Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women
Type 2 diabetes increases bone fracture risk in postmenopausal women. Usual treatment with anti-resorptive bisphosphonate drugs has some undesirable side effects, which justified our interest in the osteogenic potential of nutrition and exercise. Since meal eating reduces bone resorption, downhill l...
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doaj-438460a657ba4de58aef1a9d9f62a0b92020-11-24T21:27:38ZengMDPI AGNutrients2072-66432019-06-01117149410.3390/nu11071494nu11071494Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal WomenKatarina T. Borer0Qingyun Zheng1Akram Jafari2Saba Javadi3Thomas Kernozek4School of Kinesiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USASchool of Physical Education, Henan University Kaifeng, 475000 Henan, ChinaIslamic Azad University Shahrekord Branch, 166 Shahrekord, IranSchool of Kinesiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USADepartment of Health Professions, Physical Therapy Program, University of Wisconsin –La Crosse, La Crosse, WI 54601, USAType 2 diabetes increases bone fracture risk in postmenopausal women. Usual treatment with anti-resorptive bisphosphonate drugs has some undesirable side effects, which justified our interest in the osteogenic potential of nutrition and exercise. Since meal eating reduces bone resorption, downhill locomotion increases mechanical stress, and brief osteogenic responsiveness to mechanical stress is followed by several hours of refractoriness, we designed a study where 40-min of mechanical stress was manipulated by treadmill walking uphill or downhill. Exercise preceded or followed two daily meals by one hour, and the meals and exercise bouts were 7 hours apart. Fifteen subjects each performed two of five trials: No exercise (SED), uphill exercise before (UBM) or after meals (UAM), and downhill exercise before (DBM) or after meals (DAM). Relative to SED trial, osteogenic response, defined as the ratio of osteogenic C-terminal propeptide of type I collagen (CICP) over bone-resorptive C-terminal telopeptide of type-I collagen (CTX) markers, increased in exercise-after-meal trials, but not in exercise-before-meal trials. CICP/CTX response rose significantly after the first exercise-after-meal bout in DAM, and after the second one in UAM, due to a greater CICP rise, and not a decline in CTX. Post-meal exercise, but not the pre-meal exercise, also significantly lowered serum insulin response and homeostatic model (HOMA-IR) assessment of insulin resistance.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/7/1494osteogenesismarkers of bone formation and resorptionnutrient intakeexercise and meal timingHOMA-IRparathyroid hormonecortisol |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Katarina T. Borer Qingyun Zheng Akram Jafari Saba Javadi Thomas Kernozek |
spellingShingle |
Katarina T. Borer Qingyun Zheng Akram Jafari Saba Javadi Thomas Kernozek Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women Nutrients osteogenesis markers of bone formation and resorption nutrient intake exercise and meal timing HOMA-IR parathyroid hormone cortisol |
author_facet |
Katarina T. Borer Qingyun Zheng Akram Jafari Saba Javadi Thomas Kernozek |
author_sort |
Katarina T. Borer |
title |
Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women |
title_short |
Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women |
title_full |
Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women |
title_fullStr |
Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nutrient Intake Prior to Exercise Is Necessary for Increased Osteogenic Marker Response in Diabetic Postmenopausal Women |
title_sort |
nutrient intake prior to exercise is necessary for increased osteogenic marker response in diabetic postmenopausal women |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Nutrients |
issn |
2072-6643 |
publishDate |
2019-06-01 |
description |
Type 2 diabetes increases bone fracture risk in postmenopausal women. Usual treatment with anti-resorptive bisphosphonate drugs has some undesirable side effects, which justified our interest in the osteogenic potential of nutrition and exercise. Since meal eating reduces bone resorption, downhill locomotion increases mechanical stress, and brief osteogenic responsiveness to mechanical stress is followed by several hours of refractoriness, we designed a study where 40-min of mechanical stress was manipulated by treadmill walking uphill or downhill. Exercise preceded or followed two daily meals by one hour, and the meals and exercise bouts were 7 hours apart. Fifteen subjects each performed two of five trials: No exercise (SED), uphill exercise before (UBM) or after meals (UAM), and downhill exercise before (DBM) or after meals (DAM). Relative to SED trial, osteogenic response, defined as the ratio of osteogenic C-terminal propeptide of type I collagen (CICP) over bone-resorptive C-terminal telopeptide of type-I collagen (CTX) markers, increased in exercise-after-meal trials, but not in exercise-before-meal trials. CICP/CTX response rose significantly after the first exercise-after-meal bout in DAM, and after the second one in UAM, due to a greater CICP rise, and not a decline in CTX. Post-meal exercise, but not the pre-meal exercise, also significantly lowered serum insulin response and homeostatic model (HOMA-IR) assessment of insulin resistance. |
topic |
osteogenesis markers of bone formation and resorption nutrient intake exercise and meal timing HOMA-IR parathyroid hormone cortisol |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/11/7/1494 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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