Diabetes: 'Weekend warrior' activity may reduce death risk by 33%

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
A person running on abridge against a backdrop of buildings on the New York skylineShare on Pinterest
Exercising, even a little, can have profound effects on heart health and overall health. Gary Hershorn/Getty Images
  • Research has shown that physical exercise can help increase insulin sensitivity and help regulate blood sugar more effectively in people with diabetes.
  • A new study found that people with diabetes who meet current physical activity recommendations through either regular physical activity or a “weekend warrior” type of format have a reduced risk for both all-cause mortality and cardiovascular-related mortality, compared to people who do not exercise.
  • Scientists also found that study participants who were insufficiently active still had a lower risk for all-cause and heart disease-related mortality than those who were completely inactive.

According to the International Diabetes Federation, about one in every nine adults around the world is living with diabetes — a chronic condition where the body does not process blood sugar properly.

Of that number, more than 95% of diabetes cases are type 2 diabetes, which is a condition a person develops, compared to type 1 diabetes where a person is born with the disease. People who have obesity, have certain conditions like high blood pressure, and who are not physically active are at a high risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

People with either type of diabetes are at a high risk for Health-related complications such as neuropathy, cognitive decline, foot issues, kidney damage, skin conditions, and heart disease.

“People with type 2 diabetes still face a significantly elevated risk of cardiovascular mortality, which is the leading cause of death among this high-risk population,” Zhiyuan Wu, PhD, postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health, told Medical News Today. “While medication treatments are effective, lifestyle modifications — such as increasing and optimizing physical activity recommendations — are also essential for risk reduction.”

Wu is the first author of a new study recently published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine that has found people with diabetes who meet current physical activity recommendations through either regular physical activity or a “weekend warrior” type of format have a reduced risk for both all-cause mortality and cardiovascular-related mortality, compared to people who do not exercise.

Scientists also found that study participants who were insufficiently active still had a lower risk for all-cause and heart disease-related mortality than those who were inactive.

MNT also talked to Aaron Feingold, MD, chair of cardiology at JFK University Medical Center in New Jersey, about this research. He commented that his first reaction was one of cautious optimism and practical excitement.

“The finding that weekend warriors — those who concentrate their 150+ minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity into just 1-2 sessions per week — achieved nearly equivalent mortality benefits to those exercising regularly throughout the week is genuinely practice-changing. This challenges the conventional wisdom that exercise must be spread evenly across the week to be maximally beneficial.”
— Aaron Feingold, MD

“For my patients with diabetes who struggle with time constraints, work schedules, or other barriers to frequent exercise, this provides compelling evidence that concentrated weekend activity can still deliver substantial cardiovascular protection, he continued. “Many of my patients express that they simply cannot find time for regular daily exercise due to work, family obligations, or other commitments. By demonstrating that flexible, concentrated exercise patterns can provide similar mortality benefits, we’re expanding the toolkit of evidence-based interventions that can realistically fit into patients’ lives.”

“This research is crucial because cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in patients with diabetes, accounting for approximately 65% of deaths in this population,” Feingold added. “What makes this study particularly valuable is that it addresses real-world barriers to exercise adherence. This is especially important given that lifestyle modifications like physical activity are often more accessible and have fewer side effects than pharmacological interventions.”

TAGGED: , ,
Share this Article