People over 55 who start an exercise program can
expect to lose a significant amount of fat in six
months, but not bone mass, according to new study
findings.
These results contradict long-held concerns that
losing fat might also mean losing bone, since studies
show that people who carry more body fat also tend
to have stronger bones, explained study author Dr.
Kerry Stewart of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore,
Maryland.
Even if fat protects bone, exercise can help bone
as well, and "offset the potential negative effects"
of losing fat, Stewart stated. Consequently, people
who want to lose weight should do so using exercise,
not just diet, he added.
During the study, Stewart and his team asked 115
men and women between the ages of 55 and 75 to either
try to follow general government recommendations on
exercise for 6 months, or participate in exercise
training under supervision 3 times each week, doing
stretching, resistance training and aerobics.
People who followed the supervised exercise program
showed improvements in upper and lower body strength,
total strength, lean mass, body weight, total and
abdominal body fat.
The supervised exercise program appeared to have
no effect on men's bone density. For women, exercising
was associated with a slight decrease in overall bone
density. However, even women who didn't exercise lost
some bone mass from around the hip, the authors note
in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
In an interview, Stewart noted that people who showed
the greatest increase in fitness from their exercise
program actually showed improvements in bone mass.
"Those who worked the hardest also got the benefit
of bone," he said.
Stewart explained that research has shown fat can
actually help bone because it creates a beneficial
stress on bone. Also, fat produces estrogen, which
contributes to healthier bone, and fat is also associated
with higher levels of the hormone leptin, which animal
studies show can help form new bone cells, he added.
SOURCE: American Journal of Preventive Medicine,
June 2005.