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The Physiology of Sedentary Behavior

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-01, 14:28 authored by Ana J Pinto, Audrey Bergouignan, Paddy C Dempsey, Hamilton Roschel, Neville Owen, Bruno Gualano, David W Dunstan

Sedentary behaviors (SB) are characterized by a low energy expenditure while in a sitting or reclining posture. Evidence relevant to understanding the physiology of SB can be derived from studies employing several experimental models: bed rest, immobilization, reduced step count, and reducing/interrupting prolonged SB. We examine the relevant physiological evidence relating to body weight and energy balance, intermediary metabolism, cardiovascular and respiratory systems, the musculoskeletal system, the central nervous system, and immunity and inflammatory responses. Excessive and prolonged SB can lead to insulin resistance, vascular dysfunction, shift in substrate use towards carbohydrate oxidation, shift in muscle fiber from oxidative to glycolytic type, reduced cardiorespiratory fitness, loss of muscle mass and strength, and bone mass, and increased total body fat mass and visceral fat depot, blood lipid concentrations, and inflammation. Despite marked differences across individual studies, longer-term interventions aimed at reducing/interrupting SB have resulted in small, albeit marginally clinically meaningful, benefits on body weight, waist circumference, percent body fat, fasting glucose, insulin, HbA1c and HDL concentrations, systolic blood pressure, and vascular function in adults and older adults. There is more-limited evidence on other health-related outcomes and physiological systems, and for children and adolescents. Future research should focus on the investigation of molecular and cellular mechanisms underpinning adaptations to increasing and reducing/ interrupting SB and the necessary changes in SB and physical activity to impact physiological systems and overall health in diverse population groups.

History

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Physiological reviews

Publisher

American Physiological Society

issn

0031-9333

eissn

1522-1210

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2024-06-16

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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