CARRYING out exercise during the
early teenage years could reduce a child's risk of developing diabetes
later in life, UK health experts say.
A STUDY led by the University of Exeter found that physical
activity provides the greatest benefits to fighting adolescent insulin
resistance, a condition which leads to high blood sugar and is a
precursor to type 2 diabetes.
But researchers found that while
exercise made a difference at age 13, it made no impact on insulin
resistance by the age of 16. They said their findings, published
in the journal Diabetologia, suggested that early teens should be
specifically targeted for reducing diabetes levels. Researchers
measured insulin resistance in the same 300 children every year from the
age of
nine through to 16 by using accelerometers (electronic motion
sensors) worn around the child's waist.
The results showed that the condition was 17 per cent lower in the
more active adolescents at the age of 13, but this difference diminished
progressively over the next three years and had disappeared completely
by age 16, when insulin resistance levels were much lower.
Dr
Brad Metcalf, of the University of Exeter's School of Sport and Health
Science, said the findings had implications for future interventions in
reducing the insulin resistance of children. "Insulin resistance rises dramatically from age nine to 13 years, then falls to the same extent until age 16," he said. "Our study found that physical activity reduced this early-teenage peak in insulin resistance, but had no impact at age 16."
A reduction in this peak could lessen the demand on the cells that
produce insulin during this critical period, which may preserve them for
longer in later life, Dr Metcalf said.
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