This study will evaluate the effects of impaired blood flow regulation on exercise. It will also determine whether the effects are more important in the heart or in the skeletal muscle tissue during exercise. In addition, this study will decide whether temporarily reversing these problems will improve blood flow control, improve heart and muscle tissue function and help improve exercise capacity in person with type 2 diabetes. This study will do so using two methods: (1) by giving vitamin C intravenously (IV) and (2) a three month exercise training program. Up to 100 subjects will be enrolled in this study.
The investigators have found that persons with type 2 diabetes have an impaired ability to perform exercise even without clinically apparent complications. The reasons for this marked abnormality are unknown but are important as the decreased ability to exercise could contribute to the decreased expenditure of physical activity frequently observed in this population and may potentially constitute an early marker of cardiovascular disease. The investigators wish to evaluate the effects of impaired blood flow regulation on exercise capacity and whether the effects are more important in the heart or in the skeletal muscle tissue during exercise. In addition, the investigators are determining whether correcting these abnormalities by two methods of improving blood flow regulation (acutely infusing Vitamin C or three months of chronic exercise training) leads to improved blood flow regulation, improved heart and skeletal muscle tissue function and hence to better exercise capacity in person with type 2 diabetes. This information will provide a more mechanistic understanding of causes of abnormal exercise responses observed in person with type 2 diabetes as well as whether and to what degree responses are modifiable. Interventions that reverse the exercise defect may facilitate patient adherence to prescribed physical activity programs and potentially decrease cardiovascular mortality in this large segment of the population.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
47
Three month exercise program located at the Anschutz Medical Campus at I-225 and Colfax. The program runs three times per week for about an hour each session. Gym is open Monday - Saturday during specific hours (morning, noon, evening).
During one exercise study visit, 0.06 grams of Vitamin C per kilogram fat-free mass per 100 milliliters (mL) of normal saline administered; Subjects will receive a bolus of 100mL Vitamin C solution given at 5ml/minute over 20 minutes followed by a "drip-infusion" given at 1.7ml/minute.
University of Colorado Denver
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Percent Change in Circumferential Strain Before and After Exercise at Baseline, After Vitamin C Infusion, and After Exercise Training
Characterize the purported cardiac dysfunction during exercise in people with type 2 diabetes (T2D). In a normal patient when measuring circumferential strain, results are negative with downward tracing (as strain is a relative change in length). Circumferential strain is a measurement of ventricular circumference within the heart vessels, measured via echocardiography.
Time frame: 7 months; Measures are made at rest and after exercise for baseline, at rest and after infusion for Vitamin C administration, and at rest and after exercise following the exercise training
Ejection Fraction: Percentage of Blood Leaving the Heart Before and After Exercise at Baseline, After a Vitamin C Infusion, and After Exercise Training
Evaluate potential changes in cardiac function by echocardiography following 2 interventions: Three months of exercise training and acute vitamin C administration. Ejection fraction (EF) is a measurement of the percentage of blood leaving your heart each time it contracts, typically measure by echocardiography. Numbers listed are absolute EF values.
Time frame: 7 months; Measures are made at rest for baseline, at rest for Vitamin C administration, and at rest following the exercise training
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