| Pedometers and Diabetes |
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| Written by Phil Haywood |
| Sunday, 01 November 2009 15:04 |
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"People with diabetes can limit the impact of the condition simply by walking for an extra 45 minutes a day”, says The Guardian. A study found that exercise helped to keep blood sugar levels in check. The benefits of exercise in controlling blood sugar in people with diabetes are well-known and they are recommended, along with dietary change, to delay the onset of diabetes. This study of 20 volunteers was too small to show any changes in blood sugar control, however it did confirm the feasibility of a simple programme in which each volunteer was given a pedometer and asked to walk an extra 45 minutes each day. This led to more than 10,000 steps a day in the group with diabetes, maintained for eight weeks. These results are encouraging. There was a measurable change in the ability of muscle cells to burn fat in people with diabetes, and in the ability of cells to use sugar in the diabetes and control groups. Further studies will be needed to show how these cellular changes are linked to the control of diabetes.
The researchers were interested in whether there were differences between the groups in the activity of mitochondria in the muscle cells. Mitochondria are components of the cell that are thought to play a role in the development of type 2 diabetes by affecting the way the cells react to the hormone insulin. The researchers set out to measure differences in the activity of the mitochondria in the muscle at baseline and after physical activity in people with and without diabetes. They looked at how much of the enzyme “ATP” was used by the muscles, and how well lipids (fats) were metabolised. Measurements were done by magnetic resonance spectroscopy of muscles, a non-invasive technique that obtains information about the biochemical content of cells without the need for a biopsy. "Walking has been shown to be achievable and sustainable by people with Type 2 diabetes" Michael Trenell, lead author The researchers used a pedometer at the start of the study to measure baseline physical activity. The pedometer is activated by movement, and is a validated method of recording physical activity. In this study, the pedometer was attached to the arm, and baseline activity levels were averaged over three days. Measures of diabetes control were also recorded for all volunteers, using blood tests, fasting plasma glucose, insulin sensitivity using HOMA and HbA1c.
After increasing physical activity, the measures at eight weeks showed that the number of steps had increased to 12,322 per day on average for the people with diabetes, and to 9,187 steps per day for those without. There were no changes in basal ATP use as measured by the MRI spectroscopy, but lipid metabolism rates increased in the people with diabetes more than in the group of people without diabetes.
This supports the theory that pedometers encouraged an increase in walking, and that this improved their bodies' ability to store sugar and burn fat. What does the NHS Knowledge Service make of this study? •ATP production in the mitochondria of muscle cells may also be determined by other factors, such as oxygen demand, and it is not clear from this study what the normal variation in the measure of ATP production through the day or between people is. The significance of the changes in ATP turnover reported by this study would need this context for interpretation by non-experts in the field.
Source: nhs.uk |





