Obesity and diabetes increase cardiovascular risk by complex and incompletely known mechanisms. The aims of this study are : 1. to compare cardiac and vascular functions at rest and during exercise in 4 groups of age-matched men, without cardiovascular diseases but exhibiting increasing cardiovascular risk: trained and untrained healthy volunteers, obese and type 2 diabetic subjects 2. to test the effects of a 8-weeks long individualized training program on these functions in obese subjects and in diabetics patients.
Obesity, especially in its truncal distribution, and type 2 diabetes, increase cardiovascular risk. Mechanisms underlaying both early preclinical, and clinical cardiovascular complications are complex and still incompletely clarified. However, relationship between central, i.e. cardiac, and peripheral, i.e. vascular dysfunctions remains unclear, as well as their respective role in reduced exercise tolerance in these populations. Moreover, exercise training can improve both metabolic status and cardiovascular risk, and thus, has proven useful in management and prevention of chronic metabolic diseases. Nevertheless, respective effects of training on cardiac and vascular functions, and on their interaction at rest, but also during exercise, need to be clarified. Therefore, the aims of this study are : 1. to compare cardiac and vascular functions at rest and during a local maximal leg exercise in 4 groups of age-matched men, without cardiovascular diseases but exhibiting increasing cardiovascular risk: trained and untrained healthy volunteers, obese and type 2 diabetic subjects 2. to test the effects of a 8-weeks long individualized training program on these functions in obese subjects and in diabetics patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
59
no drugs added
Service d'Explorations et de Médecine Vasculaire University Hospital Center
Nîmes, Nimes, France
Peripherical vascular function at rest and during exercise
Time frame: before and after training
cardiac function at rest and during exercise
Time frame: before and after training (8 weeks)
metabolic profile (biological data)
Time frame: before and after training (8 weeks)
body composition and BMI
Time frame: before and after training (8 weeks)
VO2
Time frame: before and after training (8 weeks)
substrate utilization during exercise
Time frame: before and after training (8 weeks)
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