Effect of moderate exercise on insulin sensitivity and substrate metabolism during post-exercise recovery in cirrhosis

  • Petrides A
  • Matthews D
  • Eβer U
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Abstract

We examined whether a single bout of moderate exercise has a beneficial effect on insulin sensitivity and fuel homeostasis in cirrhosis. Clinically stable cirrhotic patients and age-, sex-, and weight-matched controls participated in insulin clamp studies (either euglycemic hyperinsulinemic or hyperglycemic hyperinsulinemic) in combination with indirect calorimetry and [6,6-2H2]glucose. Three to seven days later, studies were repeated following a single bout of exercise (30 minutes of treadmill exercise at 60% of maximal aerobic capacity). After an overnight fast, following exercise, both cirrhotic and control individuals showed a shift in fuel utilization to enhanced lipid oxidation, decreased glucose oxidation, and increased nonoxidative glucose disposal rates (i.e., glycogen synthesis in muscle) when compared with pre-exercise rates but differences were statistically significant only in the patient group. During euglycemic hyperinsulinemia, insulin-mediated glucose disposal was significantly reduced in cirrhotic patients (3.43 +/- 0.26 vs. 7.36 +/- 0.48 mg/kg/min, P < .01). Following exercise, glucose uptake increased significantly in cirrhotic patients when compared with pre-exercise levels (P

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Petrides, A. S., Matthews, D. E., & Eβer, U. (1997). Effect of moderate exercise on insulin sensitivity and substrate metabolism during post-exercise recovery in cirrhosis. Hepatology, 26(4), 972–979. https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.510260426

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