Business Standard

Aquatic exercise as good as others for diabetics

- SHEREEN LEHMAN

For people with type 2 diabetes, exercising in water is just as effective at improving blood sugar as other types of workouts, according to a review of existing research.

People who face obstacles in getting to a gym or exercising outdoors should consider hitting the pool to meet their exercise goals, the authors write in Acta Diabetolog­ica.

Exercise helps lower blood sugar levels, which is a primary goal for diabetes management, but it also contribute­s to positive changes in body compositio­n, blood pressure and cholestero­l, and helps increase overall quality of life, the study authors note.

But only about 30 per cent of people with type 2 diabetes adhere to a traditiona­l exercise programme that includes walking, running or resistance training.

“Our research group has conducted several exercise studies in people who have type 2 diabetes. We noticed that some people could not participat­e in our land-based (e.g., walking) studies due to barriers such as joint pain,” lead author Normand Boule told Reuters Health by email.

“We then planned to do a study on alternate forms of exercise which could address some of these barriers. Aquatic exercise seemed to be a logical alternativ­e,” said Boule, a physical education and recreation researcher at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada.

But when Boule and his colleagues looked for prior studies on this topic, they were surprised to find that not many water-based exercise studies had been done with people with type 2 diabetes.

“These studies had few participan­ts, making it difficult to fully understand how waterbased exercise may benefit individual­s with type 2 diabetes,” he said, so they decided to pool the results in a socalled meta-analysis for a bigger picture.

They drew on nine previously published studies that examined aquatic exercises and blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes. The water-based exercises included water walking or running, water cycling and various types of water-based fitness classes.

Two studies compared water exercise to land-based exercise directly. The rest compared water exercisers to similar but sedentary people, or compared individual­s to themselves before starting an exercise regimen and after eight weeks or more of water exercise.

The researcher­s found that after eight weeks, water exercisers had reduced a marker of long-term blood sugar levels known as HbA1C by the same amount as people doing landbased exercise.

In addition, after 8 to 12 weeks of water-based exercise, individual­s may have improvemen­ts in blood pressure, cholestero­l, and triglyceri­des, Boule said.

There are some limitation­s to the analysis. Most of the studies were short-term, so more research is needed to see how water exercises compare with land-based exercises over time, Boule’s team writes.

While this study may be sufficient to show improved blood sugars, it would be important to conduct longerterm studies for several reasons, Boule said.

 ?? PHOTO: ISTOCK ?? People who face obstacles in getting to a gym or exercising outdoors should consider hitting the pool to meet their exercise goals, a study suggests
PHOTO: ISTOCK People who face obstacles in getting to a gym or exercising outdoors should consider hitting the pool to meet their exercise goals, a study suggests

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