 15 × 30 s | 24 weeks | ⇑20% | — |
| Warburton et al. [ | — | — | ⇓3.0 kg (4%) | — | 7 × 2 min/2 min R | 16 weeks | ⇑10% | — |
| Whyte et al. [ | — | — | ⇓1.0 kg (1%) | ⇓2.4 cm (2%) | 4–6 Wingate/4.5 min R | 2 weeks | ⇑9% | ⇑25% |
Note: ⇑ indicates increased; ⇓ decreased; ⇔no change; —not recorded; *body fat was assessed by skin folds; # trunk fat; SSE = steady state exercise; Wingate = 30 s flat out sprint; R = recovery.
Figure 2Subcutaneous (a) and abdominal fat loss (b) after 15 weeks of high-intensity intermittent exercise. HIIE: high-intensity intermittent exercise, SSE: steady state exercise, Cont: control. *Significantly different from control and SSE groups (P < .05). (Adapted from Trapp et al. [5]).