Moderate-intensity aerobic and resistance exercise is safe and favorably influences body composition in patients with quiescent Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A randomized controlled cross-over trial

  • Owen Cronin
  • , Wiley Barton
  • , Carthage Moran
  • , Donal Sheehan
  • , Ronan Whiston
  • , Helena Nugent
  • , Yvonne McCarthy
  • , Catherine B. Molloy
  • , Orla O'Sullivan
  • , Paul D. Cotter
  • , Michael G. Molloy
  • , Fergus Shanahan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Overweight and metabolic problems now add to the burden of illness in patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. We aimed to determine if a program of aerobic and resistance exercise could safely achieve body composition changes in patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Methods: A randomized, cross-over trial of eight weeks combined aerobic and resistance training on body composition assessed by Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometry was performed. Patients in clinical remission and physically inactive with a mean age of 25 ± 6.5 years and Body Mass Index of 28.9 ± 3.8 were recruited from a dedicated Inflammatory Bowel Disease clinic. Serum cytokines were quantified, and microbiota assessed using metagenomic sequencing. Results: Improved physical fitness was demonstrated in the exercise group by increases in median estimated VO2max (Baseline: 43.41mls/kg/min; post-intervention: 46.01mls/kg/min; p = 0.03). Improvement in body composition was achieved by the intervention group (n = 13) with a median decrease of 2.1% body fat compared with a non-exercising group (n = 7) (0.1% increase; p = 0.022). Lean tissue mass increased by a median of 1.59 kg and fat mass decreased by a median of 1.52 kg in the exercising group. No patients experienced a deterioration in disease activity scores during the exercise intervention. No clinically significant alterations in the α- and β-diversity of gut microbiota and associated metabolic pathways were evident. Conclusions: Moderate-intensity combined aerobic and resistance training is safe in physically unfit patients with quiescent Inflammatory Bowel Disease and can quickly achieve favourable body compositional changes without adverse effects. Trial registration: The study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov; Trial number: NCT02463916.

Original languageEnglish
Article number29
JournalBMC Gastroenterology
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Feb 2019

Keywords

  • Body composition
  • Clinical trials
  • Exercise
  • Microbiome

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