| Literature DB >> 27073714 |
Abstract
This review seeks to synthesize data on the timing, intensity, and duration of exercise found scattered over some 39 studies spanning 3+ decades into optimal exercise conditions for controlling postmeal glucose surges. The results show that a light aerobic exercise for 60 min or moderate activity for 20-30 min starting 30 min after meal can efficiently blunt the glucose surge, with minimal risk of hypoglycemia. Exercising at other times could lead to glucose elevation caused by counterregulation. Adding a short bout of resistance exercise of moderate intensity (60%-80% VO2max) to the aerobic activity, 2 or 3 times a week as recommended by the current guidelines, may also help with the lowering of glucose surges. On the other hand, high-intensity exercise (>80% VO2max) causes wide glucose fluctuations and its feasibility and efficacy for glucose regulation remain to be ascertained. Promoting the kind of physical activity that best counters postmeal hyperglycemia is crucial because hundreds of millions of diabetes patients living in developing countries and in the pockets of poverty in the West must do without medicines, supplies, and special diets. Physical activity is the one tool they may readily utilize to tame postmeal glucose surges. Exercising in this manner does not violate any of the current guidelines, which encourage exercise any time.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27073714 PMCID: PMC4814694 DOI: 10.1155/2016/4045717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Glucose response to different exercise conditions: moderate exercise, before meal [8–21] and after meal [22–30]; high-intensity exercise, before meal [31–34] and after meal [35–39]; comparisons of training, fast versus fed [40–43], timings [44, 45], and durations [46].
| Study | Subjects | Exercise protocol | Results |
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| T1D (type 1 diabetes); T2D (type 2 diabetes) | HIT (high-intensity interval training) | FFA (free fatty acid), PPG (postprandial glucose), Ra (rate of appearance), and AUC (area under the curve) | |
| Gaudet-Savard et al. [ | 43 men with T2D | Light, before meal for 1 h versus after meal tested at 6 time intervals 0-1, 1-2, 2-3, 3-4, 4-5, and 5–8, 60% VO2peak | Exercise in fasted state is safe, no hypoglycemia; decrease in blood glucose depends on preexercise glucose level |
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| Poirier et al. [ | 10 men with T2D | Light exercise, before meal versus 2 h after meal, both at 60% VO2peak for 1 h | Moderate exercise in fasted state has minimal impact on blood glucose; exercise 2 h after meal decreases plasma glucose |
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| Poirier et al. [ | 19 men with T2D | Light exercise, before meal for 1 h versus after meal tested at 6 time intervals 0-1, 1-2, 2-3, 3-4, 4-5, and 5–8, 60% VO2peak | Exercise in fasted state does not decrease blood glucose; blood glucose decreases with postprandial exercise, no clinical hypoglycemia is observed, and in postprandial state low blood sugar is seen |
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| Derave et al. [ | 7 men with metabolic syndrome | Light exercise before meal, versus 1 h after meal, 60% VO2peak for 45 min versus no exercise | Blunted glucose response with postmeal exercise, excessive glucose response with premeal exercise, and later meals unaffected |
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| Colberg et al. [ | 12 men and women with T2D | Brisk walk, before meal versus 30 min after meal, for 20 min versus no exercise | Postdinner walking better for blunting postprandial glucose excursion and the postdinner glucose peak bigger with predinner exercise |
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| DiPietro et al. [ | 10 prediabetes men and women | Light walks, 1 h after meal for 15 min each ×3 and 2.5 h and 4.5 h after meal (before dinner) for 45 min | Postmeal walks improve 24 h glycemia, there is no 24 h glucose improvement with predinner walk, and 3 bouts of 15 min postmeal walk are more effective than 45 min of morning or afternoon walk |
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| Yamanouchi et al. [ | 6 patients with T1D | Premeal walk versus postmeal walk at 60 min after meal, 50% VO2max for 30 min versus no walk | Glucose levels and glucose-AUC significantly lower only in the postmeal walking (premeal walk 17.8, postmeal walk 3.8, and no walk 11.8 h mM) |
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| Francois et al. [ | 9 individuals with insulin resistance | Premeal HIT (three 10 min bouts) versus moderate premeal exercise, 60% VO2max for 30 min | Premeal HIT exercise results in improved insulin sensitivity; moderate exercise leads to postprandial glucose elevation |
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| Melton et al. [ | 16 prediabetes women | Moderate premeal exercise, 65% HRmax for 45 min versus no exercise | No effect on glucose, triglyceride, or oxidative stress |
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| Kirwan et al. [ | 6 healthy women | Exercise before meal versus after meal (45 min), 60% VO2peak to exhaustion | As insulin and glucose go up, FFA and glycerol are suppressed for 120 min of postmeal exercise, glucose is steady with premeal exercise for 120 minutes, and duration is not altered |
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| Borer et al. [ | 9 healthy postmenopausal women | Premeal exercise, versus postmeal exercise (1 h) at 43% max effort, 2 bouts of 2 h each | Only prolonged light premeal exercise improves fasting glucose; FFA and D-3 hydroxybutyrate go up more during premeal exercise indicating liver glycogen depletion |
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| Marmy-Conus et al. [ | 6 healthy men | Moderate premeal exercise versus moderate postmeal exercise starting 30 min after meal, 71% VO2max for 60 min | Muscle glucose uptake increased, liver glucose output decreased by 62% with the postmeal exercise, and glucose level goes up 20 min into the exercise |
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| Short et al. [ | Study 2: 11 young adults | Moderate aerobic exercise 17 h before meal versus 1 h before meal, 75% VO2peak for 45 min versus no exercise | Glucose-AUC 6% lower with the 1 h premeal trial within 3 h after the exercise, the effect not seen at 17 h after exercise |
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| Oberlin et al. [ | 9 sedentary patients with T2D | Moderate premeal exercise 60–75% HRmax for 1 h versus no exercise | Glucose-AUC improved 15% after the 2nd meal |
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| Høstmark et al. [ | 9 young and 10 middle-aged sedentary women, 10 young and 10 middle-aged trained women | Light bicycling starting 15 min after meal for 30 min versus no exercise | Light postmeal physical activity reduces blood glucose by a magnitude similar to that obtained by using drugs |
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Aadland and Høstmark [ | 9 healthy people | Very light intensity (VLI) and light intensity (LI) walk starting 15 min after meal for 30 min versus no walking | Both VLI and LI exercise blunted and delayed the rise in blood glucose |
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| Nygaard et al. [ | 14 healthy women | Slow walking starting 15 min after meal for 15 min versus 40 min versus no walking | Even slow postmeal walking reduces postprandial glucose response to meal; this response is dose dependent on duration |
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| Rasmussen et al. [ | 7 people with T1D | Bicycling starting 15 min after meal, 65% VO2max for 30 min versus no exercise | Moderate postmeal exercise starting 15 min after meal for 30 min reduces blood glucose response by one-third |
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| Nelson et al. [ | 9 people with T1D, 7 heathy people | Exercise starting 30 min after meal, 55% VO2max for 45 min | Glycemic response to breakfast entirely normalized, symptomatic hypoglycemia seen after 35 min into exercise |
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| Caron et al. [ | 8 people with T1D | Exercise starting 30 min after meal, 50% VO2max for 45 min | Glucoregulation improves with strategically timed postmeal exercise |
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| Shin et al. [ | 8 young healthy men | Exercise starting 30 min after meal, 50% VO2max for 60 min | Higher insulin action decreases glucose, free fatty acid levels, and fat oxidation and increases growth hormone levels during exercise |
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| Larsen et al. [ | 9 sedentary men with T2D | Exercise starting 45 min after meal, 53% VO2max for 45 min versus no exercise versus diet | Moderate postmeal exercise decreases glycemia, the effect does not persist to affect subsequent meal, and the effect is similar to what follows decreased calorie intake |
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| Van Dijk et al. [ | 60 T2D men (23 insulin-treated) | Endurance exercise, 2 h after meal, 35%–50% Wmax, for 45–60 min versus no exercise | With exercise glycemic control per continuous glucose monitoring improves throughout the subsequent day. HbA1C is related to the magnitude of response to exercise |
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| Kjaer et al. [ | 7 men with T2D and 7 healthy men | Single bout premeal HIT exercise at 100–110% VO2max | 60 min of postexercise hyperglycemia in T2D followed by increased insulin effect on glucose disposal that is present 24 h after exercise. This has less therapeutic value in T2D |
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| Kreisman et al. [ | 10 healthy men for premeal exercise and 8 healthy men for postmeal exercise | High-intensity exercise before meal versus 3 h after meal | Ra response to high-intensity exercise is preserved in postprandial exercise. Postexercise hyperglycemia is relatively reduced in postprandial exercise |
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| Mitchell et al. [ | 8 T1D and 8 healthy | High-intensity premeal exercise at 80% VO2max | Postexercise hyperglycemia for 2 h, diabetes control deteriorates with intense premeal exercise |
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| Yale et al. [ | 8 lean and 12 obese people | High-intensity premeal exercise to exhaustion | Obese people had greater postexercise insulin resistance |
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| Larsen et al. [ | 8 sedentary men with T2D | High-intensity postmeal exercise, 45 min after meal, 98% VO2max versus no exercise | Intense postmeal exercise does not deteriorate glucose homeostasis, effect related to energy expenditure, and the effect does not help lunch |
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| Gillen et al. [ | 7 adults with T2D | HIT 90 min after meal versus no exercise | HIT exercise at 90 min after meal reduces postprandial hyperglycemia up to 24 h |
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| Little et al. [ | 10 inactive obese men | HIT 2 h after breakfast versus continuous moderate intensity exercise, 65% VO2max for 30 min versus no exercise | No effect on lunch. PPG-AUC for dinner and for next breakfast better for HIT, absolute AUC and absolute spikes not different |
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| Szewieczek et al. [ | 14 T2D and 14 healthy | HIT 2 h after meal versus no exercise | Hyperglycemia reduced during recovery period with HIT |
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| Heden et al. [ | 13 obese T2D patients | Resistance exercise (RE) 45 min after dinner, before dinner versus no exercise | Predinner RE improves postprandial glucose concentration; postdinner exercise improves both glucose and TAG concentrations |
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| Gillen et al. [ | 16 women | HIT, fasted versus fed, starting at 60 min, 3/week for 6 weeks | HIT is time efficient, fed versus fasted: both improve body composition and muscle oxidative capacity |
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| De Bock et al. [ | 20 healthy men | Endurance training, 10 fasted versus 10 fed starting at 90 min ×3/week for 6 weeks at 75% VO2peak | Fat oxidation similar, glycogen breakdown less in fasted training |
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| van Proeyen et al. [ | 27 healthy men | Endurance training, 10 fasted versus 10 fed starting at 90 min, ×4/week for 6 weeks versus 7 no training | Fasted training is (slightly) more potent in muscle adaptations |
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| Nybo et al. [ | 15 healthy men | Endurance training, 7 fasted versus 8 fed starting at 3 h postprandial ×4/week for 8 weeks at 70–85% VO2peak | Muscular adaptations similar in fast versus fed training except GLUT4 and glycogen content more in fasted training |
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Achten and Jeukendrup [ | 8 healthy men | 45 min after meal 40%, 65%, 80% VO2max for 20 min | Insulin peaks at 30 min after meal; insulin and glucose levels decrease in 10 min similarly (then glucose level goes up for 80%) |
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| Manders et al. [ | 9 sedentary men with T2D | Starting 60 min after meal light (35% Wmax) for 60 min versus moderate intensity (70% Wmax) exercise for 30 min | Light exercise as opposed to moderate exercise reduces hyperglycemia throughout the subsequent 24 h, prevalence of hyperglycemia 50% versus 19% |
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| Van Dijk et al. [ | 30 patients with T2D | 90 min after meal, 50% Wmax 30 min every day versus 60 min every other day versus no exercise | Hyperglycemia lower in both exercise regimens |