Literature DB >> 28663372

Muscle hypertrophy in prediabetic men after 16 wk of resistance training.

Charles A Stuart1, Michelle L Lee2, Mark A South3, Mary E A Howell4, Michael H Stone3.   

Abstract

Resistance training of healthy young men typically results in muscle hypertrophy and a shift in vastus lateralis composition away from type IIx fibers to an increase in IIa fiber content. Our previous studies of 8 wk of resistance training found that many metabolic syndrome men and women paradoxically increased IIx fibers with a decrease in IIa fibers. To confirm the hypothesis that obese subjects might have muscle remodeling after resistance training very different from healthy lean subjects, we subjected a group of nine obese male volunteers to progressive resistance training for a total of 16 wk. In these studies, weight loss was discouraged so that muscle changes would be attributed to the training alone. Detailed assessments included comparisons of histological examinations of needle biopsies of vastus lateralis muscle pretraining and at 8 and 16 wk. Prolonging the training from 8 to 16 wk resulted in increased strength, improved body composition, and more muscle fiber hypertrophy, but euglycemic clamp-quantified insulin responsiveness did not improve. Similar to prior studies, muscle fiber composition shifted toward more fast-twitch type IIx fibers (23 to 42%). Eight weeks of resistance training increased the muscle expression of phosphorylated Akt2 and mTOR. Muscle GLUT4 expression increased, although insulin receptor and IRS-1 expression did not change. We conclude that resistance training of prediabetic obese subjects is effective at changing muscle, resulting in fiber hypertrophy and increased type IIx fiber content, and these changes continue up to 16 wk of training.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Obese, insulin-resistant men responded to 16 wk of progressive resistance training with muscle hypertrophy and increased strength and a shift in muscle fiber composition toward fast-twitch, type IIx fibers. Activation of muscle mTOR was increased by 8 wk but did not increase further at 16 wk despite continued augmentation of peak power and rate of force generation.
Copyright © 2017 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  euglycemic clamp; fiber hypertrophy; fiber shift; insulin resistance; metabolic syndrome

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28663372      PMCID: PMC5668444          DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00023.2017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  28 in total

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Authors:  Charles A Stuart; Michelle L Lee; Mark A South; Mary E A Howell; Brian M Cartwright; Michael W Ramsey; Michael H Stone
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Authors:  Sean L McGee; Mark Hargreaves
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Review 2.  Exercising for Insulin Sensitivity - Is There a Mechanistic Relationship With Quantitative Changes in Skeletal Muscle Mass?

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Review 3.  Impact of Endurance and Resistance Training on Skeletal Muscle Glucose Metabolism in Older Adults.

Authors:  Leslie A Consitt; Courtney Dudley; Gunjan Saxena
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2019-11-03       Impact factor: 5.717

4.  Frequent Manipulation of Resistance Training Variables Promotes Myofibrillar Spacing Changes in Resistance-Trained Individuals.

Authors:  Carlton D Fox; Paulo H C Mesquita; Joshua S Godwin; Vitor Angleri; Felipe Damas; Bradley A Ruple; Casey L Sexton; Michael D Brown; Andreas N Kavazis; Kaelin C Young; Carlos Ugrinowitsch; Cleiton A Libardi; Michael D Roberts
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5.  Resistance exercise stimulates mixed muscle protein synthesis in lean and obese young adults.

Authors:  Carl J Hulston; Rachel M Woods; Rebecca Dewhurst-Trigg; Sion A Parry; Stephanie Gagnon; Luke Baker; Lewis J James; Oonagh Markey; Neil R W Martin; Richard A Ferguson; Gerrit van Hall
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2018-07
  5 in total

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