Cargando…

A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity

BACKGROUND: This is an exploratory pilot study of novel technology enabling people with mobility disability to walk with minimal effort, in the “sedentary range”. The study’s premise is that impairment of the leading physical activity of daily living, walking, is a major contributor to a dysmetaboli...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Godwin, Ellen M., Uglialoro, Anthony D., Ali, Andaleeb, Yearwood, Leah, Banerji, Mary Ann, Kral, John G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6382100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30785891
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211529
_version_ 1783396606563844096
author Godwin, Ellen M.
Uglialoro, Anthony D.
Ali, Andaleeb
Yearwood, Leah
Banerji, Mary Ann
Kral, John G.
author_facet Godwin, Ellen M.
Uglialoro, Anthony D.
Ali, Andaleeb
Yearwood, Leah
Banerji, Mary Ann
Kral, John G.
author_sort Godwin, Ellen M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This is an exploratory pilot study of novel technology enabling people with mobility disability to walk with minimal effort, in the “sedentary range”. The study’s premise is that impairment of the leading physical activity of daily living, walking, is a major contributor to a dysmetabolic state driving many prevalent “civilization diseases” associated with insulin resistance. METHODS: We explore within-subject changes in standard oral glucose tolerance (OGT) tests including metabotropic molecules after 22 twice-weekly, 30-minute bouts of weight-supported light-moderate physical activity in 16 non-diabetic obese, otherwise healthy, reproductive-age, volunteer women walking on an “anti-gravity” lower-body positive pressure (LBPP) treadmill. RESULTS: Subjects had reference base-line fasting plasma glucose and triglycerides (TG) but 2-hr OGT insulin levels of 467 ± 276 pmol • liter(-1) (mean± S.D.) indicating nascent insulin resistance, compared to post-study 308 ± 179 (p = 0.002). Fasting TG decreased from 0.80 ± 0.30 mmol • liter(-1) to 0.71 ± 0.25 (p = 0.03). Concomitantly plasma total ghrelin decreased from 69.6 ± 41.6 pmol • liter(-1) to 56.0 ± 41.3 (p = 0.008). There were no statistically significant changes in body weight or any correlations between weight change and cardiometabolic markers. However, there were robust positive correlations between changes among different classes of peptides including C-reactive protein–Interleukin 6, leptin–adiponectin, β-endorphin–oxytocin and orexin A (r (2) = 0.48–0.88). CONCLUSION: We conclude that brief, low-dose physical activity, walking on an anti-gravity LBPP treadmill may improve cardiometabolic risk, exhibiting favorable changes in neuro-regulatory peptides without weight loss in people with problems walking.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6382100
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-63821002019-03-01 A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity Godwin, Ellen M. Uglialoro, Anthony D. Ali, Andaleeb Yearwood, Leah Banerji, Mary Ann Kral, John G. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: This is an exploratory pilot study of novel technology enabling people with mobility disability to walk with minimal effort, in the “sedentary range”. The study’s premise is that impairment of the leading physical activity of daily living, walking, is a major contributor to a dysmetabolic state driving many prevalent “civilization diseases” associated with insulin resistance. METHODS: We explore within-subject changes in standard oral glucose tolerance (OGT) tests including metabotropic molecules after 22 twice-weekly, 30-minute bouts of weight-supported light-moderate physical activity in 16 non-diabetic obese, otherwise healthy, reproductive-age, volunteer women walking on an “anti-gravity” lower-body positive pressure (LBPP) treadmill. RESULTS: Subjects had reference base-line fasting plasma glucose and triglycerides (TG) but 2-hr OGT insulin levels of 467 ± 276 pmol • liter(-1) (mean± S.D.) indicating nascent insulin resistance, compared to post-study 308 ± 179 (p = 0.002). Fasting TG decreased from 0.80 ± 0.30 mmol • liter(-1) to 0.71 ± 0.25 (p = 0.03). Concomitantly plasma total ghrelin decreased from 69.6 ± 41.6 pmol • liter(-1) to 56.0 ± 41.3 (p = 0.008). There were no statistically significant changes in body weight or any correlations between weight change and cardiometabolic markers. However, there were robust positive correlations between changes among different classes of peptides including C-reactive protein–Interleukin 6, leptin–adiponectin, β-endorphin–oxytocin and orexin A (r (2) = 0.48–0.88). CONCLUSION: We conclude that brief, low-dose physical activity, walking on an anti-gravity LBPP treadmill may improve cardiometabolic risk, exhibiting favorable changes in neuro-regulatory peptides without weight loss in people with problems walking. Public Library of Science 2019-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6382100/ /pubmed/30785891 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211529 Text en © 2019 Godwin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Godwin, Ellen M.
Uglialoro, Anthony D.
Ali, Andaleeb
Yearwood, Leah
Banerji, Mary Ann
Kral, John G.
A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
title A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
title_full A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
title_fullStr A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
title_full_unstemmed A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
title_short A pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
title_sort pilot study of metabolic fitness effects of weight-supported walking in women with obesity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6382100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30785891
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211529
work_keys_str_mv AT godwinellenm apilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT uglialoroanthonyd apilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT aliandaleeb apilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT yearwoodleah apilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT banerjimaryann apilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT kraljohng apilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT godwinellenm pilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT uglialoroanthonyd pilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT aliandaleeb pilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT yearwoodleah pilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT banerjimaryann pilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity
AT kraljohng pilotstudyofmetabolicfitnesseffectsofweightsupportedwalkinginwomenwithobesity