| Literature DB >> 32847106 |
José Alberto Laredo-Aguilera1,2, María Gallardo-Bravo1, Joseba Aingerun Rabanales-Sotos3,4, Ana Isabel Cobo-Cuenca2,5, Juan Manuel Carmona-Torres2,5.
Abstract
Gestational diabetes mellitus has an incidence of 14% worldwide and nursing is responsible for its monitoring during pregnancy. Excessive weight gain during pregnancy is directly related to gestational diabetes mellitus development. Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) has negative repercussions on the evolution of the pregnancy and the fetus. The objective of this systematic review is to establish how physical activity influences pregnant women with gestational diabetes mellitus and to analyze what benefits physical activity has in the control of gestational diabetes mellitus. A systematic search was carried out in different databases (Cochrane, Superior Council of Scientific Investigations (CSIC), EBSCOhost, Pubmed, Scopus, Web os Science, and Proquest) for papers published within the last 12 years, taking into account different inclusion and exclusion criteria. Six randomized controlled studies and one observational case-control study of a high quality were selected. Fasting, postprandial glucose and HbcA1 were assessed, as well as the requirement and amount of insulin used. Thus, there is a positive relationship between the performance of physical activity and the control of gestational diabetes mellitus. Resistance, aerobic exercise, or a combination of both are effective for the control of glucose, HbcA1, and insulin. Due to the variability of the exercises of the analyzed studies and the variability of the shape of the different pregnant women, it does not permit the recommendation of a particular type of exercise. However, any type of physical activity of sufficient intensity and duration can have benefits for pregnant women with GDM. Pregnant women with gestational diabetes mellitus should exercise for at least 20-50 min a minimum of 2 times a week with at a least moderate intensity.Entities:
Keywords: active pregnancy; exercise; gestational diabetes mellitus; nursing; physical activity; pregnant
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32847106 PMCID: PMC7503359 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17176151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
PICO criterion.
| Criterion (PICO) | Keywords |
|---|---|
| Population (P) | (pregnant) and (“gestational diabetes” or “type one diabetes” or “type i diabetes” or “type 1 diabetes” or “type two diabetes” or “type ii diabetes” or “type 2 diabetes”) |
| Intervention (I) | (“physical activity” or exercise or “exercise training” or “aerobic training” or “cardiorespiratory fitness” or “resistance training” or “resistance exercise” or “training intervention” or sport) |
| Outcome (O) | (“woman benefits” or “women benefits” or “woman effects” or “women effects”) |
Figure 1Prisma flow chart.
Description of the type of study, intervention, sample, results, conclusions, and year of the selected studies.
| Author—Year | Type of Study | Type of Intervention | Sample Size | Results | Conclusions | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sklempe et al., 2017 [ | ECA | EG: exercises twice a week → 50–55′ session + 30′ walking/day. 20′ aerobic activity (static tape with individualized intensity) + 20–25 resistance exercises (6 exercises in 3 sets of 10 to 15 repetitions with weight and elastic band) + pelvic exercises and stretching + 10’ relaxation. | 365 exercise sessions. | Aerobic exercises + resistance exercises → benefits for women with GDM. | 10/11 | |
| Youngwanichsetha et al., 2014 [ | ECA | CG: standard diabetes care. | 180 (90 CG; 90 EG) | Fasting glucose average: | The exercise intervention program is effective in improving glycemic control. | 10/11 |
| Bo et al., 2014 [ | ECA | Multiple interventions: GD, GB, GBE, GE | 400 participants | Weight, BMI, insulin, and dietary values (triglycerides and CPR concentration) → < in all groups. | Exercise → ↓ postprandial glucose, triglycerides and CRP concentrations. | 10/11 |
| Halse et al., 2014 [ | ECNA | Analyze fasting, postprandial glucose levels, HbA1c and glucose and insulin response to an oral glucose load of 75 g. | 40 participants (20 EG; 20 CG) | W 34 → glucose measurement and insulin response at 30, 60, 90, 120’ fasting according to GTT, HbcA1, physical activity level and nutritional status. | Cycling at home helps control postprandial glucose levels in women with GDM along with a proper diet. | 8/11 |
| De Barros et al., | ECA | Diet: 7 servings → 35 cal/Kg per day + 300 Kcal/day in the day 2nd and 3rd quarter. | 64 participants (32 CG; 32 EG) | Insulin requirement: | The resistenace exercise program with elastic band was effective in reducing the number of patients requiring insulin and to control glucose levels in women with GDM | 11/11 |
| Davenport et al., | Case-control study | 2 groups were established: CG: conventional treatment: nutritionist advice every 2 w. Objectives: 2000 Kcal/day. 200 g CH in 3 meals and 3 drinks + glucose measurement + regular monitoring with your doctor. | 30 women → 10 EG and 20 CG. | Participants that require insulin: | Glucose concentration can be improved, as well as reducing the amount and frequency of insulin injection in women with GDM who walk. | 7/9 |
| Daniel et al., 2014 [ | ECA | EG: dance exercises for 8 w. Warm-up (low-intensity aerobic exercises) and 5–10’ stretching + Dance: 10–20’ cardio-respiratory exercises (low-moderate intensity) such as fast walking. The duration increased from 40 to 60’ after 4 w + strengthening exercises (pelvic floor and abdominal muscle exercise)+ stretching and cooling 5–10’. | 30 participants (15 EG; 15 CG) | Fasting glucose: | Significant effect of the exercise program. | 8/11 |
RCT: randomized controlled study; w: week; GDM: gestational diabetes mellitus; EG: experimental group; CG: control group; BMI: body mass index; CRP: c-reactive protein; ECNA: non-randomized controlled study; GTT: glucose tolerance test; tto: treatment; cc: concentration; n: number; HbcA1: glycosylated haemoglobin; SD: standard deviation; p: a measure of statistical significance; g: grams; GD: group D; GB: group B; GBE: BE group; GE2: group E; <: minor; >: major; ′: minute; HC: carbohydrate.