The effect of concurrent training on glucose, lipid profile, liver enzymes, and lipid peroxidation in young men
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v58.106483Keywords:
Concurrent training, Oxidative stress, Lipid oxidation, Glucose levels, lipid profile, liver enzymes.Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the effect of concurrent training (CT) on glucose, liver function, lipid profile, and oxidative stress in young men. Sixteen moderately active young men (Age= 23.11 ± 4.20 yr., Height= 172.44 ± 6.50 cm, Weight= 73.52 ± 15.70 kg, BMI= 24.84 ± 5.85 kg/m2) trained for twelve weeks in separate in blocks of adaptation, development, and maintenance for four weeks each. Blood samples were collected at baseline and after CT to determine MDA glucose, TG, LDL-c, HDL-c, ALT, and AST. Repeated measures t-tests compared scores. Our results showed that no significant changes were observed in body weight (M= -0.14, p= 0.748, 95%CI= -0.79, 0.99), BMI (M= 0.04, p= 0.803, 95%CI= -0.27, 0.32), glucose (M= 0.88, p= 0.679, 95%CI= -2.87, 4.63), cholesterol (M= -0.19, p= 0.957, 95%CI= -7.00, 7.00), triglycerides (M= -9.00, p= 0.325, 95%CI= -25.19, 7.73), HDL-c (M= -0.60, p= 0.811, 95%CI= -6.52, 3.42), LDL-c (M= 2.20, p= 0.494, 95%CI= -4.20, 8.77), AST (M= -0.13, p= 0.954, 95%CI= -3.94, 3.00), ALT (M= 0.25, p= 0.923, 95%CI= -3.19, 4.44), VLDL (M= -1.80, p= 0.325, 95%CI= -5.04, 1.55), and MDA (M= 0.06, p= 0.621, 95%CI= -0.16, 0.29). The 40% of the participants responded positively to the CT program. Our findings revealed that a four-week CT program did not affect oxidative stress markers in young adults. Additionally, non-responders to the intervention should be carefully followed up to determine their personal threshold for improvement.
Keywords: Concurrent training, Oxidative stress, Lipid oxidation, Glucose, liver enzymes.
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