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http://hdl.handle.net/1942/49105| Title: | Exercise volume modulates cardiac protection in a type 2 diabetic rat model: differential effects of high- and low-volume moderate-intensity endurance exercise training on diabetic cardiomyopathy | Authors: | SIMONS, Rob Bonilauri, Ileana VASTMANS, Lotte STEEGEN, Lisa HEEREN, Ellen VANDENBOER, Vincent VERGHOTE, Eline D'HAESE, Sarah CLAESSEN, Guido LAMBRICHTS, Ivo Martín-Fernández, Beatriz VOLDERS, Pieter-Jan HANSEN, Dominique DELUYKER, Dorien BITO, Virginie |
Issue Date: | 2026 | Source: | Cardiovascular diabetology, 12 (1) (Art N° 19) | Abstract: | Background Cardiomyopathy is a major complication of type 2 diabetes, whose prevalence continues to rise globally. Although major cardiology and endocrinology societies endorse exercise training to reduce cardiovascular risk, the optimal exercise training modality, and specifically the role of exercise volume, in preventing diabetic cardiomyopathy remains unclear. Methods Male Sprague Dawley rats were fed a high-sugar diet to induce type 2 diabetes. At diet onset, animals were assigned to high-volume (HVE, N = 7) or low-volume (LVE, N = 8) moderate-intensity treadmill training, performed five days per week for 18 weeks. Sedentary rats served as controls (N = 6). Cardiac function was assessed using conventional echocardiography, strain imaging, and invasive hemodynamics. Plasma analyses were used to identify systemic metabolic status, and ex vivo techniques quantified left ventricular cardiac fibrosis, oxidative stress, hypertrophy, inflammation, and metabolism. Results After 18 weeks of diet, sedentary rats developed characteristic features of early-stage diabetic cardiomyopathy, accompanied by impaired systolic function and increased interstitial myocardial fibrosis. Conversely, high volumes of moderate-intensity exercise training partially prevented pathological cardiac remodelling by improving cardiac metabolic regulation, reducing oxidative stress, and enhancing both cardiac stress-responses and systemic metabolic control. Lower volumes of exercise training primarily influence oxidative stress and inflammatory pathways, resulting in modest cardioprotective effects and preservation of cardiac function. By contrast, high-volume exercise training elicited more pronounced cardioprotective effects, reflected by a significantly higher ejection fraction, cardiac output, stroke volume index, and global longitudinal strain relative to sedentary controls. Conclusion The progression of diabetic cardiomyopathy appears to be modulated by exercise training volume. Although both volumes preserve cardiac performance, high-volume exercise training elicited more pronounced cardioprotective effects than low-volume exercise training in T2DM rats. These findings emphasise the importance of further considering exercise volume as a critical variable in the optimisation of evidence-based exercise prescriptions for individuals with type 2 diabetes. | Keywords: | Diabetes;Cardiomyopathy;Aerobic training;Exercise volume;Preclinical study | Document URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1942/49105 | e-ISSN: | 1475-2840 | DOI: | 10.1186/s40842-026-00288-2 | Category: | A1 | Type: | Journal Contribution |
| Appears in Collections: | Research publications |
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| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simons et al. cardiovasc diabetol endocrinol rep2026.pdf | Published version | 4.75 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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