New
Study Points To Inactivity And Troublesome Layer Of Fat
Exercise Can Reduce
This Extra Layer
A sedentary lifestyle
leads to a buildup of dangerous levels of fat deep within the
belly, increasing the risk of heart disease and other conditions.
That is the conclusion
of a new study by Duke University Medical Center researchers.
They say this "visceral fat" accumulates at a surprisingly quick
rate around organs and deeper in the body than subcutaneous
fat, which lies under the skin.
On the upside, the
researchers found that months of regular, moderate exercise
can prevent the build-up of visceral fat, while vigorous exercise
can significantly reduce levels of such fat.
The Duke researchers
reported the study at the American College of Sports
Medicine (ACSM) annual meeting. The study is part of
a five-year Duke trial on the effects of exercise, funded by
a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI).
Study Finds High Cost
for Inactivity
Researchers followed
170 overweight men and women aged 40 to 65 for about eight months.
The researchers divided participants into four groups.
One group did no exercise.
The other three groups were classified based on a weekly exercise
regimen equivalent to about 11 miles of walking, 11 miles of
jogging, or 17 miles of jogging.
Lack of any exercise
led to significant increases in visceral fat, the researchers
found.
"This finding emphasizes
the high cost of continued physical inactivity for sedentary,
overweight adults," they wrote.
Dr. William Kraus,
a Duke cardiologist who led the exercise trial, offers simple
advice to counter the buildup of visceral fat.
"Get out and do something;
don't sit," says Dr. Kraus, an associate professor at Duke's
medical center. "Being sedentary is very bad for your health."
It is even worse than
researchers had previously realized, adds Dr. Kraus. "The most
striking result was how bad the sedentary people got over eight
months," he says.
Dr. Gerald Fletcher,
a professor of medicine and director of preventive cardiology
at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., says the study illustrates
well the "vicious syndrome" that results from visceral abdominal
fat.
Dr. Fletcher, also
a spokesman for the American Heart Association (AHA),
says visceral fat buildup increases the risk of high blood pressure,
blood clotting, elevated levels of "bad" cholesterol, and insulin
resistance, a precursor to diabetes.
Get
Out, Get Moving
"I'm just hoping this
study will motivate our obese public to do things we've been
preaching for years," Dr. Fletcher says. "We looked at all ways
to treat [visceral fat buildup], and the best way is physical
activity."
Even elderly patients
who had been sedentary can benefit greatly from moderate exercise,
he says.
In the Duke study,
for participants who did not exercise, visceral fat increased
an average of 8.6 percent. Such fat decreased an average of
8.1 percent among those who jogged about 17 miles each week.
Those in the two less-intensive
exercise groups had no significant increase in visceral fat,
demonstrating the preventive role of moderate exercise.
Men who did not exercise
averaged a 1.5 percent overall weight gain; women, 0.6 percent.
However, women averaged an 11.6 percent increase in visceral
fat, more than twice that of men (5.7 percent). Researchers
say determining why would require further study.
Participants exercised
on treadmills, elliptical trainers, or cycle ergometers in a
supervised setting, and nobody changed their diet during the
study.
Always consult your
physician for a diagnosis.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization
is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
College of Sports Medicine
American
Heart Association
American
Lung Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
HealthierUS.Gov
National
Cancer Institute (NCI)
National
Cancer Institute (NCI) Eat 5 to 9 A Day
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
National
Women's Health Information Center
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July 2003
New
Study Points To Inactivity And Troublesome Layer Of Fat
Study
Finds High Cost for Inactivity
Get
Out, Get Moving
Women
Benefit More from Quitting Smoking than Men
Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Quality of Life
Online
Resources
Women
Benefit More from Quitting Smoking than Men
New findings from
the Lung Health Study (LHS) indicate that,
in general, women's lung function improves significantly more
than men's after sustained smoking cessation.
LHS
researchers previously published results showing that both men
and women benefit from smoking cessation; this new analysis
indicates that the benefits to the lungs are greater in women
than in men. The results are published in the American
Journal of Epidemiology.
Supported by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the study
followed more than 5,300 middle-aged smokers for five years.
All participants had
mild or moderate chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
In the first year
after quitting, women's lung function improved more than twice
that of the men's. Among those who quit, improved lung function
remained greater for women than for men throughout the study,
although the differences between the genders narrowed over time.
The decline in lung
function in those who continued to smoke was on average similar
for men and women.
Cigarette smoking
is a leading cause of COPD, a slowly progressive disease of
the lung that is characterized by a gradual loss of lung function.
COPD is the fourth
most common and the most rapidly increasing cause of death in
the US. Emphysema, chronic bronchitis, chronic obstructive bronchitis,
or a combination of emphysema and chronic bronchitis are forms
of COPD.
Always consult your
physician for a diagnosis.
Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Quality of Life
The goals of COPD
rehabilitation programs include helping a person return to the
highest level of function and independence possible, while improving
the overall quality of life - physically, emotionally, and socially.
Attaining these goals
help people with COPD live more comfortably by improving endurance,
providing relief of symptoms, and preventing progression of
the disease with minimal side effects.
In order to reach
these goals, COPD rehabilitation programs may include the following:
-
medication management
-
exercises to decrease respiratory
symptoms and improve muscle strength and endurance
-
respiratory treatments to
improve breathing ability
-
assistance with obtaining
respiratory equipment and portable oxygen
-
methods to increase independence
with activities of daily living (ADLs)
-
exercises for physical conditioning
and improved endurance
-
stress management, relaxation
exercises, and emotional support
-
smoking cessation programs
-
nutritional counseling
-
patient and family education
and counseling
-
vocational counseling
Always consult your
physician for a diagnosis.
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