Higher baseline fat oxidation promotes gynoid fat mobilization in response to a 12 week exercise intervention in sedentary, obese black South African women.
Clicks: 357
ID: 17402
2019
This 12-week exercise intervention study assessed changes in cardiorespiratory fitness(CRF), energy expenditure (EE) and substrate utilization at rest and during exercise in obese, black South African (SA) women and explored associations with changes in body composition. Black SA women (BMI 30-40 kg.m-2, 20-35 y) were randomized into control (CTL, n=15, maintaining usual activity) or exercise (EXE, n=20; 12 weeks, 4d.wk-1, 40-60min.d-1 @ >70%HRpeak) groups. Pre- and post-intervention testing included: VO2peak, resting and steady state (50% VO2peak) EE and respiratory exchange and body composition (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)). Dietary intake (4d) and daily step-count (ActivPAL) was collected at pre-testing, 4, 8 & 12 weeks. EXE increased VO2peak (24.9±2.4 to 27.6±3.4 ml.min-1.kg-1; p<0.001) and steady state fat oxidation rates (7.5±2.5 to 9.0±2.7 mg.min-1.kg-1 fat-free soft tissue mass; p=0.003) (same relative exercise intensity). CTL remained unchanged (p>0.05). EXE reduced proportional gynoid fat mass (%total fat mass, p=0.002). Baseline resting carbohydrate oxidation rates (p=0.036) and steady state fat oxidation rates (p=0.021) explained 60.6% of the variability in ∆gynoid FM (p<0.001) in EXE. This 12-week exercise intervention improved CRF and steady state fat oxidation rates. Greater reliance on fat oxidation at baseline promoted proportional reductions in gynoid, not visceral, FM in response to exercise training. •Combined exercise training in obese black South African women increased cardiorespiratory fitness and rates of fat oxidation during steady state exercise. •Exercise training reduced proportional gynoid, not visceral, fat, potentially representing an ethnic/gender-specific response. •Baseline substrate utilization (resting and steady state exercise (50% VO2peak)) predicted changes in gynoid fat mass.
Reference Key |
clamp2019higherapplied
Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using
SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
|
---|---|
Authors | Clamp, Louise Diana;Mendham, Amy E;Kroff, Jacolene;Goedecke, Julia H; |
Journal | applied physiology, nutrition, and metabolism = physiologie appliquee, nutrition et metabolisme |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | 10.1139/apnm-2019-0460 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
Citations
No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.