Psychophysiological Adaptations to Yoga Practice in Overweight and Obese Individuals: A Topical Review.
Alexios BatrakoulisPublished in: Diseases (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Physical activity has been documented as a foundational approach for weight management and obesity, improving several cardiometabolic and mental health indices. However, it is not clear whether yoga practice can induce beneficial improvements in anthropometric and body composition parameters, performance, metabolic health, and well-being among overweight/obese people. The aim of this topical review was to catalog training studies examining the psychophysiological responses to yoga interventions in order to detect which outcomes have been investigated, the research methods applied, and the conclusions. The inclusion/exclusion criteria were met by 22 published articles involving 1178 (56% female) overweight/obese participants. This brief review on yoga-induced adaptations demonstrates that this widely used meditative movement activity can meaningfully improve the vast majority of the selected markers. These beneficial alterations are focused mostly on various anthropometric and body composition variables, cardiovascular disease risk factors, physical fitness parameters, quality of life, and stress in previously inactive overweight/obese individuals. Instead, yoga-based physical exercise interventions investigating anxiety, depression, mood state, exercise enjoyment, affect valence, and adherence were limited. Further research should focus on the yoga intervention configuration and potential mechanisms behind favorable changes in various psychophysiological indices through large-scale, rigorously designed randomized controlled trials implementing long-term interventions in overweight/obese individuals.
Keyphrases
- body composition
- weight loss
- physical activity
- resistance training
- bariatric surgery
- mental health
- bone mineral density
- sleep quality
- weight gain
- metabolic syndrome
- cardiovascular disease
- healthcare
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- randomized controlled trial
- risk factors
- glycemic control
- primary care
- obese patients
- body mass index
- high intensity
- public health
- clinical trial
- quality improvement
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- human health
- systematic review
- heat stress
- bipolar disorder
- depressive symptoms
- mental illness
- health information
- cardiovascular risk factors
- endothelial cells
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular events