What you eat after exercise shapes or misshapes you
January 29th, 2010 - 3:57 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Sydney, Jan 29 (IANS) The benefits of exercise can be greatly affected by the food we eat after it, a new study says.
“Differences in what you eat after exercise produce different effects on the body’s metabolism,” said the senior study author, Jeffrey F. Horowitz of the University of Michigan (U-M).
The study follows up on several previous studies that demonstrate that many benefits of exercise are transient: one exercise session produces benefits to the body that taper off, generally within hours or a few days.
“Many of the improvements in metabolic health associated with exercise stem largely from the most recent session of exercise, rather than from an increase in ‘fitness’ per se,” Horowitz said.
“But exercise doesn’t occur in a vacuum, and it is very important to look at both the effects of exercise and what you’re eating after exercise,” he said.
Specifically, the study found that exercise enhanced insulin sensitivity, particularly when meals eaten after the exercise session contained relatively low carbohydrate content.
Enhanced insulin sensitivity means that it is easier for the body to take up sugar from the blood stream into tissues like muscles, where it can be stored or used as fuel.
Impaired insulin sensitivity (i.e., “insulin resistance”) is a hallmark of Type II diabetes, as well as being a major risk factor for other chronic diseases, such as heart disease.
But the study also found that one does not have to starve after exercise to reap its benefits.
The study is based on healthy sedentary men, aged between 28 and 30 years, said a U-M release.
The study was published in the Journal of Applied Physiology.
- Eat fewer carbs to get the most out of exercise - Jan 29, 2010
- Aerobic exercise 'may curb non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in obese' - Apr 14, 2011
- Cells coordinate to promote exercise - Sep 20, 2011
- Potential new non-insulin treatment for type 1 diabetes found - Mar 25, 2011
- Modest exercise can undo negative effects of belly fat - Apr 24, 2009
- Nutraceuticals in energy drinks, foods - Mar 20, 2011
- Exercise can improve insulin sensitivity in obese sedentary adolescents - Sep 02, 2009
- Fat rich breakfast might be healthy - Mar 31, 2010
- Brain insulin plays critical role in development of diabetes - Feb 17, 2011
- Understanding causes of insulin resistance (Part-I) - Dec 28, 2010
- Rye and barley products 'reduce obesity risk' - May 06, 2010
- Human enzyme holds promise of weight loss - Nov 15, 2011
- Study exhibits the 'couch potato effect' in mice - Dec 01, 2010
- Exercise, healthy diet can combat diabetes: Experts (Nov 14 is World Diabetes Day) - Nov 14, 2010
- Obese children likely to have stiffer arteries - Apr 13, 2010
Tags: benefits of exercise, blood stream, carbohydrate content, chronic diseases, effects of exercise, exercise session, hallmark, heart disease, horowitz, insulin resistance, insulin sensitivity, jan 29, journal of applied physiology, low carbohydrate, metabolism, risk factor, sedentary men, study also found that, study author, type ii diabetes