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Pumping
Iron Improves
Insulin Effects in Diabetics
Strength training improves the effects
of insulin in the muscles of patients with type 2 diabetes, according
to a report from Denmark.
"Physical inactivity is becoming
close to the number-one leading cause of death in the US," Dr.
Flemming Dela from the University of Copenhagen stated. "Our study
is one which shows how to fight this trend."
Earlier research demonstrated the
value of aerobic endurance training in increasing insulin action,
the authors explain in the medical journal Diabetes, but most
patients with type 2 diabetes are overweight and unlikely to take
up endurance training.
Dela and colleagues, therefore,
investigated the impact of strength training three times weekly
for 6 weeks on insulin action in 10 type 2 diabetics and 7 healthy
subjects.
In addition to increasing muscle
mass, strength training seemed to enhance the effects of insulin,
the researchers report.
"Strength training is a realistic
and effective alternative to endurance training and probably much
more attractive to the 'average' type 2 diabetic patient," Dela
concluded.
"We have followed up on this study
by exploring the molecular mechanisms in the muscle that lies
behind the effect," Dela added. These results should be published
in the near future.
SOURCE: Diabetes, February 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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