Different Exercise Makes
for Different Effects
People too fat or too weak to start
normal exercise may get surprising benefits from a downhill stroll,
Austrian researchers reported.
Hiking downhill appeared to specifically
lower blood glucose levels, in turn reducing the risks or effects
of diabetes, according the researchers' study carried out in the
Austrian Alps.
"Walking downhill may be a starting
mode for sedentary people to begin with exercise," Dr. Heinz Drexel,
of the Voralberg Institute in Feldirch, Austria, told a meeting
of the American Heart Association.
Hiking may also affect cholesterol
levels, Drexel said. Hiking uphill reduced triglycerides, an important
component of overall cholesterol. In addition, the so-called "bad
cholesterol," low-density lipoprotein (LDL), was lowered by hiking
in either direction.
For the study, Drexel and his colleagues
at the Vorarlberg Institute persuaded 45 healthy but sedentary
people to spend four months hiking on a steep mountain.
For two months, three to five days
a week, half of the people hiked uphill and took a cable car back
down, while the other half hiked only downhill.
Then they swapped. Drexel's team
checked their cable car tickets to make sure they were complying.
A day and a half after a hike the
researchers measured cholesterol, including LDL and triglycerides,
as well as blood sugar.
Although the researchers had had
assumed that hiking downhill would have little beneficial effect,
the found that the downhill hikers were better able to handle
sugar while hiking upwards showed little impact.
All exercise lowered LDL cholesterol,
they found. Uphill hiking also lowered overall triglycerides and
helped participants better handle a fat-laden drink.
Drexel said he now wants to test
diabetes patients to see if walking downhill will actually help
them.
Drexel said that, being Austrian,
he has a particular enthusiasm for hiking in steep mountains.
"Many groups are trying to find an equivalent in a gymnasium and
fitness centers ... but it is more fun to do it in nature.
Dr. Gerald Fletcher of the Mayo
Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida, said different societies will
have to apply the findings appropriately. "We don't have mountains
in Florida," he noted.
Dr. Raymond Gibbons of the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, suggested one adaptation. "I walk
up five flights of stairs to my office and take the elevator down,"
he said.
Reference
Source 89
November 8, 2004
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