Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2910051 | Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome: Clinical Research & Reviews | 2015 | 5 Pages |
AimsMetabolic syndrome (MetS) is often accompanied by pro-oxidative and pro-inflammatory processes. Lifestyle modification (LiSM) may act as primary treatment for these processes. This study aimed to elucidate influencing factors on changes of malondialdehyde (MDA) and C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations after a LiSM intervention.MethodsSixty subjects (53 yrs, 84% women) clinically approved to attend a 20 weeks LiSM-program were submitted to weekly nutritional counseling and physical activities combining aerobic (3 times/week) and resistance (2 times/week) exercises. Before and after intervention they were assessed for anthropometric, clinical, cardiorespiratory fitness test (CRF) and laboratory markers. Statistical analyses performed were multiple regression analysis and backward stepwise with p < 0.05 and R2 as influence index.ResultsLiSM was responsible for elevations in CRF, healthy eating index (HEI), total plasma antioxidant capacity (TAP) and HDL-C along with reductions in waist circumference measures and MetS (47–40%) prevalence. MDA and CRP did not change after LiSM, however, we observed that MDA concentrations were positively influenced (R2 = 0.35) by fasting blood glucose (β = 0.64) and HOMA-IR (β = 0.58) whereas CRP concentrations were by plasma gamma-glutamyltransferase activity (β = 0.54; R2 = 0.29).ConclusionsPro-oxidant and pro-inflammatory states of MetS can be attenuated after lifestyle modification if glucose metabolism homeostasis were recovered and if liver inflammation were reduced, respectively.