McCarthy Olivia, Moser Othmar, Eckstein Max L, Deere Rachel, Bain Steve C, Pitt Jason, Bracken Richard M
Applied Sport, Technology, Exercise and Medicine Research Centre (A-STEM), College of Engineering, Swansea University, Swansea, United Kingdom.
Diabetes Research Group, Medical School, Swansea University, Swansea, United Kingdom.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2019 Aug 2;10:507. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2019.00507. eCollection 2019.
The importance of regular exercise for glucose management in individuals with type 1 diabetes is magnified by its acknowledgment as a key adjunct to insulin therapy by several governmental, charitable, and healthcare organisations. However, although actively encouraged, exercise participation rates remain low, with glycaemic disturbances and poor cardiorespiratory fitness cited as barriers to long-term involvement. These fears are perhaps exacerbated by uncertainty in how different forms of exercise can considerably alter several acute and chronic physiological outcomes in those with type 1 diabetes. Thus, understanding the bodily responses to specific forms of exercise is important for the provision of practical guidelines that aim to overcome these exercise barriers. Currently, the majority of existing exercise research in type 1 diabetes has focused on moderate intensity continuous protocols with less work exploring predominately non-oxidative exercise modalities like resistance exercise. This is surprising, considering the known neuro-muscular, osteopathic, metabolic, and vascular benefits associated with resistance exercise in the wider population. Considering that individuals with type 1 diabetes have an elevated susceptibility for complications within these physiological systems, the wider health benefits associated with resistance exercise may help alleviate the prevalence and/or magnitude of pathological manifestation in this population group. This review outlines the health benefits of resistance exercise with reference to evidence in aiding some of the common complications associated with individuals with type 1 diabetes.
一些政府、慈善和医疗保健组织认可定期锻炼是1型糖尿病患者血糖管理的关键辅助手段,这凸显了其重要性。然而,尽管积极鼓励,但锻炼参与率仍然很低,血糖紊乱和心肺功能不佳被认为是长期参与锻炼的障碍。对于1型糖尿病患者,不同形式的锻炼如何能显著改变多种急性和慢性生理结果尚不确定,这可能加剧了这些担忧。因此,了解身体对特定形式锻炼的反应对于提供旨在克服这些锻炼障碍的实用指南很重要。目前,1型糖尿病现有的大多数锻炼研究都集中在中等强度连续方案上,较少有研究探索主要是非氧化运动方式,如抗阻运动。考虑到在更广泛人群中抗阻运动已知的神经肌肉、整骨、代谢和血管益处,这令人惊讶。鉴于1型糖尿病患者在这些生理系统中发生并发症的易感性增加,抗阻运动带来的更广泛健康益处可能有助于减轻该人群中病理表现的发生率和/或严重程度。本综述参考了有助于改善1型糖尿病患者一些常见并发症的证据,概述了抗阻运动的健康益处。