More Power to You  
 
    Site Map | Search  

 home Company Products Diabetes Care OneTouch Gold Professionals
  Diabetes Essentials
  Why Test?
  Managing Diabetes
  Diabetes News
  Diabetes Resources

LifeScan

 

Diabetes News
Exercise may lower teens' risk of type 2 diabetes

Last Updated: 2009-01-16 16:40:39 -0400 (Reuters Health)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - New research shows that teenagers who are moderately active burn more calories and metabolize blood sugar more efficiently than their sedentary peers -- a fact that may protect them from type 2 diabetes.

Type 2 diabetes develops when the body can no longer properly use the blood-sugar regulating hormone insulin, causing blood sugar, or blood "glucose," levels to soar. The disorder is closely linked to obesity, but studies in adults have shown that regular exercise can prevent or delay its onset.

Whether the same is true of children and teenagers has been unclear.

The question is important because rising rates of childhood obesity are leading to rising rates of type 2 diabetes.

For the new study, reported in the journal Diabetes Care, researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham outfitted 32 male and female teenagers with accelerometers -- small devices worn on the hip that record the body's movement throughout the day.

The researchers found that teens who were moderately active over 1 week generally had a higher metabolism at rest than those who were more sedentary. They also had better results on tests of glucose tolerance, a measure of how well the body metabolizes carbohydrates. People with impaired glucose tolerance may go on to develop diabetes.

While the study was short-term, the results suggest that regular exercise could help protect teenagers from both obesity and type 2 diabetes, write Amy S. Thomas and her colleagues.

They also point out that the teenagers in the study got very little vigorous exercise; instead moderate activity, like walking, seemed to improve metabolism.

Further studies, the researchers conclude, are needed to see physical activity translates into lower rates of obesity and diabetes.

SOURCE: Diabetes Care, January 2009.

Back to Diabetes News Index  

 

diabetes news
Circulatory problems still bedevil diabetics
Teens not urged to activity by pedometers/texts
Cardiac anomalies seen in poorly controlled diabetes
Type 2 diabetes raises risk of pancreatitis: study

More News

 



Search LifeScan's
Diabetes News archive:
Enter keyword(s):

     
 
   

Search Tips

  Accessibility E-mail This Print This
 
 

The health information on this Web site is for general background purposes and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for specific conditions. Seek prompt medical attention for health care questions you have. Consult your physician before making changes to your medication, diet, fitness program, or blood glucose testing schedules.