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Brief, High-Intensity Workouts show promise
in helping Diabetics lower Blood Sugar
Newswise, December 12, 2011 — Researchers at
McMaster University have found that brief
high intensity workouts, as little as six
sessions over two weeks, rapidly lower blood
sugar levels in type 2 diabetics, offering a
potential fix for patients who struggle to
meet exercise guidelines.
The small proof-of-principle study,
conducted on eight diabetics, appears in the
latest edition of the Journal of Applied
Physiology.
It found that a total of 30 minutes of
high-intensity intermittent exercise per
week, involving a total time commitment of
75 minutes, lowered 24-hour blood sugar
concentrations, reduced blood sugar spikes
after meals, and increased skeletal muscle
mitochondrial capacity, a marker of
metabolic health.
“These findings are intriguing because they
suggest that exercising very strenuously for
short periods of time, may provide many of
the same health benefits as traditional
exercise training,” says Martin Gibala,
professor in the Department of Kinesiology
at McMaster and supervising author of the
study. “This is the first study to show that
intense interval training may be a potent,
time-efficient strategy to improve glycemic
regulation in people with type 2 diabetes.”
Current guidelines from the Canadian
Diabetes Association call for 150 minutes of
moderate to vigorous exercise per week—twice
the training time commitment of study
participants—which can be tough to manage
for many people including those with
diabetes, adds Gibala.
He is quick to point out that larger studies
are needed to comprehensively examine the
potential benefits of this type of training,
especially compared to traditional exercise
guidelines.
For the study, researchers gave each
volunteer a baseline exam to test blood
sugar over a 24-hour period, assess fitness
levels and take biopsies of thigh muscle to
measure proteins linked to health status.
Each workout involved riding a stationary
bike for 10 bouts of 60 seconds at roughly
90 percent of maximal heart rate, with one
minute between each burst of exercise. The
routine also included a warm up and cool
down such that each training session lasted
25 minutes in total.
Participants showed improved blood sugar
levels even though they did not lose weight
during the short two-week study.
“The improved glycemic control may be linked
to changes in the subjects’ muscles, such as
an improved ability to clear glucose from
the blood after meals”, says Gibala. “We
need to conduct further research to identify
the mechanisms behind these results.”
The research was funded by the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada
and the Canadian Diabetes Association.
McMaster University, one of four Canadian
universities listed among the Top 100
universities in the world, is renowned for
its innovation in both learning and
discovery. It has a student population of
23,000, and more than 140,000 alumni in 128
countries.