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Exercise
Cuts Fall Risk for
Women with Thin Bones
Exercises that boost strength and agility may help elderly women
with brittle bones lessen their odds of falling, a new study suggests.
Canadian researchers found that
both strength training and agility activities lowered fall risk
among women 75 to 85 years old, all of whom had reduced bone mass
or full-blown osteoporosis.
Falls are a major cause of disability
among the elderly, and those with osteoporosis are at particular
risk of falling and sustaining a bone fracture.
The new findings are important,
according to study co-author Dr. Karim M. Khan, because although
older adults are generally encouraged to stay active, people with
osteoporosis may be advised to avoid exercise because of safety
concerns.
But this study, Khan told Reuters
Health, shows that older adults with brittle bones should be active,
under the proper supervision.
"This study showed very important
gains in health, and the safety was excellent," said Khan, who
is from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. He and
his colleagues report their findings in the Journal of the American
Geriatrics Society.
For the study, 98 women were randomly
assigned to perform one of three types of exercise: resistance
training, agility training or stretching exercises.
Those in the resistance-training
group focused on building strength through lifting light weights
and doing exercises such as squats and lunges. The agility training
used games, dance and obstacle courses to try to improve the women's
balance, coordination and reaction times.
Women in all three groups took
50-minute exercise classes twice a week at a community center.
After six months, those in the
strength-training and agility-training groups showed a greater
drop in fall risk compared with women in the stretching group.
Fall risk, which was estimated with a standard battery of tests,
declined by about 57 percent with strength training and 47 percent
with agility training, the researchers report. That compares with
20 percent in the stretching group.
According to Khan and his colleagues,
much of the benefit from both types of training had to do with
"postural stability." This is gauged in tests that measure how
much the body sways when a person is standing still. After six
months, women in the strength and agility groups were steadier
on their feet than at the study's start.
The findings also suggest that
strength training may be a particularly good way for elderly adults
with osteoporosis to exercise. While participants found the agility
program enjoyable, the researchers note, it carried a higher risk
of falls, and it may be a less feasible type of activity compared
with strength training.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) has said more older adults should be doing
strength-building exercises to counter the loss of muscle and
bone mass that comes with aging. In a recent national survey,
the CDC found that only about 11 percent of Americans age 65 and
up regularly perform any type of strength training.
SOURCE: Journal of the American
Geriatrics Society, May 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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