From the New York Times
Hoping to learn more about how
inactivity affects disease risk, researchers at the University of Missouri
recently persuaded a group of healthy, active young adults to stop moving
around so much. Scientists have known for some time that sedentary people are
at increased risk of developing heart disease and Type 2 diabetes. But they
haven’t fully understood why, in part because studying the effects of sedentary
behavior isn’t easy. People who are inactive may also be obese, eat poorly or
face other lifestyle or metabolic issues that make it impossible to tease out
the specific role that inactivity, on its own, plays in ill health.So, to
combat the problem, researchers lately have embraced a novel approach to
studying the effects of inactivity. They’ve imposed the condition on people who
otherwise would be out happily exercising and moving about, in some cases by
sentencing them to bed rest.But in the current study, which was published this
month in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, the
scientists created a more realistic version of inactivity by having their
volunteers cut the number of steps they took each day by at least half.They
wanted to determine whether this physical languor would affect the body’s
ability to control blood sugar levels. “It’s increasingly clear that blood
sugar spikes, especially after a meal, are bad for you,” says John P. Thyfault,
an associate professor of nutrition and exercise physiology at the University
of Missouri, who conducted the study with his graduate student Catherine R.
Mikus and others. “Spikes and swings in blood sugar after meals have been
linked to the development of heart disease and Type 2 diabetes.”So the
scientists fitted their volunteers with sophisticated glucose monitoring devices,
which checked their blood sugar levels continuously throughout the day. They
also gave the subjects pedometers and activity-measuring armbands, to track how
many steps they took. Finally, they asked the volunteers to keep detailed food
diaries.Then they told them to just live normally for three days, walking and
exercising as usual.Exercise guidelines from the American Heart Association and
other groups recommend that, for health purposes, people accumulate 10,000
steps or more a day, the equivalent of about five miles of walking. Few people
do, however. Repeated studies of American adults have shown that a majority
take fewer than 5,000 steps per day.The Missouri volunteers were atypical in
that regard. Each exercised 30 minutes or so most days and easily completed
more than 10,000 daily steps during the first three days of the experiment. The
average was almost 13,000 steps.During these three days, according to data from
their glucose monitors, the volunteers’ blood sugar did not spike after they ate.But
that estimable condition changed during the second portion of the experiment,
when the volunteers were told to cut back on activity so that their step counts
would fall below 5,000 a day for the next three days. Achieving such indolence
was easy enough. The volunteers stopped exercising and, at every opportunity,
took the elevator, not the stairs, or had lunch delivered, instead of strolling
to a cafe. They became, essentially, typical American adults.Their average step
counts fell to barely 4,300 during the three days, and the volunteers reported
that they now “exercised,” on average, about three minutes a day.Meanwhile,
they ate exactly the same meals and snacks as they had in the preceding three
days, so that any changes in blood sugar levels would not be a result of eating
fattier or sweeter meals than before.And there were changes. During the three
days of inactivity, volunteers’ blood sugar levels spiked significantly after
meals, with the peaks increasing by about 26 percent compared with when the volunteers
were exercising and moving more. What’s more, the peaks grew slightly with each
successive day.This change in blood sugar control after meals “occurred well
before we could see any changes in fitness or adiposity,” or fat buildup, due
to the reduced activity, Dr. Thyfault says. So the blood sugar swings would
seem to be a result, directly, of the volunteers not moving much.Which is both
distressing and encouraging news. “People immediately think, ‘So what happens
if I get hurt or really busy, or for some other reason just can’t work out for
awhile?’” Dr. Thyfault says. “The answer seems to be that it shouldn’t be a big
problem.” Studies in both humans and animals have found that blood sugar
regulation quickly returns to normal once activity resumes.The spikes during
inactivity are natural, after all, even inevitable, given that unused muscles
need less fuel and so draw less sugar from the blood.The condition becomes a
serious concern, Dr. Thyfault says, only when inactivity is lingering, when it becomes
the body’s default condition. “We hypothesize that, over time, inactivity
creates the physiological conditions that produce chronic disease,” like Type 2
diabetes and heart disease, regardless of a person’s weight or diet.To avoid
that fate, he says, keep moving, even if in small doses. “When I’m really busy,
I make sure to get up and walk around the office or jog in place every hour or
so,” he says. Wear a pedometer if it will nudge you to move more. “You don’t
have to run marathons,” he says. “But the evidence is clear that you do need to
move.”
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