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Physical Activity Linked To
Protection From Parkinson's Disease
In the first comprehensive examination of strenuous physical
activity and the risk of developing Parkinson's disease, researchers
from the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) have found that
men who exercised regularly and vigorously early in their adult
life had a lower risk for developing Parkinson's disease compared
to men who did not. The findings appear in the February 22, 2005
issue of the journal Neurology.
Parkinson's disease is a progressive nervous disease occurring
generally after age 50. It destroys brain cells that produce dopamine
and is characterized by muscular tremor, slowing of movement,
rigidity and postural instability.
Men who were the most physically active at the start of the
study cut their risk of developing Parkinson's disease by 50 percent
compared to men study participants who were the least physically
active. The authors also found that men who reported regularly
having engaged in strenuous physical activity in early adult life
cut the risk for Parkinson's by 60 percent compared to those who
did not.
Among women in the study, strenuous activity in the early adult
years was also linked to a lower risk of Parkinson's, but this
relationship was not statistically significant, and there was
no clear relationship between physical activity later in life
and Parkinson's risk.
To examine the relationship between physical activity and Parkinson's
disease, participants were chosen from the Health Professionals
Follow-Up Study at HSPH and the Nurses' Health Study, a Brigham
and Women's Hospital-based study. More than 48,000 men and 77,000
women, who were free of Parkinson's disease, cancer or stroke,
were included. Participants completed comprehensive questionnaires
on disease, lifestyle practices and physical and leisure time
activities beginning in 1986 and were updated every two years
through 2000. During the course of the study, 387 cases of Parkinson's
disease (252 men and 135 women) were diagnosed among the study
participants.
The questionnaires contained inquiries on activities such as
walking, hiking, jogging, running, bicycling, lap swimming, tennis,
squash, racquetball, aerobic exercising and other activities.
Additionally, participants were asked to report the number of
flights of stairs they climbed per day ranging from two to 15.
Alberto Ascherio, senior author and associate professor of nutrition
and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, said:
"These are intriguing and promising findings that suggest that
physical activity may contribute to the prevention of Parkinson's.
A protective effect of physical activity has been recently found
in an animal model of Parkinson's disease -- this convergence
of epidemiological and experimental data is what we are looking
for, because consistent results are more likely to reflect biological
mechanisms with important clinical implications. Future studies
should also address the possibility that physical activity slows
the progression of Parkinson's."
Reference
Source 125
February 23, 2005
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