Glycemic responses to strenuous training in male professional cyclists with type 1 diabetes: a prospective observational study

IntroductionThis prospective observational study sought to establish the glycemic, physiological and dietary demands of strenuous exercise training as part of a 9-day performance camp in a professional cycling team with type 1 diabetes (T1D).Research design and methodsSixteen male professional cycli...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ open diabetes research & care 2020-04, Vol.8 (1), p.e001245, Article 001245
Hauptverfasser: McCarthy, Olivia, Eckstein, Max L, Scott, Sam N, Fontana, Federico Y, Christiansen, Mark P, Stettler, Christoph, Fisher, Miles, Bode, Bruce, Riddell, Michael C, Hayes, Charlotte, Lagrou, Peter L, Southerland, Phil, Moser, Othmar, Bracken, Richard M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IntroductionThis prospective observational study sought to establish the glycemic, physiological and dietary demands of strenuous exercise training as part of a 9-day performance camp in a professional cycling team with type 1 diabetes (T1D).Research design and methodsSixteen male professional cyclists with T1D on multiple daily injections (age: 27±4 years; duration of T1D: 11±5 years; body mass index: 22±2 kg/m2; glycated hemoglobin: 7%±1% (50±6 mmol/mol); maximum rate of oxygen consumption: 73±4 mL/kg/min) performed road cycle sessions (50%–90% of the anaerobic threshold, duration 1–6 hours) over 9 consecutive days. Glycemic (Dexcom G6), nutrition and physiological data were collected throughout. Glycemic data were stratified into predefined glycemic ranges and mapped alongside exercise physiology and nutritional parameters, as well as split into daytime and night-time phases for comparative analysis. Data were assessed by means of analysis of variance and paired t-tests. A p value of ≤0.05 (two-tailed) was statistically significant.ResultsHigher levels of antecedent hypoglycemia in the nocturnal hours were associated with greater time spent in next-day hypoglycemia overall (p=0.003) and during exercise (p=0.019). Occurrence of nocturnal hypoglycemia was associated with over three times the risk of next-day hypoglycemia (p
ISSN:2052-4897
2052-4897
DOI:10.1136/bmjdrc-2020-001245