| Literature DB >> 29867567 |
Leandro R Marques1, Tiego A Diniz2, Barbara M Antunes1, Fabrício E Rossi3, Erico C Caperuto4, Fábio S Lira1, Daniela C Gonçalves5.
Abstract
Dyslipidemia (high concentrations of LDL-c and low concentrations of HDL-c) is a major cause of cardiovascular events, which are the leading cause of death in the world. On the other hand, nutrition and regular exercise can be an interesting strategy to modulate lipid profile, acting as prevention or treatment, inhibiting the risk of diseases due to its anti-inflammatory and anti-atherogenic characteristics. Additionally, the possibility of controlling different training variables, such as type, intensity and recovery interval, can be used to maximize the benefits of exercise in promoting cardiovascular health. However, the mechanisms by which exercise and nutrients act in the regulation of cholesterol and its fractions, such as reverse cholesterol transport, receptors and transcription factors involved, such as PPARs and their role related to exercise, deserve further discussion. Therefore, the objective of this review is to debate about non-medical approaches to increase HDL-c, such as nutritional and training strategies, and to discuss the central mechanisms involved in the modulation of lipid profile during exercise, as well as that can be controlled by physical trainers or sports specialists in attempt to maximize the benefits promoted by exercise. The search for papers was performed in the databases: Medline (Pubmed), Science Direct, Scopus, Sport Discus, Web of Science, Scielo and Lilacs until February 2016.Entities:
Keywords: dyslipidemias; exercise; functional foods; lipoproteins; nutritional strategies; physical training
Year: 2018 PMID: 29867567 PMCID: PMC5962737 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.00526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Clinical evidence of the effect of training strategies on metabolic and lipid profiles.
| Author | Sample | Exercise Protocol | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Professional Athletes ( | Cycling and running exercising at the rate of 5.185 ± 501 kcal/week. | Free cholesterol flow | |
| Professional Athletes ( | Marathon race exercising at the rate of 80–100 km/week | HDL-c | |
| Professional Atheles ( | Endurance exercises (triathlon, biathlon, running, and swimming) tested at the “off season” period | VO2max | |
| Sedentary Adults ( | Low-intensity exercise program exercising by walking 3 times/week (10.000 steps/session) during 8 weeks | ↓Total cholesterol | |
| Healthy men ( | Acute high-intensity aerobic exercise (∼ 90% VO2max) performed at cycle ergometer | ↓Total cholesterol | |
| Sedentary men ( | Compared high-intensity training [12 intervals at 1 min work (90–100 VV O2max) with 1 min active recovery (50% VV O2max)], and moderate aerobic endurance training (70–80% VV O2max) during 8 weeks | ↓Triacylglycerol Total colesterol/HDL-c ratio improvement | |
| Adult men ( | Intermittent sprint cycle training (sprints of 10-s duration, repeated 15 times with 50 s of rest between each sprint) during 7 weeks | Glutathione peroxidase | |
| Healthy men ( | Compared high-intensity training (ten 4-min intervals at a power output to elicit 85–90% of VO2peak) and moderate intensity (60% VO2peak) in acute session | IL-6 soluble receptor (sIL-6R) | |
| Professional Athletes ( | Running (average time of 206 min) | IL-6 | |
| Metabolic Syndrome subjects ( | Moderate intensity exercise training (45 min per day at 60 rpm performed 3 times/week) during 3 month | ↓Triacylglycerol | |
| Healthy Adults ( | Compared high-intensity intermittent all-out exercise (60 × 8-s bouts interspersed by 12-s passive recovery) and fixed high-intensity intermittent exercise (100% maximal aerobic speed, consisted of 1-min repetitions at 70 rpm separated by 1-min of passive recovery) in acute session | Triacylglycerol | |
| Postmenopausal women ( | Compared combined training (strength plus aerobic exercise) and aerobic training during 16 weeks | ↓Body fat | |
| Healthy Adults ( | Compared the recovery time (30 or 90 s) in acute session of exhaustive strength exercises (four sets of squats and four sets of horizontal bench press) performed at 90% of 1RM | ↓LDL-c |
Summary of the effects of training strategies on lipids profile and RCT pathway in animals.
| Author | Sample | Experimental design | Outcomes | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 adult Wistar rats | Treadmill running at 25 m/min (0% grade) for 90 min/day, 5 days/week for 6 weeks. | ↑Hepatic gene expression of ABCA1 | Endurance training increase plasma HDL-C levels may result from higher liver ABAC1 expression, LCAT, pre-b-HDL as key elements in RCT process. | |
| 10 adult Wistar rats | Treadmill running at 26 m/min (0% grade) for 90 min/day, 5 days/week for 6 weeks. | ↑Hepatic gene expression of ABCA1 | Endurance training increase hepatic ABCA1. | |
| 20 adult Wistar rats | Treadmill running at 25 m/min (0% grade) for 60 min/day, 5 days/week for 12 weeks. | ↑Hepatic and intestinal gene expression of ABCA1 | Endurance training increase elevation in plasma HDL-C and HDL2-C concentrations, accompanied by higher plasma Apo A-1, pre-β HDL-C concentrations, LCAT activity and ABCA1 mRNA expressions in rat intestine and liver. | |
| 52 adult OLETF rats | Swimming training 5 days/week for 12 weeks. | ↑Hepatic gene expression of PPAR-α, CPT-1, CAT, and ABCA1 | Endurance training increase hepatic PPAR-α that is a contributory factor to the improve whole-body lipid metabolism in diabetic rats. | |
| 10 adult Wistar rats | Treadmill running at 25 m/min (0% grade) for 60 min/day, 5 days/week for 12 weeks. | ↑Gastrocnemius gene expression of ABCA1 | Endurance training improve lipids profile and muscle ABCA1. | |
| 50 adult Sprague-Dawley rats | Treadmill running at 26 m/min (10% grade) for 60 min/day, 5 days/week for 8 weeks. | ↑Hepatic gene expression of SR-B1 and ABCA1 | Endurance training seems to improve hepatic gene expression related to RCT. |
Summary of the effects of training strategies on lipids profile and RCT pathway in humans.
| Author | Sample | Experimental design | Outcomes | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 adult men | Sample was dichotomized by physical activity level | Physically active men had: ↑Apo A-1 and pre-β HDL | ABCA1 expression in human leukocytes is associated with physical activity levels. | |
| 34 adult men and women | Subjects underwent an treadmill exercise program that consisted of walking 10,000 steps 3 days/week for 8 weeks | Training group: | Low intensity exercise improves serum lipids, as a result of increased PPAR-γ and LXRα and consequently up-regulation of CD36, ABCA1, and ABCG1 within circulating leukocytes. | |
| 20 adult women | Subjects performed a single session of circuit resistance exercise (9 exercises), in three different intensities (40, 60 and 80% of one-repetition maximum) | Intensity of 60 RM% | A single session of circuit resistance exercise increased lymphocyte ABCA1 expression that was more pronounced in 60% RM. | |
| 16 obese adult men and women | Subjects underwent endurance training at 70% of VO2max (∼500 kcal/session) 3 days/week for 12 weeks | Training group: | Endurance training enhanced expression of PPARs, PGC-1α and AMPKα that were related to improvement in lipids profile. |