Exercise, Diet Cut Diabetes
Risk in Sedentary Men
Vigorous exercise reduces the risk of
diabetes among overweight, sedentary men, study findings suggest.
And if these men reduce the amount of calories they consume each
day, their diabetes risk drops even further.
"Taking up regular exercise, improving
diet and losing weight are simple ways of preventing diabetes,"
study author Dr. Kay L. Cox, of the University of Western Australia
stated.
"The findings are important as
the incidence of overweight and diabetes are on the increase in
western countries," she said. "We need to put prevention programs
in place now before it is too late."
For their study, Cox and her colleagues
asked 60 nonsmoking, sedentary, overweight 20-to-50-year-old men
to either maintain their usual diet or restrict their calorie
intake for 16 weeks. The men, all non-diabetics, were also randomly
assigned to participate in a vigorous exercise group or light
exercise group, for comparison.
Overall, the researchers found
that vigorous exercise - intense half-hour-long sessions three
times per week - alone lowered glucose levels by 13 percent and
insulin levels by 20 percent in response to an oral-glucose-tolerance
test, they report in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
For this glucose test the researchers measured how much insulin
was needed to keep glucose concentrations within a certain desirable
range two hours after the men consumed a sugary drink.
Fasting glucose levels were also
lower among the vigorous exercisers in comparison to their light-exercising
peers, the researchers report.
"The main point of the study is
that exercise was able to reduce blood glucose and insulin levels
in men with normal levels," Cox said. "This means there is a potential
protective effect of regular exercise to reduce the risk of diabetes."
The vigorous exercisers did not
have any great weight loss, however, the researchers note.
Calorie restriction was also effective,
the report indicates. Men who restricted their calorie intake
not only lost a significant amount of weight and had a nearly
six percent reduction in body fat, but their insulin concentrations
were also reduced by 40 percent on the glucose tolerance test.
Further, when calorie restriction
was combined with vigorous exercise, the two worked together to
lower insulin levels after the glucose test, the report indicates.
Altogether, the findings show that
"even taking up exercise after being sedentary can improve health,"
Cox said.
She advises that sedentary individuals
slowly build up their exercise level from light to moderately
intense. "They should find an activity that they like and that
they will keep doing," she said.
Those who are overweight should
start with swimming, cycling, or some other non-weightbearing
exercise to minimize their risk of joint problems, the researcher
added. "They should also try to lose weight by cutting down on
the amount they eat, substitute high fat foods with low fat foods
and include fruit and vegetables rather than refined carbohydrates."
"Even if weight is not lost but
people exercise regularly they may also gain the benefits in terms
of improving glucose levels," Cox said.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, August 2003.
Reference
Source 89
September 17, 2004
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