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Dariush Sheikholeslami-vatani

Dariush Sheikholeslami-vatani

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 26029634500
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Address: Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences- Faculty of Social and Humanity Sciences- University of Kurdistan- Sanandaj- Kurdistan- IRAN
Phone: +98-87-33664600

Research

Title
Acute effect of exercise type on serum visfatin in healty men
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
hormonal response – recovery - exercise model - insulin
Year
2011
Journal MEDICINA DELLO SPORT
DOI
Researchers Dariush Sheikholeslami-vatani ، Hasan Faraji ، Mohammad Rahman Rahimi ، Sajad Ahmadiza

Abstract

Aim. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of acute resistance exercise (RE), aerobic exercise (AE) and concurrent exercise (CE) on serum visfatin and insulin concentrations. Methods. Nine healthy male subjects (Mean ± SD; age, 24.2±3.6 yr; body mass index, 21.8±2.8 kg/m2) performed three exercise trials on separate days in a randomized balanced design. The three protocols were: 1) RE protocol which included three sets of 15 repetitions at 60% of one repetition maximum (1RM) for 7 exercises, 2) AE protocol included 50 min cycling at an intensity corresponding to 60% of HRmax on a cycle ergometer, 3) CE protocol encompassed two sets of 15 repetitions at 60% of 1RM for 7 exercises and 22 min cycling at 60% of HRmax. Three blood samples were collected before, immediately after exercise and after 30 min recovery and were analyzed for visfatin and insulin concentrations. Results. Serum visfatin and insulin levels were reduced significantly (P<0.05) in response to all exercise protocols, and remained unchanged after 30-min recovery. However, neither responses to exercise nor changes during recovery in visfatin and insulin were significantly different among the three exercise trials (P>0.05). Conclusion. It could be concluded that different acute exercise protocols reduce serum visfatin and insulin levels and that these responses are not related to type of exercise.