Breaking Up Prolonged Sitting Reduces Postprandial Glucose and Insulin Responses
Edith Cowan University · Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Observational studies show breaking up prolonged sitting has beneficial associations with cardiometabolic risk markers, but intervention studies are required to investigate causality. We examined the acute effects on postprandial glucose and insulin levels of uninterrupted sitting compared with sitting interrupted by brief bouts of light- or moderate-intensity walking. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Overweight/obese adults (n = 19), aged 45-65 years, were recruited for a randomized three-period, three-treatment acute crossover trial: 1) uninterrupted sitting; 2) seated with 2-min bouts of light-intensity walking every 20 min; and 3) seated with 2-min bouts of moderate-intensity walking every 20 min. A standardized test drink was provided after an initial 2-h period of uninterrupted sitting. The positive incremental area under curves (iAUC) for glucose and insulin (mean [95% CI]) for the 5 h after the test drink (75 g glucose, 50 g fat) were calculated for the respective treatments.
The glucose iAUC (mmol/L) · h after both activity-break conditions was reduced (light: 5.2 [4.1-6.6]; moderate: 4.9 [3.8-6.1]; both P
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
11- DWDavid W. DunstanCorresponding
Edith Cowan University, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Deakin University, The University of Queensland, Monash University
- BABronwyn A. Kingwell
Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute
- RNRobyn N. Larsen
Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute
- GNGeneviève N. Healy
Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, The University of Queensland
- ECEster Cerin
University of Hong Kong
Topics & keywords
- Postprandial
- Medicine
- Sitting
- Crossover study
- Overweight
- Insulin
- Internal medicine
- Glycemic
- Good health and well-being