Effects of interrupting prolonged sitting on postprandial glycemia and insulin responses: A network meta-analysis.

School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai 200438, China. Electronic address: quanminghui@163.com. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health-Bloomington, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA. Rehabilitation Medicine Center, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Jiaxing University, Jiaxing 314000, China. School of Sports Science and Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China. Department of Endocrinology, Yangpu Hospital Affiliated to Tongji University, Shanghai 200090, China. Institute of Physical Education, Normal College, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen 518061, China. School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai 200438, China. Department of Physical Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China. School of Kinesiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai 200438, China. Electronic address: chenpeijie@sus.edu.cn.

Journal of sport and health science. 2021;(4):419-429
Full text from:

Abstract

PURPOSE This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of physical activity (PA) interrupting prolonged sitting (PS) on postprandial glycemia and insulin responses among adults. METHODS PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and the China National Knowledge Infrastructure databases were searched through September 30, 2020. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that examined the effect of all forms of PA interrupting PS on postprandial glycemia and/or insulin responses among adults without chronic diseases were included in this study. The risk of bias of included studies was evaluated based on the Cochrane tool. A network meta-analysis was performed to estimate the summary standardized mean differences (SMDs) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs) with random effects. RESULTS Thirty crossover RCTs were included in our review. These RCTs included 9 types of interventions that interrupted PS. When compared to PS by itself, light-intensity PA intermittent interrupting (LPA-INT) PS and moderate-intensity PA intermittent interrupting (MPA-INT) PS significantly lowered postprandial glycemia (SMD = -0.46, 95%CI: -0.70 to -0.21; SMD = -0.69, 95%CI: -1.00 to -0.37, respectively) and significantly reduced postprandial insulin response (SMD = -0.46, 95%CI: -0.66 to -0.26; SMD = -0.47, 95%CI: -0.77 to -0.17, respectively). Results of the clustered ranking plot indicated that MPA-INT was the most effective intervention in lowering postprandial glycemia and insulin responses. CONCLUSION Replacing PS with MPA-INT or LPA-INT has a positive effect in reducing postprandial glycemia and insulin responses, with MPA-INT being the optimal intervention strategy.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Meta-Analysis ; Review

Metadata

MeSH terms : Blood Glucose ; Exercise ; Insulin