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When
it Comes to Cardiovascular
Fitness, Either Use It or Lose It
Excerpt
By Jennie Phipps, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews)
-- A new study confirms that when it comes to cardiovascular fitness,
you either use it or lose it -- but it isn't too tough to get
it back, even when you're middle-age and pudgy.
Thirty years
ago, researchers at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center hired five college students to lie in bed for almost a
month. They measured their fitness before and after and concluded
the obvious -- that lying in bed was debilitating.
Recently,
researchers dug up these same guys (by hiring private detectives)
and compared their current fitness levels with what they had been
30 years before in the original study.
The researchers
first examined changes in the men's cardiovascular capacity. That's
the body's ability to take in and use oxygen and it affects not
only heart health, but also endurance and, as you age, the ability
to carry on a normally active life.
They then
compared the cardiovascular capacity that the men lost in 30 years
of aging to that lost during three weeks of bed rest when they
were 20 years old. And they discovered that the bed rest was harder
on the men than 30 years of hard living.
Dr. Darren
McGuire, assistant professor of internal medicine and lead author
of the study, believes this finding makes it clear that getting
patients up and moving is very important. "It's not fun for
a patient to get up, but there are lot of reasons to do early
rehabilitation," he says.
Then the researchers
enrolled the men in a low-key exercise program. If you're 50 and
feeling sluggish, the results of that program may surprise you.
The initial tests showed the five men to be mostly out of shape.
All of them had doubled their percentage of body fat since they
were in their 20s. "Slugs," is how one of the research
physicians characterized them.
But after
only a moderate amount of exercise -- 15 minutes a day, growing
to about an hour four days a week over a six-month period, all
five of the men were back to the cardiovascular fitness level
they had enjoyed as 21-year-old students before bed rest.
"It just
shows you that the average non-athletic person doesn't have to
knock himself out to gain a large amount of cardiovascular fitness,"
says McGuire, whose study appeared in a recent Circulation:
Journal of the American Heart Association.
One of the
five participants in the pair of studies, Kazmer Laszlo, a Dallas-area
engineer who is now 55, says, "Then I had everything but
brains. Today, I have the brains, but my life is behind a desk."
When he started
the exercise regime, Laszlo was asked to choose an activity he
could do regularly. He decided to run around the high-school track
next to his house. "At first, I'd run a half-mile and I'd
have to quit, but after awhile I built up my stamina, and it started
to feel good."
McGuire says
the trick is to encourage an exerciser to select a mode of exercise
that he can stick with. Among the five men in the study, Laszlo
jogged; one rode a stationary bike and the remaining three did
a combination of walking, jogging and stationary biking. Those
who worked harder reached their optimal cardiovascular fitness
level in about four months. Those who were less determined took
six months, but all five got there.
None of the
men lost any weight, and they didn't achieve muscle tone. "We
didn't change body composition, but we dramatically improved their
aerobic power," McGuire says. "They didn't look different,
but they all said they felt better."
Bruce Craig,
who is a professor of exercise at the Human Performance Laboratory
at Ball State University, Muncie, Ind., says the findings don't
surprise him at all.
"The
encouraging thing with older individuals, you can see fairly good
results with both resistance or aerobic training as long as they
stick with it. My theory has always been, that anything above
nothing is going to be beneficial."
What To
Do
It's never
too late to get off the couch and start moving around.
Start simply
and keep going, and here
are some basics to get you going, along with some
advice from the Franklin Institute.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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