4.2 Review

The Effects of Different Types of Exercise on Circulating Irisin Levels in Healthy Individuals and in People With Overweight, Metabolic Syndrome and Type 2 Diabetes

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 71, Issue 4, Pages 457-475

Publisher

ACAD SCIENCES CZECH REPUBLIC, INST PHYSIOLOGY
DOI: 10.33549/physiolres.934896

Keywords

Exercise; FNDC5; Metabolic Syndrome; Obesity; Type 2 Diabetes

Categories

Funding

  1. CONACYT scholarship

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This article reviewed the literature and evaluated the effects of different types of training on circulating irisin levels in healthy subjects and those with different metabolic conditions. The results showed that various types of training can increase circulating irisin levels, with consistently maintained moderate to high intensity training showing better effectiveness. However, the increase in circulating irisin levels depends on the subject's metabolic condition and age.
Irisin is a myokine secreted during exercise. It has drawn the attention of researchers as it regulates several effects of exercise that are considered beneficial. It has also been proposed as a therapeutic tool to treat metabolic disorders. In recent years, the effect of different types of training on circulating irisin has been studied in large populations. An overall beneficial result has been shown, however, the outcome of the investigations has raised some controversy. Herein we evaluated the existing literature on the effects of different types of training on the circulating irisin levels in healthy subjects and in those displaying different metabolic condition. We conducted queries in the PubMed and Web of Science databases for literature published between January 2010 and January 2021. Thirty-seven original articles were retrieved and they were included in this review. Any letter to the editor, meta-analyses, reviews, and systematic review articles were excluded. From these 37 articles, 19 of them reported increased levels of circulating irisin. The interventions encompassed aerobic, resistance, combined, circuit, and interval training types. Such increase of circulating irisin was reported for healthy subjects and for those displaying different metabolic condition. A training that is steadily kept with a moderate to high intensity, including that characterized by brief highly intense intervals, were distinguishable from the rest. Nevertheless, the training effectiveness as evaluated by the increased circulating irisin levels depends on the subject's metabolic condition and age.

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