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Weight Training May Help Heart
Excerpt
By Lindsey Tanner, AP
Moderate
physical activity is good for preventing heart disease, but revving
up the pace may be better especially if combined with weight-training,
a Harvard study of more than 40,000 men suggests.
Researchers have debated whether pace
makes a significant difference in protecting the heart, but the
new study found that men who exercised at high intensity were
17 percent less likely to develop heart disease than those who
did low-intensity exercise.
High-intensity exercise includes running
or jogging at 6 mph, while low-intensity activities include walking
at a pace of about 2 mph.
Researchers also have debated whether
weight-training has a big impact on the heart, since it does not
give the heart and lungs the kind of workout they get from aerobic
activities such as brisk walking or running for at least 20 minutes.
But in the Harvard School of Public
Health study, men who engaged in weight training for 30 minutes
or more weekly had a 23 percent lower risk of heart disease than
men who did not pump iron. The researchers said the benefits may
result in part from reductions in blood pressure and body fat
achieved through weight training.
Given the independent results from
weight training, the researchers theorized that adding weight
training to a high-intensity exercise program would reap even
greater benefits.
The study appears in Wednesday's Journal
of the American Medical Association. It is based on medical records
and questionnaires given periodically to 44,452 health professionals
from 1986 to 1998. Participants were ages 40 to 75 at the outset.
Heart disease was ultimately diagnosed
in 1,700 participants.
Men who ran for an hour or more weekly
at 6 mph or more were 42 percent less likely to develop heart
disease than non-runners. Men who did brisk walking at a moderate
pace of at least 3 mph for at least a half hour daily were 18
percent less likely to develop heart disease than those who did
not. There were no significant heart benefits found from low-intensity
walking.
"The more exercise you do and the
higher intensity seems to be better with regard to cardiovascular
protection," said Dr. Gerald Fletcher, an American Heart Association
spokesman and cardiologist at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville,
Fla.
He said the findings correspond with AHA guidelines, which recommend
aerobic exercise at least six days a week and weight-training two
or three times weekly.
But Fletcher said the results should
not discourage couch-potatoes who may be contemplating starting
an exercise program.
"A little is better than sitting
in front of the television," he said.
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On the Net:
JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org
AHA: http://www.americanheart.org
Reference
Source 102
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