Taking short
walks after meals can help reduce diabetes
Taking a short walk after meals, particularly when they
contain a substantial amount of carbohydrates, can help people with Type 2 diabetes reduce
their blood sugar levels, a study has found. The findings showed that
post-meal blood sugar levels dropped 12 per cent on average when the
participants followed the ‘walking after meals’ advice compared to walking at
any time of the day. ‘Most of this effect came from the highly significant
22 per cent reduction in blood sugar when walking after evening meals, which
were the most carbohydrate heavy, and were followed by the most sedentary
time,’ said lead author Andrew Reynolds from University of Otago in New
Zealand. Post-meal glucose is regarded as an important target in managing
Type 2 diabetes, given its independent contribution to overall blood sugar
control and cardiovascular risk, added Jim Mann, professor at University of
Otago.
‘Postprandial physical activity may avoid the need for an
increased total insulin dose or additional mealtime insulin injections that
might otherwise have been prescribed to lower glucose levels after eating,’
Mann said. An increase in insulin dose might, in turn, be associated with
weight gain in patients with type 2 diabetes, many of whom are already
overweight or obese, he stated. For the study, the researchers prescribed
walking to 41 patients with Type 2 diabetes in two-week blocks, separated by a
month. The results are published in the journal Diabetologia.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
20.10.2016
The one who
falls and gets up is so much stronger than the one who never fell
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