A brisk walk may temporarily improve the body’s handling of dietary fats regardless of body weight
A 90-minute walk lowered triglycerides and
improved endothelial function in a small group of lean and obese
men, with benefits persisting into the following day, even after
participants ate a fatty meal, according to an article in the December
21st issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
“Just one brisk walk substantially improved
blood vessel function both before and during the hours after eating
a fatty meal, and the exercise improved the body’s handling of dietary
fat to the same extent irrespective of whether someone was lean
or obese,” said Jason M. Gill, Ph.D., lead author of the study.
“The differences observed in blood fat levels
and in blood vessel function following just one workout are remarkable,
particularly as these were evident for at least 24 hours after completion
of exercise,” he said. “Recent research has shown that blood vessel
function is impaired for a few hours after eating fatty food, and
this may be one reason why the rise in blood fats seen after eating
seems to contribute to the development of heart disease. As we have
known for some time that exercising before eating fatty food reduces
this rise in blood fat levels, we thought that a workout before
eating a fatty meal could help to prevent the post-meal decline
in blood vessel function.”
The researchers studied 10 lean and 10 obese
middle-aged men. Each man was tested twice for his response to a
fatty meal, with the tests performed a week or two apart. On the
afternoon before one of the tests, each man walked on a treadmill
for 90 minutes. No exercise was done the day before the other test.
Exercise reduced triglyceride concentrations
by 25 percent both before and after the fatty meal. Similar responses
were seen in both the lean and the obese men.
Particularly striking, according to Gill, was the effect of the
long walk on the functioning of tiny blood vessels in the forearms
of subjects as measured by laser Doppler imaging. Overall, the responsiveness
of the endothelium, measured before the fatty meal, was 25 percent
better following the treadmill walk.
Although the fatty meal reduced blood vessel
function whether or not the men had exercised the previous afternoon,
the decline was not as great after exercise. Endothelium-dependent
function was 15 percent higher and endothelium-independent function
was 20 percent higher in the exercise trial than in the control
trial, and again the benefits were seen in both the lean and obese
men.
While the benefits of regular physical activity
are well-established, the researchers say this study suggests some
possible explanations for the protective effects that exercise can
both improve the way the body metabolizes food and help blood vessels
resist the harmful effects of fatty foods. This trial also demonstrated
that a single exercise session can provide immediate benefits that
last at least a day.
“Ninety minutes of exercise is a long time,
but it is important to note that the exercise was not strenuous
and even obese men who were unused to exercise completed the walk
without difficulty. Having said that, we appreciate that many people
will struggle to fit this amount of exercise into their busy schedules.
The good news is that we have previously shown that as little as
30 minutes of exercise has a beneficial effect on the blood fat
responses following a fatty meal and that accumulating exercise
in two or three short sessions throughout the day has the same beneficial
effect in this respect as one longer session. The size of the benefit
is related to the number of calories burned during exercise, so
any exercise you do will be beneficial, it’s just that if you do
twice as much, you get twice the benefit,” Gill said.
Gill noted that this study, which was funded
by the British Heart Foundation, involved only 20 men, so he would
like to see the findings confirmed by larger studies.
David S. Celermajer, MD, PhD, who was not
connected to the study, called it an excellent and interesting article.
He noted that while most such studies test people after they have
been fasting for many hours, this study looked at what happened
in people under more typical conditions, when they have recently
eaten a meal.
“Therefore the current study addresses a
real ‘area of need’ in research, as it studies changes in vessel
function after a meal and investigates the effect of a simple intervention,
a long period of low-grade exercise before the meal,” Celermajer
said. “As the authors write, the major novel finding of this study
is therefore that a single session of moderate exercise, rather
than most previous studies, which have examined the effects of chronic
exercise, can significantly improve small vessel vasodilator function.
This suggests that exercise can have acute as well as chronic benefits
on the vasculature.”
Celermajer said that although this study
probably won’t prompt any changes in exercise recommendations, it
does put a spotlight on research into the effects of exercise on
blood vessel function and how the body processes food.
“It would be clearly of interest to examine
whether shorter bursts of exercise such as 10 to 15 minutes, which
might be clinically applicable, have similar benefits on post-meal
vascular and metabolic factors, compared with the 90-minute sessions
studied in this paper.”
|