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Low-Impact
Exercise May
Boost Women's Bone Mass
Excerpt
By
Amy Norton, Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
- Aerobic exercise can increase women's bone density, and it need
not be a high-impact regimen to work, new research shows.
In fact, experts' recommendations for general health--walking
for about 30 minutes a day, a few days a week--is enough to lend
the bones a hand, George A. Kelley, of the Massachusetts General
Hospital Institute of Health Professions in Boston, told Reuters
Health.
In a review of 24 studies on aerobic exercise and bone mineral
density in women, Kelley's team found that, on average, regular
exercisers saw about a 2% bone mass gain over non-exercisers.
Whether the modest gain translates into a lower risk of the bone-thinning
disease osteoporosis and its associated fractures is unclear,
Kelley said. However, he added, because exercise improves balance
and coordination, it could lower older women's odds of falling,
which would provide benefits beyond any boosts in bone mass.
Kelley presented the study findings last week in Atlanta, Georgia,
at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association.
Kelley's team analyzed studies that followed women aged 18 and
older, the majority of whom were sedentary. In each study, some
women were assigned to an aerobic exercise regimen that lasted
at least 16 weeks.
Walking was the most common form of exercise used in the studies,
Kelley said. On average, women walked about a half-hour, 3 days
a week.
Overall, women who exercised gained close to 0.4% in bone mineral
density in the lower spine, while non-exercisers saw a decrease
of nearly 2%. Exercisers also saw a 1.4% gain in the thighbone,
while non-exercisers recorded a loss of about 0.6%.
The benefits were similar among premenopausal and postmenopausal
women, Kelley noted.
Exercise helps strengthen bones because it forces them to bear
weight. Accordingly, some research shows that exercise that requires
more weight-bearing--such as high-impact activities like running--provides
the greatest benefits to bone.
``But then there's the practical part of getting people to stick
with it,'' Kelley pointed out.
``Our adherence to physical activity programs is abominable,''
he added.
So the good news from this study is that the most popular form
of exercise in the US--walking--can give a lift to bone mass,
according to Kelley.
Since strength training with weights also helps bone density,
he added, the ideal exercise plan includes aerobics and weights.
Reference
Source 89
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