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Study
Tells Overweight Adults to Walk
Overweight adults who are not on a diet
need only a small amount of exercise the equivalent of
a half-hour of brisk walking per day to prevent further
weight gain, a study found.
Participants who got no exercise
during the eight-month study gained an average of almost 2.5 pounds.
But 73 percent of those who briskly walked 11 miles a week, or
about 30 minutes a day, were able to maintain their weight or
even lose a few pounds.

The most noticeable weight loss occurred in those who did the
most vigorous exercise jogging about 17 miles weekly. They
lost an average of nearly eight pounds over eight months, and
also shed more than 10 pounds of body fat and gained about 3 pounds
of lean body mass on average.
The study was led by Duke University
researchers and involved 120 overweight or mildly obese adults
who were instructed not to diet during the research. The findings
appear in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
The study confirms that exercise
without cutting calories is not the most effective way to lose
weight, said Dr. Samuel Klein, director of the Center for Human
Nutrition at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
But demonstrating that small amounts
of exercise alone can prevent weight gain is significant, given
the nation's growing obesity epidemic, Klein said.
"That's important because on average
we gain about a pound of fat a year from age 25 to 55 in this
country," he said. "Preventing that would be very important."
The men and women studied were
ages 40 to 65. They had an average body-mass index of 29.7; anything
between 25 and 29 is considered overweight, while 30 and above
is obese. The index is a height-weight ratio.
Government estimates suggest more
than 60 percent of American adults are overweight.
The study may help settle confusion
over conflicting recommendations from the Institute of Medicine
and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The institute, a private group
that advises the government, has recommended adults get at least
an hour of moderate-intensity exercise daily. The study's findings
suggest that may be unrealistic and unnecessary for weight maintenance;
they are more in line with the CDC's recommendations for a half-hour
of moderate exercise per day, said Duke researcher Cris Slentz,
the study's lead author.
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On the Net:
Archives: http://archinternmed.com
CDC: http:www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/
Reference
Source 102
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