type 2 diabetes

Breathing Restores Autonomic Control in Type-2 Diabetics with Complications

 

Quit worrying about your health. It’ll go away.” - Robert Orben

 
 

As people with diabetes (type 1 or 2), we know our bodies are under extra stress. This is due to things like fluctuating blood sugars and chronic inflammation. These factors can gradually accumulate into nerve damage and a variety of other long-term complications.  

However, we have recently learned that some “long-term complications” are functional and reversible (at least in their early stages). One way to reverse them is slow breathing.

Slow breathing treats the root cause of many complications, tissue hypoxia, which then restores autonomic functioning. This has been proven in several studies involving people with type-1 diabetes. However, most participants had not yet developed severe complications.

Putting Slow Breathing to the Test

It seems reasonable to assume that slow breathing would have the same effects in type 2s. But, what if these people with type-2 diabetes have chronic kidney disease? With a severe complication such as this, could slow breathing still have the same benefits?

 
 

 
 

Trained breathing-induced oxygenation acutely reverses cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction in patients with type 2 diabetes and renal disease

Published in Acta Diabetologica, 2016

Click Here to Read the Full Summary

 
 

 
 

The Study Group and Breathing Protocol

This study had 26 type-2 diabetic patients, 12 of which had diabetic kidney disease, and 24 non-diabetic controls. The protocol was simple: They had the participants lay down and breathe normally for five minutes, followed by two minutes of slow breathing at 6 breaths per minute.

The primary outcome was a change in baroreflex sensitivity (BRS). BRS measures your body’s ability to quickly adjust blood pressure to meet the current demands of your situation. It is thought to be an overall measurement of autonomic and cardiovascular control. In general, diabetics have lower BRS scores than non-diabetics.


Slow Breathing Improves Autonomic Function in Diabetics With Kidney Disease

At baseline, the type-2 diabetics had a lower resting oxygen saturation and lower BRS. When they switched to breathing at 6 breaths per minute, their oxygen saturation and BRS both increased significantly. Their blood pressure also reduced.

Perhaps most importantly, these same changes were observed in the diabetics with kidney disease. Both sets of diabetics (kidney disease and no complications) showed similar increases in BRS and oxygen saturation.  This indicates that, even in diabetics with severe complications, slow breathing can acutely reverse autonomic dysfunction.


Getting Back to Tissue Hypoxia

The authors suggest that these improvements in autonomic function were due to increases in tissue oxygenation. Similar to the study we featured on type-1 diabetes, they indicate that by increasing tissue oxygen levels, sympathetic activity is reduced, and autonomic balance is restored.


A New Model of Diabetic Complications

These results again indicate that autonomic dysfunction is not an expression of nerve damage. Instead, it is a reversible phenomenon that might actually be the precursor to nerve damage.  This paradigm-shifting view opens the door to new opportunities for treating autonomic dysfunction in diabetics.


In good breath,

Nick

P.S. A Zoom Meeting I would Look Forward To.


P.P.S. James Nestor’s new book, Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art, comes out tomorrow. I don’t know James, but from the podcast interviews I’ve heard so far, this sounds like a must-read if you’re into all this “breathing” stuff :)

And if you really want to geek out, James and Patrick McKeown got together for an hour long conversation on all things breathing. Watch/Listen Here.


 
 

I'm Rucking 100 Miles + Diaphragmatic Breathing Improves HbA1c

 
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Announcement:
I’m Rucking 100 Miles for Chronic Disease

On Leap Day, February 29th, I’m going to ruck 100 miles to raise money for the Health and Human Performance Foundation (HHPF).

If you’ve been following me for a little while, you know I’m a huge fan of their mission. They are an amazing nonprofit raising awareness around the benefits of breathing for chronic disease, stress, and anxiety.

Given the impacts breathing has had on my life, I wanted support their cause. What better way than a ridiculously long walk?

I am wearing a weighted rucksack to symbolize the extra weight we carry around as those living with chronic disease. Yet, despite that weight, we can still accomplish anything. In fact, that weight makes us stronger. I wholeheartedly believe diabetes has made stronger.

We are setting up a donations page on HHPF, which I’ll be sending out separately. If you feel so inspired, donate to help support their great mission. And please support me by telling others, sharing our posts on Instagram, and spreading the word about HHPF.

Thank you in advance for your support!

Now, on to the science.

 

 

Last week, we learned that diaphragmatic breathing improved HRV and lowered HbA1c. This week’s research reveals that it also improves antioxidant status in type 2 diabetics.

Diaphragmatic Breathing Exercise as a Therapeutic Intervention for Control of Oxidative Stress in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

(Read the Full Summary)

This is one of the early papers I posted to The Breathing Diabetic. I often go back through important papers to reinforce the ideas and see if I notice new things I missed before.

This one did not disappoint. Just re-reading all of my notes on this one energized me (image below). I’m fascinated with breathing, but sometimes I need a paper like this to remind me how important it is to get this research out.

The Breathing Protocol

One hundred and twenty three type-2 diabetics participated in this study. Sixty were placed in the diaphragmatic breathing group, and 63 served as controls.

The participants were instructed to lie down, place one hand on their chest, one hand on their belly, and breathe deeply and slowly, only allowing the hand on their belly to move.

This protocol is almost identical to the Oxygen Advantage “Breathe Light Advanced” exercise.

They were asked to perform this procedure for 15-20 minutes, twice a day, for 3 months.

Breathing Improves Oxidative Stress and HbA1c

At the end of the 3 months, participants in the breathing group had significantly lowered their oxidative stress by increasing antioxidant levels.

Additionally, they decreased their HbA1c by 3%. Now, this isn’t 3% as in dropping from 9% down to 6% (like last week’s study). This was 3% of their original value. Not quite as significant, but still encouraging. And, remember the study from last week didn’t see major improvements in HbA1c until the 12 month follow-up.

In short, diaphragmatic breathing led to:

  • Decreased oxidative stress

  • Better blood sugars

In good breath,
Nick

P.S. Here’s the first page of my notes on this article. I was clearly excited the first time I read it too.

 
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