Weight training may be as effective as
endurance exercises like running when it comes to burning
fat and warding off diabetes, a study suggests.
American scientists created mice which
carried a gene that, when switched on, gave them muscles
similar to those produced by weight training.
When the gene was off, the mice - which
were fed a fast food diet - became obese and developed
liver problems.
But when on, the same mice burned up
fat, the Cell Metabolism study said.
In addition, the fatty liver disease
it had developed while the gene was off disappeared, and
it stopped being resistant to insulin, a condition which
can lead to type II diabetes.
This was despite the fact that the mouse
was still eating a diet high in fat and sugar and did
not increase its physical activity.
The team from the Boston University School
of Medicine (BUSM) genetically engineered the mouse to
grow a certain type of muscle - known as Type II - which
develops as a result of resistance training.
This is different to the muscle which
forms as a result of endurance training such as running,
known as Type I.
Speeding up
"We've shown that Type II muscle does
more than allow you to pick up heavy objects," said Kenneth
Walsh of BUSM. "It's also important in controlling whole-body
metabolism."
The researchers suggested it may be because
an increase in this type of muscle sparks changes in the
rest of the body.
Professor Ken Fox, an exercise specialist
at the University of Bristol, said that attention was
increasingly turning to resistance exercise as a means
to improve metabolism.
"If you have these muscles, even when
you are not doing much, you are still burning up energy.
"It's a hot topic at the moment. It's
something that could be particularly useful for older
people who may have trouble with endurance exercise, and
it can be very satisfying because the effects of resistance
training appear very quickly."