The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors

Higher serum levels of glucose, C-peptide and insulin have been linked to poorer breast cancer prognosis and fluctuations of these substances resulting from acute bouts of exercise in breast cancer survivors have not been studied. In this pilot study, 28 postmenopausal women were in 3 groups: contro...

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Main Author: Hunt, Sherry Celene
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40070
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-400702018-01-05T17:25:34Z The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors Hunt, Sherry Celene Higher serum levels of glucose, C-peptide and insulin have been linked to poorer breast cancer prognosis and fluctuations of these substances resulting from acute bouts of exercise in breast cancer survivors have not been studied. In this pilot study, 28 postmenopausal women were in 3 groups: controls (n = 10), aromatase inhibitor users (AI, n = 8) and breast cancer survivors not using aromatase inhibitors (BCS, n = 10). Fasting glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels were compared and changes in these substances with acute exercise of different intensities were explored. V0₂peak values were determined and fasting blood samples were obtained. Blood was collected before, immediately after, and 45 minutes after 2 exercise bouts: moderate (45 minutes at 60% V0₂peak) and intense (10 minutes at 85% V0₂peak). Fasting glucose, C-peptide and insulin values, plus HOMA-IR values, were homogeneous between groups. Exercise intensity affected glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels similarly in all 3 groups. For the breast cancer survivor groups combined (n = 19), the pre-post changes and post-recovery changes of glucose and C-peptide were significantly different between the moderate and intense bouts (glucose: p = 0.01 and 0.01; C-peptide: p = 0.04 and 0.04, respectively) showing greater increases in glucose and C-peptide during intense exercise. The pre-post change in insulin approached a significant difference between intensities (p = 0.09) showing a greater increase during intense exercise. Of importance, glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels all transiently increased with intense exercise in breast cancer survivors. In conclusion, more research is warranted on the possible detrimental effects of transiently high glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels induced by intense exercise on breast cancer etiology and prognosis. Education, Faculty of Kinesiology, School of Graduate 2012-01-13T17:53:07Z 2012-01-13T17:53:07Z 2012 2012-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40070 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Higher serum levels of glucose, C-peptide and insulin have been linked to poorer breast cancer prognosis and fluctuations of these substances resulting from acute bouts of exercise in breast cancer survivors have not been studied. In this pilot study, 28 postmenopausal women were in 3 groups: controls (n = 10), aromatase inhibitor users (AI, n = 8) and breast cancer survivors not using aromatase inhibitors (BCS, n = 10). Fasting glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels were compared and changes in these substances with acute exercise of different intensities were explored. V0₂peak values were determined and fasting blood samples were obtained. Blood was collected before, immediately after, and 45 minutes after 2 exercise bouts: moderate (45 minutes at 60% V0₂peak) and intense (10 minutes at 85% V0₂peak). Fasting glucose, C-peptide and insulin values, plus HOMA-IR values, were homogeneous between groups. Exercise intensity affected glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels similarly in all 3 groups. For the breast cancer survivor groups combined (n = 19), the pre-post changes and post-recovery changes of glucose and C-peptide were significantly different between the moderate and intense bouts (glucose: p = 0.01 and 0.01; C-peptide: p = 0.04 and 0.04, respectively) showing greater increases in glucose and C-peptide during intense exercise. The pre-post change in insulin approached a significant difference between intensities (p = 0.09) showing a greater increase during intense exercise. Of importance, glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels all transiently increased with intense exercise in breast cancer survivors. In conclusion, more research is warranted on the possible detrimental effects of transiently high glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels induced by intense exercise on breast cancer etiology and prognosis. === Education, Faculty of === Kinesiology, School of === Graduate
author Hunt, Sherry Celene
spellingShingle Hunt, Sherry Celene
The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
author_facet Hunt, Sherry Celene
author_sort Hunt, Sherry Celene
title The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
title_short The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
title_full The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
title_fullStr The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
title_full_unstemmed The effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
title_sort effect of exercise intensity on insulin levels in postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40070
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