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Exercise
Can Be Fountain
of Youth for Middle-Aged
Excerpt By Keith Mulvihill, Reuters
Health
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - Middle-aged men have a shot at regaining
some of their youthful vigor, the results of a small study indicate.
A 6-month
program of moderate exercise--including walking, jogging or using
a stationary bike for one hour, four to five times per week--turned
back the clock 30 years for five middle-aged men.
The men were
able to regain the cardiovascular fitness levels they had as 20-year-olds,
according to a report published in the September 18th issue of
Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
``This study
demonstrates that it's never too late to get back in shape,''
said lead author Dr. Darren K. McGuire, of the University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, in an interview with Reuters
Health.
The study
began in 1966 when five healthy 20-year-old men went through a
battery of tests that measured how their aerobic power--their
body's ability to use oxygen--was affected by 3 weeks of total
bed rest.
Thirty years
later the same men underwent similar types of cardiovascular fitness
tests before and after a 6-month exercise regimen.
Age, the researchers
found, had not been kind to the men, whose weight had climbed
25%, on average. In addition, their body fat had doubled and their
aerobic capacity had declined 11% over the 30 years. However,
in a ``remarkable'' finding, 30 years of aging had done less to
lower the men's aerobic power than had the 3 weeks of bed rest
in 1966.
Moreover,
through 6 months of exercise, the men were able to reverse the
effects of aging and boost their aerobic power by about 15%.
In the study,
the men started out exercising twice a week for 15 minutes, then
gradually increased their activity each week so that at 6 months,
they were getting approximately one hour a day, 4 or 5 days each
week.
``The type
of exercise doesn't matter just as long as you do it consistently,''
McGuire told Reuters Health. And he pointed out that it does not
take a tremendous effort to recover and maintain substantial cardiovascular
fitness.
``None of
the fitness training would be considered high-intensity, and (it)
excluded weight training,'' he said.
Improving
cardiovascular fitness, McGuire noted, helps lower cholesterol,
improve blood pressure, cut heart attack risk and enhance feelings
of well-being.
SOURCE:
Circulation 2001;104:1350-1357.
Reference
Source 89
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