Mechanisms of Fatigability With Diabetes
Mechanisms of Fatigability and the Protective Effects of Exercise in People With Diabetes
University of Michigan
80 participants
Sep 1, 2022
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Pre-diabetes (Pre-D) is a precursor to type 2 diabetes (T2D) and characterized by increased exercise fatigability of lower limb muscles, that can impede exercise performance. The cause for the increased fatigability in people with Pre-D is not known. Given the profound vascular disease present in people who have had uncontrolled diabetes for several years, we will determine whether dynamic, fatiguing contractions of the lower limb muscles in people with Pre-D are limited by vascular dysfunction at multiple levels along the vascular tree including the artery, arteriole, and/or capillary. This clinical trial involves a novel exercise training regime involving blood flow restriction to the exercising limb will be used as a probe to further understand the vascular mechanisms for increased fatigability in people with Pre-D and T2D. The long-term goal is to better understand what limits exercise and functional performance in people with diabetes to help develop targeted, more effective exercise programs.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria4
- Men and women adults 30 years to 85 years or less
- Pre-diabetes \[glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) of 5.7-6.4% and fasting plasma glucose 100-125 mg/dL at the time of initial screening\]
- Controls \[normoglycemic with a HbA1c level ≤5.6% and fasting blood glucose ≤ 99 mg/dL (5.5 mmol/L)\]
- Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus \[elevated glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) \>6.5% and \<10%\]
Exclusion Criteria10
- Signs or symptoms of neuropathy
- Medications associated with advanced stages of T2D including insulin
- Poor glycemic control (HbA1c\>10%)
- Peripheral edema
- Severe obesity (BMI, \>45kg·m-2)
- Untreated hypothyroidism
- Smoking
- Hypertension
- Cardiovascular or musculoskeletal disease that preclude exercise testing
- Hormone replacement drugs or vasoactive medications
Interventions
Each participant will attend 3 sessions per week for 8 weeks. Participants will perform low-load knee extension resistance training (20% of 1-RM) without blood flow restriction on the designated leg for 4 sets of contractions with 15 contractions per set of contractions with a 30 second rest between each set of contractions.
Each participant will attend 3 sessions per week for 8 weeks. Participants will perform low-load knee extension resistance training (20% of 1-RM) with blood flow restriction on the designated leg for 4 sets of contractions with 15 contractions per set of contractions with a 30 second rest between each set of contractions.
Locations(1)
View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov
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NCT04442451