4.3 Article

A single exercise session increases insulin sensitivity in normal weight and overweight/obese adolescents

Journal

PEDIATRIC DIABETES
Volume 19, Issue 6, Pages 1050-1057

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pedi.12684

Keywords

glucose tolerance; mixed meal; physical activity

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [M01-RR14467P20-RR024215]
  2. NATIONAL CENTER FOR RESEARCH RESOURCES [P20RR024215, M01RR014467] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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We measured the effect of an aerobic exercise session on postprandial glucose control in adolescents with habitually low-physical activity. The goal was to determine if the acute or residual response of exercise was altered in people who are overweight/obese (OW/Ob). Eleven normal weight, body mass index (NW, BMI = 48 +/- 13 percentile) and 12 OW/Ob (BMI = 91 +/- 5 percentile) participants completed 3 trials. In the no exercise (No Ex) trial, participants rested quietly before and after consuming a test meal. In the other 2 trials, a 45-minute aerobic exercise session was performed either 17-hour (Prior Day Ex) or 40 minutes (Same Day Ex) before the test meal. On all trials, the OW/Ob group had higher fasting glucose (similar to 6%) and insulin (similar to 66%), and lower insulin sensitivity (similar to 9%) than the NW group. The Same Day Ex and Prior Day Ex trials resulted in reduced area under the curve for glucose (6% on both trials, P < .01) and insulin (15% and 13%, respectively, P < .03), and increased insulin sensitivity (8% and 6%, respectively, P < .01). The magnitudes of those effects did not differ between the NW and OW/Ob groups. Plasma fatty acids declined and carbohydrate oxidation increased after the meal, but did not differ among trials or groups. The results demonstrate that moderate intensity aerobic exercise increases insulin sensitivity in NW and OW/Ob adolescents and that the beneficial effects of exercise last up to 17 hours. The acute impact of exercise on metabolic health in adolescents is not impaired in overweight/obese participants.

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