The effects of breaking up sitting with resistance exercise on cardiometabolic health and cognitive function in young healthy adults are unknown. This study evaluated the acute effects of breaking up sitting with bodyweight resistance exercise on postprandial glucose, lipids, blood pressure and cognitive function. A randomised crossover design was used. Twelve normal-weight participants aged 25 ± 6 years took part in two, 5 h conditions: (1) uninterrupted sitting (SIT), and (2) sitting with 3 min of bodyweight resistance exercise breaks every 30 min (REX). Dietary intake was standardised across conditions. Linear mixed models were used to compare outcomes between conditions. Postprandial glucose was significantly higher in the REX condition than in SIT (incremental area under the curve 346.3 [95% confidence interval: 233.9, 458.7] and 256.9 [144.4, 369.3] mmol/L∙5 h, respectively, p = 0.045). Blood pressure, lipids and cognitive function outcomes were not different between conditions (p ≥ 0.05). This study suggests that breaking up sitting with bodyweight resistance exercise does not benefit cardiometabolic health or cognitive function acutely in young healthy adults. The longer-term effects of breaking up sitting with resistance exercise warrants investigation to appropriately inform public health guidelines.
Keywords: Sedentary time; cardiometabolic risk; cognitive function; resistance exercise; sitting.