| Literature DB >> 22875231 |
Chinmay Manohar1, James A Levine, Debashis K Nandy, Ahmed Saad, Chiara Dalla Man, Shelly K McCrady-Spitzer, Rita Basu, Claudio Cobelli, Rickey E Carter, Ananda Basu, Yogish C Kudva.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Physical activity (PA), even at low intensity, promotes health and improves hyperglycemia. However, the effect of low-intensity PA captured with accelerometery on glucose variability in healthy individuals and patients with type 1 diabetes has not been examined. Quantifying the effects of PA on glycemic variability would improve artificial endocrine pancreas (AEP) algorithms. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We studied 12 healthy control subjects (five males, 37.7 ± 13.7 years of age) and 12 patients with type 1 diabetes (five males, 37.4 ± 14.2 years of age) for 88 h. Participants performed PA approximating a threefold increase over their basal metabolic rate. PA was captured using a PA-monitoring system, and interstitial fluid glucose concentrations were captured with continuous glucose monitors. In random order, one meal per day was followed by inactivity, and the other meals were followed by walking. Glucose and PA data for a total of 216 meals were analyzed from 30 min prior to meal ingestion to 270 min postmeal.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22875231 PMCID: PMC3507567 DOI: 10.2337/dc11-2381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Care ISSN: 0149-5992 Impact factor: 19.112
Baseline characteristics of study subjects
Figure 1A: Average PA in minutes after meals with activity and meals without activity for control and type 1 diabetic participants. B: Incremental CGM over basal levels in mmol/L with and without PA, for healthy control and type 1 diabetic participants. Data are represented in mean ± SE (n = 24). T1 DMs, type 1 diabetic participants.
Figure 2Box plots of area under the curve (A), COV (B), and percentage time hyperglycemic (C) between control and type 1 diabetic participants by activity status after the standardized meals. P values reported are based on comparisons of model-based means from a mixed model consisting of fixed effects of diabetes status and activity level after meal and their interaction, along with a random effect for participant (blocking factor). (Fig. 2 continues on p. 2498.)