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Staying
Active Keeps Joint Pain Away
You can't run away from pain -- or can you? A new study of older
runners suggests that staying active keeps joint pain at bay.
The 14-year study of 866 people (492 runners and 374 controls)
concluded that those who got regular exercise experienced 25 percent
less joint and muscle pain as they aged compared to less-active
people.
According to the Stanford University researchers, the study participants
were, on average, in their mid-60s at the start of the study.
Each year, the participants filled out a questionnaire on their
health status, exercise habits and injury history. The physically
active group spent between 6 and 35 hours exercising each week
over the course of the study. In contrast, those in the control
group were closer to the classic "couch potato."
"Exercise was associated with a substantial and significant reduction
in pain even ... despite the fact that fractures, a significant
predictor of pain, were slightly more common among runners," the
study authors wrote in the journal Arthritis Research & Therapy.
Further research is needed in order to better understand how
exercise affects musculoskeletal pain in older people, the researchers
said.
Additional
articles on Exercise and Arthritis
Reference
Source 101
September
21, 2005
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