Acute effects of concentric and eccentric exercise on glucose metabolism and interleukin-6 concentration in healthy males

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Akute Effekte der konzentrischen und exzentrischen Übungen auf den Glukosestoffwechsel und Interleukin-6 Konzentration bei gesunden Männern
Autor:Philippe, Marc; Krüsmann, Philipp J.; Mersa, Lars; Eder, Erika E.; Gatterer, Hannes; Melmer, Andreas; Ebenbichler, Christoph; Burtscher, Martin
Erschienen in:Biology of sport
Veröffentlicht:33 (2016), 2, S. 153-158, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Elektronische Ressource (online) Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0860-021X, 2083-1862
Schlagworte:
Online Zugang:
Erfassungsnummer:PU201607004549
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

Acute muscle-damaging eccentric exercise (EE) negatively affects glucose metabolism. On the other hand, long-term eccentric endurance exercise seems to result in equal or superior positive effects on glucose metabolism compared to concentric endurance exercise. However, it is not known if acute non-muscle-damaging EE will have the same positive effects on glucose metabolism as acute concentric exercise (CE). Interleukin-6 (IL-6) released from the exercising muscles may be involved in the acute adaptations of glucose metabolism after CE and non-muscle-damaging EE. The aim of this study was to assess acute effects of uphill walking (CE) and non-muscle-damaging downhill walking (EE) on glucose metabolism and IL-6 secretion. Seven sedentary non-smoking, healthy males participated in a crossover trial consisting of a 1 h uphill (CE) and a 1 h downhill (EE) walking block on a treadmill. Venous blood samples were drawn before (pre), directly after (acute) and 24 h after (post) exercise. An oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was performed before and 24 h after exercise. Glucose tolerance after 1 and 2 hours significantly improved 24 hours after CE (-10.12+/-3.22%: P=0.039; -13.40+/-8.24%: P=0.028). After EE only the 1-hour value was improved (-5.03+/-5.48%: P=0.043). Acute IL-6 concentration rose significantly after CE but not after EE. We conclude that both a single bout of CE and a single bout of non-muscle-damaging EE elicit positive changes in glucose tolerance even in young, healthy subjects. Our experiment indicates that the overall metabolic cost is a major trigger for acute adaptations of glucose tolerance after exercise, but only the IL-6 production during EE was closely related to changes in glycaemic control.