Iron status determined changes in health measures induced by nordic walking with time-restricted eating in older adults- a randomised trial.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether stored iron levels influence the adaptive response to Nordic walking (NW) training combined with time-restricted eating (TRE) in older adults.
Results Summary
The study found that NW + TRE significantly reduced ferritin levels, with greater reductions in the low ferritin group. It also lowered HbA1c and glucose levels, with more pronounced HbA1c drops in those with greater ferritin decreases. The high ferritin group showed greater improvements in body weight and fat percentage.
Population
Older adults divided into low ferritin (<75 ng/ml) and high ferritin (≥75 ng/ml) groups.
Effective Dosage
12-week Nordic walking training combined with 10-hour time-restricted eating.
Duration
12 weeks
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | ferritin levels | all participants | - | induced a statistically significant decrease | #1 |
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | reduction of serum ferritin levels | LF vs. HF groups | - | statistically significant intergroup differences | #2 |
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | HbA1c levels | all participants | - | diminished | #3 |
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | glucose | all participants | - | diminished | #4 |
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | HbA1c drop | participants who experienced a greater decrease in the stored iron | - | more pronounced | #5 |
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | body weight | HF group | - | greater changes | #6 |
Nordic walking training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating | decrease | percent of body fat | HF group | - | greater changes | #7 |
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: This study evaluated whether stored iron determines the adaptive response induced by Nordic walking (NW) training combined with 10 hours' time-restricted eating (TRE) in older adults. TRIAL DESIGN AND METHODS: Twenty-four participants underwent 12-week NW training supported by 10 h of TRE. The group was divided due to baseline ferritin concentration low < 75 ng/ml (LF) and high level ≥ 75 ng/ml (HF). Body composition, physical fitness and blood collection were assessed at baseline and post-intervention. RESULTS: NW + TRE induced a statistically significant decrease in ferritin levels in all participants (p = 0.01). Additionally, statistically significant intergroup differences in the LF vs. HF in the reduction of serum ferritin levels (p = 0.04) were observed. The procedure NW + TRE diminished HbA1c levels (p < 0.01) and glucose in all participants (p = 0.05). The range of HbA1c drop was more pronounced among those participants who experienced a greater decrease in the stored iron (p = 0.04, [Formula: see text]=0.17, F=4.59). Greater changes in body weight and percent of body fat were recorded in the HF group (for both p<0.01). CONCLUSION: Body iron stores determine the effects of a 12-week NW + TRE intervention on serum ferritin. The changes in HbA1c are more pronounced in subjects with a higher decrease in serum ferritin. TRIAL REGISTRATION: All experimental protocols were approved by the Bioethical Committee of the Regional Medical Society in Gdansk, Poland (NKBBN/330/2021) according to the Declaration of Helsinki. We confirm that all methods were carried out in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations. The trial was registered as a clinical trial (NCT05229835, date of first registration: 14/01/2022, direct link: https://classic. CLINICALTRIALS: gov/ct2/show/NCT05229835 ). Informed consent was obtained from all subjects.