Can Short Bursts of Activity Help Lower Blood Sugar?

Staff
By Staff
3 Min Read

The Science Behind Exercise Snacks and Blood Sugar

A growing body of evidence shows that short bouts of movement, such as a minute or two of moderate- to higher-intensity movement, prompt your muscles to use glucose (sugar) for energy, which can help your body handle glucose. Over time, these mini activity breaks might help improve insulin (a hormone that helps regulate glucose) sensitivity and prevent prolonged spikes in blood sugar that often happen after eating. Research shows exercise snacks can help reduce postmeal blood sugar spikes, making this approach as effective — in some cases more effective — for glucose control than traditional longer workouts, especially when timed around meals.

It starts with the basic physiology of movement. When your muscles contract, they need energy. To meet this demand, your body pulls glucose from the bloodstream into the muscles, where it’s used as fuel, naturally lowering blood sugar levels in the process. The more intense the movement, the more glucose your muscles use.

“Short bouts of movement — or exercise snacks — help accelerate this process,” says Andrew Koutnik, PhD, research faculty at the Florida State University Institute for Sports Science and Medicine in Tallahassee. “Over time, regularly doing short bouts of movement also improves insulin sensitivity, which means your body needs less insulin to store the same amount of glucose. And these benefits apply to people with and without diabetes.”

In other words, every brisk walk, quick stair climb, or set of squats can give your body an opportunity to regulate blood sugar levels, especially when timing is intentional.

That’s because after you eat, carbohydrates from food are broken down into glucose, which enters your bloodstream and raises blood sugar levels. These levels can remain elevated for up to two hours. But inserting brief movement breaks into that time frame across the day can help manage those postmeal glucose spikes, preventing prolonged periods of elevated blood sugar.

That said, exercise snacks aren’t only beneficial after eating. “Using high-intensity exercise snacks before a meal can make the muscle more receptive to glucose. Then, low-intensity workouts after meals can help maintain higher blood flow and sugar delivery to those muscles. [This combination] may well be more effective than either approach used alone,” says James Cotter, PhD, an exercise physiologist and professor of physical education at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand.

But the effectiveness of exercise snacks can depend on factors such as how hard a particular muscle group is worked and the traditional workout intensity, says Cotter, who was among the first researchers to study exercise snacks for glucose control.

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