원문정보
초록
영어
The purpose of this study is to assess the combined exercise program (12 weeks exercise training: resistance and aerobic) and 6 weeks detraining on the correlation of metabolic syndrome markers and plasma adiponectin level in two groups. Subjects were separated into two groups (exercise training group [EG: n=8] and control group [CG, n=7]). EG underwent an 12-week training (two times aerobic training per week and two times resistance training per week, more than 40 min). After 12 weeks exercise training and 6 weeks detraining, we evaluated metabolic syndrome markers and plasma adiponectin at 3 periods periods (baseline, EBP; 12 weeks exercise program, 12 EP; 12 weeks and 6 weeks detraining, 12+6 EDP) in overweight and obese children. Compared with the CG, After the 12 weeks exercise treatment, weight, body mass index, waist girth, body fat, percentage body fat, lean body mass, percentage lean body, systolic blood pressure, insulin and homeostatic model assessment (HOMA) indices were significantly lower, and plasma adiponectin level were not altered in the EG. After the 6 weeks detraining, insulin, insulin resistance and plasma adiponectin level were significantly increased in the EG. Adiponectin between after 12 weeks exercise intervention and 6 weeks detraining were significantly positive correlations with lean body mass, percent lean body and negative correlation with percent body fat, insulin, insulin resistance. In conclusion, after 12 weeks exercise treatment, plasma adiponectin level wasn't changed significantly but, after 6 weeks detraining, it was significantly increased. These findings suggest that combined exercise training is not only an effective tool in the management of metabolic syndrome markers in the training periods but also that these change were kept or additive effecting even after 6 weeks of detraining periods.