Nutrient And Hormone Delivery To Muscle: Interactions Between Insulin And Exercise
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$304,375.00
Summary
Exercise is known to be beneficial in the treatment and prevention of Type 2 diabetes and in particular muscle insulin resistance. Also, exercise and insulin share similar acute actions on muscle. Firstly, muscle contraction has a well established action to increase glucose uptake, and secondly, both muscle contraction and insulin act to increase capillary recruitment. This latter phenomenon is thought to enhance nutrient delivery and waste product removal. There is evidence that the increase in ....Exercise is known to be beneficial in the treatment and prevention of Type 2 diabetes and in particular muscle insulin resistance. Also, exercise and insulin share similar acute actions on muscle. Firstly, muscle contraction has a well established action to increase glucose uptake, and secondly, both muscle contraction and insulin act to increase capillary recruitment. This latter phenomenon is thought to enhance nutrient delivery and waste product removal. There is evidence that the increase in capillary flow due to muscle contraction is accompanied by increases in total blood flow. For insulin action we now have preliminary data to indicate that capillary recruitment occurs within a 5-10 min application of a physiologic dose of insulin independent of a change in total blood flow suggesting a redistribution of flow. Muscle contraction also increases capillary recruitment and it raises the question of whether similar mechanisms underlie insulin- and muscle contraction-induced capillary recruitment or whether there are distinct and complementary pathways. In this project we plan to define the mechanisms responsible for contraction- and insulin-induced capillary recruitment in muscle. We hypothesize that similar mechanisms are operative, with both insulin and muscle contractions acting via NO-dependent mechanisms. Because of capillary reserve, and different initial steps of the signalling systems stimulated by insulin and exercise, capillary recruitment by combined contraction and insulin stimuli will be additive at both sub maximal and perhaps at maximal insulin pathway stimulation. Signalling mechanisms will be compared and the role of non-nutritive route as a flow reserve assessed.Read moreRead less
ADVANCE-ON: A Post-trial Observational Study Of ADVANCE
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$775,867.00
Summary
The ADVANCE (Action in Diabetes and Vascular Disease) study demonstrasted that intensive control of blood glucose only reduced kidney disease but that control of blood pressure reduced both cardiovascular and kidney disease. This 10-year post-trial follow up study will determine whether intensive control of blood glucose exerts cardiovascular benefits that emerge in the long term in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Intervention To Reduce The Risk Of Diabetic Retinopathy And Early Adverse Retinal Changes In Type 1 Diabetes
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$1,294,846.00
Summary
The long term effects of young onset T1D may be devastating: diabetes is the leading cause of visual loss in young adults in Australia and other countries. We have the unique opportunity to investigate whether ACEI and statins will modify retinopathy through our collaboration with an already funded international multicentre trial. This study will treat adolescents for 4 years and will follow them for the next 5-10 years. We will use novel measures of retinal blood vessels size and fractals.