Managing free-living hyperglycemia with exercise or interrupted sitting in type 2 diabetes

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Abstract

Breaking up sitting with light physical activity (PA) is effective in reducing hyperglycemia in the laboratory. Whether the same effects are observed in the free-living environment remains unknown. We evaluated how daily and postprandial glycemia is impacted by 20, 40, or 60 min of activity performed as either breaks from sitting after each meal (BR) or as one continuous walk after breakfast (WALK). Thirty individuals with type 2 diabetes completed three experimental conditions [BR, WALK, and control (CON)] in a randomized crossover design. Conditions were performed in a free-living environment with strict dietary control over 7 days. Participants increased PA in BR and WALK by 20, 40, or 60 min (n 10 in each group) and maintained habitual levels of PA during CON. A continuous glucose monitor (iPro2) and activPAL activity monitor were worn to quantify glycemic control and PA. Using linear mixed models with repeated measures, we 1) compared postprandial glucose (PPG) across conditions and 2) assessed the relationship between activity volume and glucose responses. Whereas WALK tended to shorten the daily duration of hyperglycemia compared with CON (P 0.0875), BR was not different from CON. BR and WALK significantly attenuated the breakfast PPG versus CON (P 0.05), but lunch and dinner PPG were unaffected by BR and WALK. In conclusion, continuous walking was more effective than breaks from sitting in lowering daily hyperglycemia for the group, but both conditions lowered breakfast PPG. In contrast to tightly controlled laboratory studies, breaks from sitting did not lower hyperglycemia in the free-living environment.

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Blankenship, J. M., Chipkin, S. R., Freedson, P. S., Staudenmayer, J., Lyden, K., & Braun, B. (2018). Managing free-living hyperglycemia with exercise or interrupted sitting in type 2 diabetes. Journal of Applied Physiology, 126(3), 616–625. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00389.2018

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