Exercise
amount more important than intensity
NEW
YORK - How much you exercise may be more important than
how hard you exercise in terms of heart health, according to
a study of sedentary overweight men and women. And, many
will be happy to hear, exhaustive amounts of exercise are
not needed for heart health.
In
journal CHEST, researchers from North Carolina report that
people who walk briskly for 12 miles per week or for about
125 to 200 minutes per week will significantly improve their
aerobic fitness and lower their risk of developing heart
disease.
“Anything
beyond walking briskly for 12 miles per week, whether
increasing your intensity or the amount of miles, has
additional benefits,” Brian D. Duscha from Duke University
Medical Center in Durham who was involved in the research
said. ”So there is a separate and combined effect.”
Improving
fitness without losing weight
He
also emphasized that the 12-miles-per-week walkers in the
study improved their fitness without losing any weight.
”People need to know: even without losing weight, you are
getting significant benefits by exercising - you’re
improving your fitness level, decreasing fat and increasing
muscle and improving your lipid panel - so don’t stop
exercising,” Duscha said.
“The
other thing to realize is that people gain 3 to 4 pounds a
year, so exercise is really important for weight
maintenance,” Duscha said.
There
is a clear link between heart health and fitness. However,
less is known on how the amount and intensity of exercise
relates to increases in fitness for individuals at risk for
heart disease.
To
better understand the effects of different amounts of
exercise on aerobic fitness, Duscha and colleagues randomly
assigned 133 overweight sedentary men and women showing
signs of rising cholesterol levels to 7 to 9 months of no
exercise; low amount/moderate intensity exercise (the
12-miles per week walkers); low amount/vigorous intensity
(12 miles of jogging per week); or high amount/vigorous
intensity (20 miles of jogging per week).
The
study subjects did not alter their diet during the study.
After
completing their exercise assignment, all of exercisers had
improvements in peak oxygen consumption and time to
exhaustion - two established markers of fitness - compared
with levels at the beginning of the study.
Interestingly,
however, the vigorous intensity exercisers did not get any
“fitter” than the moderate intensity exercisers. “The
moderate intensity group only exercised to 40 or 50 percent
of their max,” Duscha explained. “That’s walking
briskly up a hill or walking fast -- you could walk around
the neighborhood after dinner and get that in. You don’t
have to go jog, climb on the stairmaster or elliptical
trainer and kill yourself.”
However,
increasing the amount of exercise from 12 to 20 miles per
week - at the same intensity - provides even more
cardiovascular benefits.
“Therefore,”
Duscha and colleagues conclude, “it is appropriate to
recommend mild exercise to improve fitness and reduce
cardiovascular risk, yet encourage higher intensities and
amounts for additional benefits.”
SOURCE:
Chest, October, 2005.
Reuters
Photo
courtesy: dundee.ac.uk
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