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O. G. Geirsdottir, A. Arnarson, K. Briem, A. Ramel, P. V. Jonsson, I. Thorsdottir, Effect of 12-Week Resistance Exercise Program on Body Composition, Muscle Strength, Physical Function, and Glucose Metabolism in Healthy, Insulin-Resistant, and Diabetic Elderly Icelanders, The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, Volume 67, Issue 11, November 2012, Pages 1259–1265, https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/gls096
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Abstract
Insulin is a stimulator of skeletal muscle protein anabolism and insulin resistance might therefore negatively affect muscle protein metabolism. We investigated muscle mass and physical function before and after a resistance exercise program in participants with prediabetes or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in comparison to healthy controls.
This was a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled intervention designed to investigate resistance training among older adults. Glucose metabolism status was not a selection criteria for the trial, and group designation was done retrospectively. Participants (N = 237, 73.7 ± 5.7 y, 58.2% women) participated in a 12-week resistance exercise program (3 times/week; three sets, six to eight repetitions at 75%–80% of the one-repetition maximum), designed to increase strength and muscle mass of major muscle groups. Body composition, muscular strength, timed up and go test, 6-minute walk for distance, and blood chemical variables were measured at baseline and endpoint.
Participants completing the study (n = 213) experienced significant changes in muscle strength or muscle function, which did not differ significantly between healthy (n = 198), prediabetic (n = 20), and T2DM participants (n = 17). Changes in serum glucose during the intervention differed by group: only glucose improved significantly in the prediabetic group, glucose and triacylglycerol improved significantly in the healthy group, whereas no serum parameter improved significantly in the T2DM group.
A 12-week resistance exercise program improves muscle strength and muscle function to a similar extent in healthy, prediabetic, and T2DM elderly people. However, according to our data, T2DM participants do not experience favorable changes in fasting glucose or HbA1C.
- triglycerides
- insulin resistance
- exercise, isometric
- diabetes mellitus
- glucose metabolism
- metabolism
- diabetes mellitus, type 2
- glucose
- body composition
- hemoglobin a, glycosylated
- muscle proteins
- skeletal muscles
- muscle
- fasting blood glucose measurement
- insulin
- protein biosynthesis
- muscle function
- resistive exercise
- prediabetes
- older adult
- get up and go test
- muscle mass
- muscle strength
- physical function