Short, frequent high-intensity physical activity breaks reduce appetite compared with a continuous moderate-intensity exercise bout
Name:
REPOSITORY_Breaking+sitting+an ...
Size:
485.4Kb
Format:
PDF
Description:
author's accepted version
Issue Date
2022-12-06Subjects
physical activity, Appetite, Nutrition, Sedentary behaviourphysical activity
appetite
nutrition
sedentary behaviour
Subject Categories::C600 Sports Science
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A single exercise session can affect appetite-regulating hormones and suppress appetite. The effects of short, regular physical activity breaks across the day on appetite are unclear. This study investigated the effects of breaking up sitting with high-intensity physical activity versus a single bout of moderate-intensity exercise and prolonged sitting on appetite control. In this randomised crossover trial, 14 sedentary, inactive adults (seven women) completed three, 8-h experimental conditions: 1) prolonged sitting (SIT); 2) 30-min of moderate-intensity exercise followed by prolonged sitting (EX-SIT), and 3) sitting with 2 min 32 s of high-intensity physical activity every hour (SIT-ACT). Physical activity energy expenditure was matched between EX-SIT and SIT-ACT. Subjective appetite was measured every 30-min with acylated ghrelin and total peptide-YY (PYY) measured hourly in response to two standardised test meals. An ad libitum buffet meal was provided at the end of each condition. Based on linear mixed model analysis, total area under the curve for satisfaction was 16% higher (p=0.021) and overall appetite was 11% lower during SIT-ACT versus EX-SIT (p=0.018), with no differences between SIT-ACT and SIT. Time series analysis indicated that SIT-ACT reduced subjective appetite during the majority of the post-lunch period compared with SIT and EX-SIT, with some of these effects reversed earlier in the afternoon (p<0.05). Total PYY and acylated ghrelin did not differ between conditions. Relative energy intake was 760 kJ lower during SIT-ACT versus SIT (p=0.024). High-intensity physical activity breaks may be effective in acutely suppressing appetite; yet, appetite-regulating hormones may not explain such responses.Citation
Maylor BD, Zakrzewski-Fruer JK, Orton CJ, Bailey DP (2022) 'Short, frequent high-intensity physical activity breaks reduce appetite compared with a continuous moderate-intensity exercise bout', Endocrine Connections, 12 (2), e220259Journal
Endocrine ConnectionsPubMed ID
36445234Type
ArticleLanguage
enEISSN
2049-3614Sponsors
This work was supported by funding from the Society for Endocrinology.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1530/EC-22-0259
Scopus Count
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item:
- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Related articles
- Breaking up sitting with short frequent or long infrequent physical activity breaks does not lead to compensatory changes in appetite, appetite-regulating hormones or energy intake.
- Authors: Maylor BD, Zakrzewski-Fruer JK, Stensel DJ, Orton CJ, Bailey DP
- Issue date: 2023 Mar 1
- Breaking up prolonged sitting time with walking does not affect appetite or gut hormone concentrations but does induce an energy deficit and suppresses postprandial glycaemia in sedentary adults.
- Authors: Bailey DP, Broom DR, Chrismas BC, Taylor L, Flynn E, Hough J
- Issue date: 2016 Mar
- Beneficial postprandial lipaemic effects of interrupting sedentary time with high-intensity physical activity versus a continuous moderate-intensity physical activity bout: A randomised crossover trial.
- Authors: Maylor BD, Zakrzewski-Fruer JK, Orton CJ, Bailey DP
- Issue date: 2018 Dec
- Interrupting Prolonged Sitting with Regular Activity Breaks does not Acutely Influence Appetite: A Randomised Controlled Trial.
- Authors: Mete EM, Perry TL, Haszard JJ, Homer AR, Fenemor SP, Rehrer NJ, Skeaff CM, Peddie MC
- Issue date: 2018 Jan 26
- Potential involvement of lactate and interleukin-6 in the appetite-regulatory hormonal response to an acute exercise bout.
- Authors: Islam H, Townsend LK, McKie GL, Medeiros PJ, Gurd BJ, Hazell TJ
- Issue date: 2017 Sep 1