Literature DB >> 34900798

Cardiac Autonomic Modulation in Response to Three Types of Exercise in Patients with Type 2 Diabetic Neuropathy.

Elaheh Piralaiy1, Marefat Siahkuhian2, Saeed Dabbagh Nikookheslat1, Linda S Pescatello3, Mahboub Sheikhalizadeh4, Mostafa Khani1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Physical exercise is necessary in the handling DM, but it is not distinct which kind of physical exercise can improve cardiac autonomic modulation in T2DM. The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of three different modalities of exercise (aerobic, resistant, and combined) on cardiac autonomic modulation as measured by HRV in patients with type 2 diabetic neuropathy.
METHODS: The participants were 45 men (age: 55.24 ± 8.11 years, weight: 89.5 ± 13.4 kg, height: 171.85 ± 6.98 cm, duration of diabetes: 12.51 ± 6.46 years) with type 2 diabetic neuropathy who were clinically free from signs and symptoms of cardiovascular disease. Participants were randomly assigned to one of four groups: aerobic-training (n = 11), dynamic resistant-training (n = 11), Combined-training (n = 11), or a non-exercise control group (n = 12). The exercise groups performed aerobic and resistant exercise for 25-45 min per day, 3-5 times per week for 12 weeks. Anthropometrics, biochemical markers (FBS, HbA1c, Lipid Profile, and Insulin), and heart rate variability in the exercise laboratory and under ambulatory conditions by 3-channel ECG digital Holter recorder were examined.
RESULTS: All time and frequency-domain HRV parameters (except LF power) were significantly improved in the exercise groups, compared with the control group (p < 0.05). SDNN, rMSSD, and HF power were boosted, LF power was not different, and the LF/HF ratio decreased after versus before exercise training, independent of exercise modality. HbA1c in aerobic and resistant-training groups, and insulin and LDL in the resistant-training group were decreased after exercise training (p < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: Exercise training, independent of modality, in patients with type 2 diabetic neuropathy who were clinically free of the cardiovascular disease cause to significant progress in cardiovascular autonomic function assessed by HRV via enhancing cardio-vagal and reducing cardio-sympathetic tone. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aerobic Training; Combined-training; Diabetes Mellitus; Heart Rate Variability; Resistant Training

Year:  2021        PMID: 34900798      PMCID: PMC8630210          DOI: 10.1007/s40200-021-00889-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Diabetes Metab Disord        ISSN: 2251-6581


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Authors:  Kristian Karstoft; Bente Klarlund Pedersen
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Authors:  Rajesh Kumar Goit; Bishnu Hari Paudel; Rita Khadka; Roshan Kumar Roy; Mukesh Kumar Shrewastwa
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