Elite Athletes Can Rapidly Fall
Out of Shape
Without enough exercise, even those
impossible bodies on display at the Olympics are in danger of
rapidly morphing into the shape of a couch potato, a study of
endurance athletes shows.
Researchers in France found that
among 20 highly trained rowers, those who stopped training saw
their weight, fat mass and cholesterol levels reach that of the
average sedentary person within a year.
Given the athletes' very low body
fat during training, it's not surprising that these changes happened
quickly, the study's lead author, Dr. Cyril Petibois stated.
However, increases in fat mass,
cholesterol and triglycerides -- another blood-fat-carrying molecule
-- should stabilize after a few months, according to Petibois,
a researcher at the University of Bordeaux. Athletes in this study
did not show such a stabilization, but instead had continuing
alterations in body fat and blood fats during their year of "detraining."
The concern is that, without enough
exercise, these athletes will face an increased risk of cardiovascular
disease in the future, according to Petibois.
He said the results highlight the
importance of slowly cutting back on training at the end of a
sports career.
"This information is very important
in the post-Olympic period since it signifies the end of (sports
careers) for a generation of athletes," the researcher noted.
He said retiring Olympians should continue training for the next
year at levels of at least 25 percent of previous training levels.
For their study, reported in the
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Petibois and his
colleagues followed 20 rowers who had been training for more than
10 years.
During the study's first year,
all of the athletes performed endurance and weight training for
about 22 hours a week, most weeks of the year. During year two,
10 athletes who wanted to retire from the sport were instructed
to exercise no more than four hours each week, while the rest
returned to their training regimen.
At the end of the second year,
the researchers found, athletes who were not training gained enough
weight and fat mass to qualify as officially out of shape. On
average, their body fat increased from 12 percent of total body
mass to 20 percent, while their body mass index, or BMI, reached
25-the threshold used to define "overweight."
The rowers who stopped training
rapidly lost the cholesterol benefits that their athleticism had
given them. Within several weeks, their levels of "bad" LDL cholesterol
went up, while concentrations of heart-healthy HDL cholesterol
declined. The athletes' triglycerides, another type of blood-fat-carrying
molecule, rose by an average of about 40 percent.
Together, these changes gave the
athletes the cholesterol "profile" of a sedentary person -- one
that could put them at risk of future cardiovascular disease,
the researchers report.
According to Petibois, the effects
seen in detrained athletes are related to liver metabolism. During
hard endurance training, the liver appears to step up its production
of much-needed fatty acids, and over a year of detraining, it
continues to churn out high levels of fats.
But non-Olympians shouldn't worry
that one day all of their exercise will be for naught if they
have to slow down. Petibois said that normal activity levels do
not appear to trigger the metabolic changes that high endurance
training can.
SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
and Metabolism, July 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 2, 2004
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