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Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial
Olivia M. McCarthy ,
Merete Bechmann Christensen,
Kasper Birch Kristensen,
Signe Schmidt ,
Ajenthen G. Ranjan,
Stephen C. Bain,
Richard Bracken ,
Kirsten Nørgaard
Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics, Volume: 25, Issue: 4, Pages: 287 - 292
Swansea University Author: Richard Bracken
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DOI (Published version): 10.1089/dia.2022.0542
Abstract
In an in-patient switch study, 10 adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) performed 45 min of moderate-intensity exercise on 2 occasions: (1) when using their usual insulin pump (UP) and (2) after transitioning to automated insulin delivery (AID) treatment (MiniMed™ 780G). Consensus glucose management gui...
Published in: | Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics |
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ISSN: | 1520-9156 1557-8593 |
Published: |
Mary Ann Liebert Inc
2023
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Online Access: |
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa63164 |
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2024-05-15T15:16:56.6304852 v2 63164 2023-04-17 Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial f5da81cd18adfdedb2ccb845bddc12f7 0000-0002-6986-6449 Richard Bracken Richard Bracken true false 2023-04-17 EAAS In an in-patient switch study, 10 adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) performed 45 min of moderate-intensity exercise on 2 occasions: (1) when using their usual insulin pump (UP) and (2) after transitioning to automated insulin delivery (AID) treatment (MiniMed™ 780G). Consensus glucose management guidelines for performing exercise were applied. Plasma glucose concentrations measured over a 3-h monitoring period were stratified into time below range (TBR, <3.9 mmol/L), time in range (TIR, 3.9–10.0 mmol/L), and time above range (TAR, >10.0 mmol/L).Overall, TBR (UP: 11 ± 21 vs. AID: 3% ± 10%, P = 0.413), TIR (UP: 53 ± 27 vs. AID: 66% ± 39%, P = 0.320), and TAR (UP: 37 ± 34 vs. AID: 31% ± 41%, P = 0.604) were similar between arms. A proportionately low number of people experienced exercise-induced hypoglycemia (UP: n = 2 vs. AID: n = 1, P = 1.00).In conclusion, switching to AID therapy did not alter patterns of glycemia around sustained moderate-intensity exercise in adults with T1D. Journal Article Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics 25 4 287 292 Mary Ann Liebert Inc 1520-9156 1557-8593 1 4 2023 2023-04-01 10.1089/dia.2022.0542 http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/dia.2022.0542 COLLEGE NANME Engineering and Applied Sciences School COLLEGE CODE EAAS Swansea University 2024-05-15T15:16:56.6304852 2023-04-17T09:32:55.0508816 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Sport and Exercise Sciences Olivia M. McCarthy 0000-0001-6971-611x 1 Merete Bechmann Christensen 2 Kasper Birch Kristensen 3 Signe Schmidt 0000-0002-6968-6675 4 Ajenthen G. Ranjan 5 Stephen C. Bain 6 Richard Bracken 0000-0002-6986-6449 7 Kirsten Nørgaard 8 63164__27136__c8d44358d18d4364a57fa58716e3f6d6.pdf 63164.pdf 2023-04-20T08:14:07.9999929 Output 326819 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true true eng |
title |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial |
spellingShingle |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial Richard Bracken |
title_short |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial |
title_full |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial |
title_fullStr |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial |
title_full_unstemmed |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial |
title_sort |
Glycemia Around Exercise in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated and Nonautomated Insulin Delivery Pumps: A Switch Pilot Trial |
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f5da81cd18adfdedb2ccb845bddc12f7_***_Richard Bracken |
author |
Richard Bracken |
author2 |
Olivia M. McCarthy Merete Bechmann Christensen Kasper Birch Kristensen Signe Schmidt Ajenthen G. Ranjan Stephen C. Bain Richard Bracken Kirsten Nørgaard |
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Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics |
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2023 |
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Swansea University |
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1520-9156 1557-8593 |
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10.1089/dia.2022.0542 |
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Mary Ann Liebert Inc |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/dia.2022.0542 |
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description |
In an in-patient switch study, 10 adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) performed 45 min of moderate-intensity exercise on 2 occasions: (1) when using their usual insulin pump (UP) and (2) after transitioning to automated insulin delivery (AID) treatment (MiniMed™ 780G). Consensus glucose management guidelines for performing exercise were applied. Plasma glucose concentrations measured over a 3-h monitoring period were stratified into time below range (TBR, <3.9 mmol/L), time in range (TIR, 3.9–10.0 mmol/L), and time above range (TAR, >10.0 mmol/L).Overall, TBR (UP: 11 ± 21 vs. AID: 3% ± 10%, P = 0.413), TIR (UP: 53 ± 27 vs. AID: 66% ± 39%, P = 0.320), and TAR (UP: 37 ± 34 vs. AID: 31% ± 41%, P = 0.604) were similar between arms. A proportionately low number of people experienced exercise-induced hypoglycemia (UP: n = 2 vs. AID: n = 1, P = 1.00).In conclusion, switching to AID therapy did not alter patterns of glycemia around sustained moderate-intensity exercise in adults with T1D. |
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2023-04-01T08:15:44Z |
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11.231748 |