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Exercise therapy in type 2 diabetes: state of the art
Dominique Hansen, PhD, FESC
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State-of-the-art exercise in T2DM
Effectiveness of exercise intervention Prevention Treatment Novel/new exercise modalities Experimental manupulations Future of exercise therapy Where do we go from here?
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Prevention of T2DM
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Prevention of T2DM
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Treatment of T2DM Qiu S, et al. PLoS One Oct 17;9(10):e109767
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Treatment of T2DM Umpierre D, et al. JAMA 2011; 305:
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Treatment of T2DM
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Treatment of T2DM Umpierre D, et al. Diabetologia 2013; 56:
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Optimizing exercises
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Optimizing exercises
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
Changes in peripheral insulin sensitivity after three months of endurance type exercise training with exercise sessions performed in either a fasted (solid lines) or postprandial state (dotted lines).
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New/other exercise types
Fasted Postprandial Time effect Group *time effect Pretest Posttest P value Fasting blood glucose (mmol/l) 11.4 ± 4.4 9.8 ± 5.0 9.0 ± 2.9 7.8 ± 2.0 <0.05 NS HbA1c (%) 7.9 ± 1.8 7.7 ± 1.7 6.9 ± 0.9 6.7 ± 0.9 HbA1c (mmol/l) 63 ± 7 61 ± 7 52 ± 4 50 ± 4 M (mg/kg/min) 11.6 ± 12.9 20.6 ± 17.9 14.5 ± 15.7 25.1 ± 18.6 <0.01
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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New/other exercise types
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Difficulties ahead Type 2 diabetes
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Difficulties ahead AMI with PCI or CABG Hypercholesterolemia
Heart failure Hypertension Sarcopenia Cardiomyopathy Type 2 diabetes Obesity Pacemaker/ICD Claudicating intermittens
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And what to do with prescription of certain medications?
Difficulties ahead And what to do with prescription of certain medications? Beta-blockers Statins Sulfonylurea/meglitinide Exogenous insulin administration … And what to do with certain adverse events during exercise testing? Myocardial ischemia Exercise-induced cardiac arrhythmias
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And what to do with prescription of certain medications?
Difficulties ahead And what to do with prescription of certain medications? Beta-blockers Statins Sulfonylurea/meglitinide Exogenous insulin administration … And what about safety precautions during exercise for all these indications? Nobody really knows….
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Comparing different clinicians
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Comparing different clinicians
Case 1 Case 2 Case 3 Case 4 Case 5 Age: 65 years Body height: cm Body weight: 65 kg Sex: male VO2max: ml/min (116% of predicted normal value) Resting HR: 55 bts/min Peak exercise HR: 123 bts/min Total cholesterol: 180 mg/dl Fasting glycaemia: 92 mg/dl Blood pressure: 145/82 mmHg Medication intake: beta-blocker, nitrate, statin, antiplatelet. Referred to rehabilitation for: acute myocardial infarction with PCI. Co-morbidities: None. Age: 55 years Body height: cm Body weight: 85 kg Sex: female VO2max: ml/min (108% of predicted normal value) Resting HR: 102 bts/min Peak exercise HR: 151 bts/min Total cholesterol: 267 mg/dl Fasting glycaemia: 108 mg/dl Blood pressure: 115/72 mmHg Medication intake: statin, ACE-inhibitor, orlistat, antiplatelet, metformin, sulfonylurea. Referred to rehabilitation for: obesity. Co-morbidities: type 2 diabetes. Additional information: gonarthrosis present. Age: 70 years Body height: cm Body weight: 80 kg VO2max: ml/min (73% of predicted normal value) Resting HR: 52 bts/min Peak exercise HR: 112 bts/min Total cholesterol: 189 mg/dl Fasting glycaemia: 102 mg/dl Blood pressure: 125/80 mmHg Medication intake: statin, antiplatelet, beta-blocker, digitalis, mucolytics, bronchodilators. Referred to rehabilitation for: AMI with CABG. Co-morbidities: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, mild COPD. Body height: cm Body weight: 90 kg VO2max: ml/min (90% of predicted normal value) Resting HR: 52 bts/min Peak exercise HR: 100 bts/min Total cholesterol: 234 mg/dl Fasting glycaemia: 115 mg/dl Blood pressure: 135/75 mmHg Medication intake: beta-blocker, statin, exogenous insulin, nitrate, erythropoietin. Referred to rehabilitation for: stable myocardial ischemia (threshold at 87 bts/min) Co-morbidities: renal failure, type 1 diabetes. Additional information: chronic aspecific low back pain present. Age: 79 years Body height: cm Body weight: 59 kg VO2max: ml/min (88% of predicted normal value) Resting HR: 56 bts/min Peak exercise HR: 111 bts/min Total cholesterol: 178 mg/dl Fasting glycaemia: 125 mg/dl Blood pressure: 135/87 mmHg Medication intake: beta-blocker, bronchodilator, antiplatelet. Referred to rehabilitation for: peripheral vascular disease. Co-morbidities: cachexia and frailty, COPD.
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Comparing different clinicians
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Comparing different clinicians
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Comparing different clinicians
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Need for standardization
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EXPERT tool
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EXPERT tool
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EXPERT tool
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EXPERT tool
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EXPERT tool
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EXPERT Tool Digital, interactive decision support tool for exercise prescription Endorsed by the European Association of Preventive Cardiology
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Time for telemedicine?
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Drug-exercise interaction?
+ = Enhanced effects of exercise? + = Enhanced effects of drugs?
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One last thing to (re)consider…
But how, by what mechanism? By HbA1c reduction only?
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Or maybe two things to (re)consider?
This is often what we aim for…. But this is what we should aim for….
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