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Predictors of the Acute Postprandial Response to Breaking Up Prolonged Sitting

Henson, J, Edwardson, CL, Celis-Morales, CA, Davies, MJ, Dunstan, David, Esliger, DW, Gill, JMR, Kazi, A, Khunti, K, King, J, McCarthy, M, Sattar, N, Stensel, DJ, Velayudhan, L, Zaccardi, F and Yates, T 2020, Predictors of the Acute Postprandial Response to Breaking Up Prolonged Sitting, Medicine and science in sports and exercise, vol. 52, no. 6, pp. 1385-1393, doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002249.

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Title Predictors of the Acute Postprandial Response to Breaking Up Prolonged Sitting
Author(s) Henson, J
Edwardson, CL
Celis-Morales, CA
Davies, MJ
Dunstan, DavidORCID iD for Dunstan, David orcid.org/0000-0003-2629-9568
Esliger, DW
Gill, JMR
Kazi, A
Khunti, K
King, J
McCarthy, M
Sattar, N
Stensel, DJ
Velayudhan, L
Zaccardi, F
Yates, T
Journal name Medicine and science in sports and exercise
Volume number 52
Issue number 6
Start page 1385
End page 1393
Total pages 9
Publisher Wolters Kluwer Health
Place of publication Philadelphia, Pa.
Publication date 2020-06
ISSN 1530-0315
Summary PURPOSE: To identify predictors of favorable changes to postprandial insulin and glucose levels in response to interrupting prolonged sitting time with standing or light-intensity physical activity. METHODS: Data were combined from four similarly designed randomized acute cross-over trials (n = 129; body mass index [BMI] range, 19.6-44.6 kg·m; South Asian = 31.0%; dysglycemia = 27.1%). Treatments included: prolonged sitting (6.5 h) or prolonged sitting broken-up with either standing or light-intensity physical activity (5 min every 30 min). Time-averaged postprandial responses for insulin and glucose were calculated for each treatment (mean ± 95% confidence interval). Mutually adjusted interaction terms were used to examine whether anthropometric (BMI), demographic (age, sex, ethnicity [white European vs South Asian]) and a cardiometabolic variable (Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance)-modified responses. RESULTS: Postprandial insulin and glucose were reduced when individuals interrupted prolonged sitting with bouts of light physical activity, but not with standing. Reductions in time-averaged postprandial insulin were more pronounced if individuals were South Asian compared with white European (-18.9 mU·L [-23.5%] vs -8.2 mU·L [-9.3%]), female compared with male (-15.0 mU·L [-21.2%] vs -12.1 mU·L [-17.6%]) or had a BMI ≥27.2 kg·m (-20.9 mU·L [-22.9%] vs -8.7 mU·L [-18.2%]). Similarly, being female (-0.4 mmol·L [-0.6 mmol·L, -0.2 mmol·L], -6.8% vs -0.1 mmol·L [-0.3 mmol·L, 1 mmol·L], -1.7%) or having a BMI ≥27.2 kg·m (-0.4 mmol·L [-0.6 mmol·L, -0.2 mmol·L], -6.7% vs -0.2 mmol·L [-0.4 mmol·L, 0.0 mmol·L], -3.4%) modified the postprandial glucose response. No significant interactions were found for Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance or age. CONCLUSIONS: Being female, South Asian, or having a higher BMI, all predicted greater reductions in postprandial insulin, whereas being female and having a higher BMI predicted greater reductions in postprandial glucose when sitting was interrupted with light physical activity. These results could help to guide personalized interventions in high-risk participants for whom breaking prolonged sitting time with light activity may yield the greatest therapeutic potential.
Language eng
DOI 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002249
Field of Research 1106 Human Movement and Sports Sciences
1116 Medical Physiology
1117 Public Health and Health Services
HERDC Research category C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Free to Read? Yes
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30162671

Document type: Journal Article
Collections: Faculty of Health
School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences
Open Access Collection
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Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that permission has been obtained for items included in DRO. If you believe that your rights have been infringed by this repository, please contact drosupport@deakin.edu.au.