Older Women with Heart
Disease Gain from Exercise
Aerobic and strength training improve
overall fitness and quality of life for older women with coronary
artery disease, the results of a small Canadian study suggest.
Such women are known to experience
a loss of physical fitness and quality of life, Dr. Mark Haykowsky
and colleagues from the University of Alberta in Edmonton point
out in the medical journal Chest.
"Exercise interventions that can
improve peak aerobic power and muscle strength may also result
in an improvement in quality of life," they write.
To further investigate this premise,
Haykowsky's group compared the effect of aerobic training, or
combined aerobic and strength training, on physical performance
and quality of life in 18 women between the ages of 60 and 80
with coronary disease.
After baseline testing, the subjects
were assigned randomly to the two exercise groups. Each group
exercised three days/week for eight weeks.
Both aerobic training and combined
aerobic and strength training produced similar increases in the
women's peak aerobic power, the distance they were able to walk
in 6 minutes, leg strength, and emotional and global quality of
life.
However, upper-body strength, and
physical and social quality of life were improved only among women
in the combined aerobic and strength training group.
Based on these findings, the researchers
conclude, "Older women who participate in a cardiac exercise rehabilitation
program should perform aerobic training and strength training
to attain optimal improvements in overall physical fitness and
quality of life."
SOURCE: Chest, October 2004.
Reference
Source 89
November 1, 2004
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