exercise and diabetes

From: Doug Skrecky (oberon@vcn.bc.ca)
Date: Tue Nov 03 1998 - 21:26:25 MST


Authors
  Lynch J. Helmrich SP. Lakka TA. Kaplan GA. Cohen RD. Salonen R. Salonen
  JT.
Institution
  Human Population Laboratory; Western Consortium for Public Health, Berkeley,
  Calif., USA. jlynchhpl:aol.com
Title
  Moderately intense physical activities and high levels of
  cardiorespiratory fitness reduce the risk
  of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in middle-aged men [see comments].
Comments
  Comment in: Arch Intern Med 1996 Jun 24;156(12):1258
Source
  Archives of Internal Medicine. 156(12):1307-14, 1996 Jun 24.
Abstract
  BACKGROUND: Physical activity has been advocated as an important factor in
  the primary prevention of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM),
  but information concerning the specific intensities and durations that are
  protective has been unavailable. OBJECTIVE: To examine prospectively the
  association between self-reported levels of the intensity and duration of
  physical activities, and cardiorespiratory
  fitness (assessed by respiratory gas exchange) and incident
  cases of NIDDM (assessed by the oral glucose tolerance test) in a
  population-based sample of 897 middle-aged Finnish men. RESULTS: After
  adjustment for age, baseline glucose values, body mass index, serum
  triglyceride levels, parental history of diabetes, and alcohol consumption,
  moderately intense physical activities (> or = 5.5 metabolic units) that were
  undertaken for at least a 40-minute duration per week were associated with a
  reduced risk of NIDDM (odds ration [OR], 0.44; 95% confidence interval [CI],
  0.22-0.88). Activities with less than an intensity of 5.5 metabolic units,
  regardless of their duration, were not protective.
  Cardiorespiratory fitness levels greater
  than 31.0 mL of oxygen per kilogram per minute were protective against NIDDM
  (OR, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.08-0.82). A subgroup of men at high risk of NIDDM,
  because they were overweight and were hypertensive and had a positive
  parental history of NIDDM, who engaged in moderately intense physical
  activities above the 40-min/wk duration reduced their risk of NIDDM by 64%
  compared with men who did not participate in such activities. CONCLUSIONS:
  After adjustment for age, baseline glucose levels, and known risk factors,
  physical activities with an intensity of 5.5 metabolic units or greater and a
  duration of 40 minutes or greater per week protected against the development
  of NIDDM. These protective effects were even more pronounced in a subgroup of
  men who were at high risk for the development of the disease.



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