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Posts Tagged ‘Exercise’

Childhood Obesity Alone May Increase Risk of Later Cardiovascular Disease

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

It’s no wonder that in a country where the rates of obesity are rising, other negative health consequences are increasing too. According to a new study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM), Nelly Mauras, MD, of Nemours Children’s Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida and senior author of the study, investigated the correlation between childhood obesity and cardiovascular risk factors.

ScienceDaily (Jan. 26, 2010) — By as early as 7 years of age, being obese may raise a child’s risk of future heart disease and stroke, even in the absence of other cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure, according to a new study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM).
“This new study demonstrates that the unhealthy consequences of excess body fat start very early,” said Nelly Mauras, MD, of Nemours Children’s Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida and senior author of the study. “Our study shows that obesity alone is linked to certain abnormalities in the blood that can predispose individuals to developing cardiovascular disease early in adulthood.
These findings suggest that we need more aggressive interventions for weight control in obese children, even those who do not have the co-morbidities of the metabolic syndrome.”
The metabolic syndrome is a cluster of risk factors that raise the risk of developing heart disease, stroke and diabetes. It is being increasingly diagnosed in children as being overweight becomes a greater problem. Although debate exists as to its exact definition, to receive a diagnosis of metabolic syndrome, one must have at least three of the following characteristics: increased waist circumference (abdominal fat), low HDL (“good”) cholesterol, high triglycerides (fats in the blood), high blood pressure and high blood glucose (blood sugar).
Mauras and her colleagues wanted to know if obesity could raise cardiovascular disease risk prior to the onset of the metabolic syndrome. Researchers therefore screened more than 300 individuals ages 7 to 18 years and included only those without features of the metabolic syndrome. They included 202 participants in the study: 115 obese children and 87 lean children as controls. Half of the children were prepubertal and the other half were in late puberty. Obese children had a body mass index (a measure of body fat) above the 95th percentile for their sex, age and height.
To be eligible to participate in the study, the children and adolescents had to have normal fasting blood sugar levels, normal blood pressure and normal cholesterol and triglycerides. Lean controls also could not have a close relative with type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure or obesity. The latter group proved very difficult to find.
All study participants underwent blood testing for known markers for predicting the development of cardiovascular disease. These included elevated levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of inflammation, and abnormally high fibrinogen, a clotting factor, among others. Obese children had a 10 fold higher CRP and significantly higher fibrinogen concentrations, compared with age- and sex-matched lean children, the authors reported. These abnormalities occurred in obese children as young as age 7, long before the onset of puberty.
The results were striking Mauras stated, as the children were entirely healthy otherwise. Although it is not yet known whether early therapeutic interventions can reverse high CRP and fibrinogen, she said it would be prudent for health care providers to advise more aggressive interventions to limit calories and increase activity in “healthy” overweight children, even before the onset of puberty.
“Doctors often do not treat obesity in children now unless they have other features of the metabolic syndrome,” Mauras said. “This practice should be reconsidered. Further studies are needed to offer more insight into the effects of therapeutic interventions in these children.

Do You Overestimate Your Child’s Activity?

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Children and parents are quite busy these days. It is no wonder that when some parents are asked about their children’s activity levels, they might not provide an accurate estimate. A British Study, in Norfolk, England, examined the amount parents over or underestimate their children’s activity level. It is referred to as “The Speedy Study (Sport, Physical Activity and Eating Behavior: Environmental Determinants in Young People)”.

January 6, 2010, 11:07 am

Many parents overestimate how much physical activity their children get, a new study found.

Compared to adults, children seem to be moving constantly. So it’s no surprise that most parents who are quizzed about their child’s physical activity level describe their children as fairly active.

But a new study of nearly 2,000 British school children suggests that many parents overestimate the amount of physical activity their children are really getting.

The researchers equipped 1,892 British school children, ages 9 and 10, with accelerometers, gadgets that measure all physical activity during a given time period. The research, known as the Speedy study (an acronym for Sport, Physical Activity and Eating Behavior: Environmental Determinants in Young People), collected the exercise data from children at 92 schools in Norfolk, England, between April and July 2007.

A child was deemed inactive if he or she recorded less than an hour a day of moderate and vigorous physical activity. Although the majority of children studied were getting a sufficient level of physical activity, a sizable minority of children were not. Overall, 39 percent of girls and 18 percent of boys studied were getting less than an hour of physical activity each day.

But if you asked the parents of the inactive children to describe their child’s activity level, the vast majority — 80 percent — described their children as fairly or very physically active, according to the findings published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Interestingly, the children themselves had more awareness about their lack of physical activity. Overall, 40 percent of children overestimated their physical activity compared to their peers.

But it wasn’t the parents of overweight children who were most likely to guess wrong about physical activity levels. The parents who were most out of touch about their child’s physical fitness were more likely to have children who were slim. Parents of girls were also more likely to overestimate physical activity. The researchers noted that parents should be educated about the importance of physical activity for children even if the child is not overweight.

“Parents of children with a lower fat mass index appear to assume that their children are adequately active,” the study authors reported. “Increasing awareness regarding health benefits of physical activity beyond weight control might help reverse misperceptions of physical activity levels and encourage behavior change.”

Stand Up While You Read This!

Friday, March 12th, 2010

This article examines the importance of getting up off of your chair and moving around! It is extremely important to be active as opposed to sedentary. In fact, many researchers have found that sitting in your chair is the enemy. The more sedentary a person is, the more likely he or she could be at risk for major health problems such as heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, obesity, some cancers, and an early death. So get up off of your chair and read this article!

Your chair is your enemy.

It doesn’t matter if you go running every morning, or you’re a regular at the gym. If you spend most of the rest of the day sitting — in your car, your office chair, on your sofa at home — you are putting yourself at increased risk of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, a variety of cancers and an early death. In other words, irrespective of whether you exercise vigorously, sitting for long periods is bad for you.

That, at least, is the conclusion of several recent studies. Indeed, if you consider only healthy people who exercise regularly, those who sit the most during the rest of the day have larger waists and worse profiles of blood pressure and blood sugar than those who sit less. Among people who sit in front of the television for more than three hours each day, those who exercise are as fat as those who don’t: sitting a lot appears to offset some of the benefits of jogging a lot.

So what’s wrong with sitting?

The answer seems to have two parts. The first is that sitting is one of the most passive things you can do. You burn more energy by chewing gum or fidgeting than you do sitting still in a chair. Compared to sitting, standing in one place is hard work. To stand, you have to tense your leg muscles, and engage the muscles of your back and shoulders; while standing, you often shift from leg to leg. All of this burns energy.

For many people, weight gain is a matter of slow creep — two pounds this year, three pounds next year. You can gain this much if, each day, you eat just 30 calories more than you burn. Thirty calories is hardly anything — it’s a couple of mouthfuls of banana, or a few potato chips. Thus, a little more time on your feet today and tomorrow can easily make the difference between remaining lean and getting fat.

You may think you have no choice about how much you sit. But this isn’t true. Suppose you sleep for eight hours each day, and exercise for one. That still leaves 15 hours of activities. Even if you exercise, most of the energy you burn will be burnt during these 15 hours, so weight gain is often the cumulative effect of a series of small decisions: Do you take the stairs or the elevator? Do you e-mail your colleague down the hall, or get up and go and see her? When you get home, do you potter about in the garden or sit in front of the television? Do you walk to the corner store, or drive?

Just to underscore the point that you do have a choice: a study of junior doctors doing the same job, the same week, on identical wards found that some individuals walked four times farther than others at work each day. (No one in the study was overweight; but the “long-distance” doctors were thinner than the “short-distance” doctors.)

So part of the problem with sitting a lot is that you don’t use as much energy as those who spend more time on their feet. This makes it easier to gain weight, and makes you more prone to the health problems that fatness often brings.

But it looks as though there’s a more sinister aspect to sitting, too. Several strands of evidence suggest that there’s a “physiology of inactivity”: that when you spend long periods sitting, your body actually does things that are bad for you.

As an example, consider lipoprotein lipase. This is a molecule that plays a central role in how the body processes fats; it’s produced by many tissues, including muscles. Low levels of lipoprotein lipase are associated with a variety of health problems, including heart disease. Studies in rats show that leg muscles only produce this molecule when they are actively being flexed (for example, when the animal is standing up and ambling about). The implication is that when you sit, a crucial part of your metabolism slows down.

Nor is lipoprotein lipase the only molecule affected by muscular inactivity. Actively contracting muscles produce a whole suite of substances that have a beneficial effect on how the body uses and stores sugars and fats.

Which might explain the following result. Men who normally walk a lot (about 10,000 steps per day, as measured by a pedometer) were asked to cut back (to about 1,350 steps per day) for two weeks, by using elevators instead of stairs, driving to work instead of walking and so on. By the end of the two weeks, all of them had became worse at metabolizing sugars and fats. Their distribution of body fat had also altered — they had become fatter around the middle. Such changes are among the first steps on the road to diabetes.

Conversely, a study of people who sit for many hours found that those who took frequent small breaks — standing up to stretch or walk down the corridor — had smaller waists and better profiles for sugar and fat metabolism than those who did their sitting in long, uninterrupted chunks.

Some people have advanced radical solutions to the sitting syndrome: replace your sit-down desk with a stand-up desk, and equip this with a slow treadmill so that you walk while you work. (Talk about pacing the office.) Make sure that your television can only operate if you are pedaling furiously on an exercise bike. Or, watch television in a rocking chair: rocking also takes energy and involves a continuous gentle flexing of the calf muscles. Get rid of your office chair and replace it with a therapy ball: this too uses more muscles, and hence more energy, than a normal chair, because you have to support your back and work to keep balanced. You also have the option of bouncing, if you like.

Or you could take all this as a license to fidget.

But whatever you choose, know this. The data are clear: beware your chair.

Notes:

The term “calorie” sometimes causes confusion. Most people, when referring to the energy content of food, use “calorie” instead of “kilocalorie” — which is the actual unit that food energy is measured in. When I refer to 30 calories, I am following this convention and therefore technically mean 30 kilocalories. For metric system users, that’s about 125 kilojoules.

For sitting a lot causing heart disease, obesity, diabetes, certain cancers and early death, independently of whether you exercise regularly, see, for example, Katzmarzyk, P. T. et al. 2009. “Sitting time and mortality from all causes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer.” Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 41: 998-1005. (This study looked at the fates of 17,013 Canadians over a span of 12 years.) See also Dunstan, D. W. et al. 2010. “Television viewing time and mortality: the Australian diabetes, obesity and lifestyle study (AusDiab).” Circulation 121: 384-391. (This study considered 8800 Australians followed for a median time of 6.6 years.)

For the negative effects of sitting a lot on healthy people who exercise regularly, see Healy, G. N. et al. 2008. “Television time and continuous metabolic risk in physically active adults.” Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 40: 639-645. For fatness and three hours of television, see Dunton, G. F. et al. 2009. “Joint associations of physical activity and sedentary behaviors with body mass index: results from a time use survey of US adults.” International Journal of Obesity 33: 1427-1436.

For energy expended during sitting as opposed to gum chewing, fidgeting, and standing, see Levine, J. A. et al. 2006. “Non-exercise activity thermogenesis: the crouching tiger hidden dragon of societal weight gain.” Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology 26: 729-736. For weight gain by slow creep, see Hill, J. O., Peters, J. C. and Wyatt, H. R. 2009. “Using the energy gap to address obesity: a commentary.” Journal of the American Dietetic Association 109: 1848-1853. Note that the process of gaining weight is different from the process of losing weight.

For fatness versus leanness being a consequence of small differences in daily movements, see Levine, J. A. et al. 2005. “Interindividual variation in posture allocation: possible role in human obesity.” Science 307: 584-586. For some doctors walking four times further than others while doing the same job, see Conzett-Baumann, K. et al. 2009. “The daily walking distance of young doctors and their body mass index.” European Journal of Internal Medicine 20: 622-624. I have borrowed their “long-distance” and “short-distance” terminology.

Two outstanding papers provide fascinating overviews of the more sinister aspects of sitting. See Hamilton, M. T., Hamilton, D. G. and Zderic, T. W. 2007. “Role of low energy expenditure and sitting in obesity, metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.” Diabetes 56: 2655-2667; and Pedersen, B. K. 2009. “The diseasome of physical inactivity — and the role of myokines in muscle-fat cross talk.” Journal of Physiology 587: 5559-5568. The Hamilton et al. paper discusses the results for lipoprotein lipase, and describes how sitting differs from standing in terms of muscles flexed. The Pedersen paper discusses a variety of other compounds that are released by active muscles, as well as the impact they have on metabolism. For muscular activity in rats and the production of lipoprotein lipase, see Bey, L. and Hamilton, M. T. 2003. “Suppression of skeletal muscle lipoprotein lipase activity during physical inactivity: a molecular reason to maintain daily low-intensity activity.” Journal of Physiology 551: 673-682.

For the physiological impact of men reducing how far they walk for two weeks, see Olsen, R. H. et al. 2008. “Metabolic responses to reduced daily steps in healthy nonexercising men.” Journal of the American Medical Association 299: 1261-1263. For the advantages of taking breaks from sitting, see Healy, G. N. et al. 2008. “Breaks in sedentary time: beneficial associations with metabolic risk.” Diabetes Care 31: 661-666.

For the advantages of having a stand-up desk attached to a treadmill, see Levine, J. A. and Miller, J. M. 2007. “The energy expenditure of using a ‘walk-and-work’ desk for office workers with obesity.” British Journal of Sports Medicine 41: 558-561. For a set of radical suggestions regarding how to reduce sitting, including the idea of attaching the television to some kind of exercise device, see the crouching tiger hidden dragon paper mentioned above.

The advantages of rocking chairs have mostly been explored in the elderly. See, for example, Pierce, C., Pecen, J. and McLeod, K. J. 2009. “Influence of seated rocking on blood pressure in the elderly: a pilot clinical study.” Biological Research for Nursing 11: 144-151. However, I see no reason why rocking wouldn’t be preferable to passive sitting in younger people too. For the advantages of using a therapy ball instead of a desk chair, see Beers, E. A. et al. 2008. “Increasing passive energy expenditure during clerical work.” European Journal of Applied Physiology 103: 353-360.

Pedometers can motivate users to get in step

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Self-monitoring continuously is an effective intervention for losing weight. Using a pedometer is just another way you can track your steps and progress to your weight loss goal. Simon Marshall, associate professor of exercise and nutritional science at San Diego State University, Karen Croteau, a professor in the department of exercise, health and sport sciences at the University of Southern Maine, and Dr. Kathy Magliato of St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica or Torrance Memorial Medical Center discuss the benefits and positive effects a pedometer can have in building a healthy lifestyle.

The step-tracking gadgets are easy to use and relatively inexpensive. Plus, evidence indicates that they truly inspire people.

By Jeannine Stein

January 11, 2010

If the journey toward fitness begins with a single step, make sure it’s counted with a pedometer.

These little step-tracking gadgets now have a solid track record when it comes to motivating people to exercise. And their popularity is growing.

Inside this small-as-an-egg device are the keys to exercise success that have eluded far more complex and expensive fitness programs: accountability, goal-setting and being able to monitor progress. If the objective is to reach 10,000 steps in a day (the recommended amount), seeing a tally of 4,000 steps at 3 p.m. is a wake-up call to start walking.

“When we ask people to start an exercise program, it’s important to have measurable, achievable goals, and adding this self-monitoring component is very critical,” says Simon Marshall, associate professor of exercise and nutritional science at San Diego State University. “We don’t know why exactly, but keeping a number, a prompt, in our consciousness on a regular basis is important, and that’s why pedometers are superior to other methods. It’s on you all the time.”

Pedometers are easy to use day after day in various settings, none of which has to be a gym.

Perhaps better yet, the average cost is around $20.

“People describe them as being like little personal trainers,” says Catrine Tudor-Locke, associate professor and director of the Walking Behavior Laboratory at Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, La. “They provide ready, real-time data so you can make decisions about how you’re going to spend the rest of your day and make adjustments as needed.”

Los Angeles-based personal trainer Harley Pasternak has been studying the health habits of various cultures for his latest book, “The 5-Factor World Diet.” He says, “What I found was that in the 10 healthiest countries in the world, they all have different [dietary habits]. But one thing they all share is that they all walk way more than we do in America. For those in these 10 countries, being fit and healthy is about having an active lifestyle, while here in America, being fit is about performing an exercise in a room designated for fitness.”

Pedometers can create that lifestyle balance that many Americans otherwise would lack.

Fits any lifestyle

At 12:30 on a recent afternoon, Dr. Kathy Magliato’s pedometer already reads 19,000 steps for the day. “I’m a cardiothoracic surgeon who’s also a busy mommy with two small kids, so I run around quite a bit,” she says. She typically gets her steps in while doing rounds at St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica or Torrance Memorial Medical Center. On days when she’s in surgery for 10 hours, she takes her children for a walk when she gets home.

Magliato clipped on her first pedometer six years ago after the birth of her first child. With 10 pounds to lose and no time to go to a gym, she had to do something to stay in shape — both for herself and as a role model for her patients, many of whom have heart disease. Through walking and watching her diet, she dropped the 10 pounds and realized that walking provided the activity she needed, which some fitness experts and researchers say is the key to true health.

“When my patients tell me they can’t work out because they don’t have time, I say, ‘Look at my lifestyle.’ ”

Pedometers have even made their way into the White House. In October, Peter Orszag, director of the Office of Management and Budget, issued a pedometer challenge through the end of 2009 to all willing agency employees. In an office blog post, Orszag (a runner and marathoner) wrote: “This year, as part of their budget submissions, federal agencies have been asked to report on their efforts to improve the health and wellness of their employees. I want to make sure that the staff at OMB doesn’t just talk the talk on wellness, but that we also walk the walk — literally.”

With approximately 115 to 200 men and women taking part, weekly step averages went from 10,871 the first week (beginning Oct. 4) to 13,000 in early December. (Final tallies aren’t yet available.)

Research confirms that monitoring daily steps helps people get the recommended amount of exercise, bolsters their cardiovascular system and often contributes to weight loss.

A 2007 study in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. analyzed data from 26 studies assessing pedometer use among adults and found the device to be linked with considerable increases in physical activity and decreases in blood pressure and body mass index. In a 2004 study in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 27 people were assigned to a pedometer-based exercise group with an emphasis on daily steps and 33 people to an exercise program emphasizing time spent exercising.

At the end of the study, the pedometer-based program proved to be more effective in increasing daily activity than the time-based program.

Set a goal

Clipping on a pedometer and counting steps — even brisk ones — isn’t the end of the fitness story. “It’s one thing to wear a pedometer, but it’s another to have a goal in mind of how many steps you want to get,” says Karen Croteau, a professor in the department of exercise, health and sport sciences at the University of Southern Maine. “These gadgets are effective when serving as a cue, but that has to be in conjunction with setting goals.”

She suggests that new users monitor steps for a few days to find a daily average before upping the amount. Some fitness experts recommend adding 5% to 10% of the starting average per day, but Tudor-Locke believes that fitness levels and daily routines should be taken into consideration. “One person has to juggle child rearing while another has different lifestyle impediments,” she says. “People should find out where they are and realize that more is better.”

And while walking 10,000 steps a day is admirable, reaching that goal every day over a long period of time may cause a fitness plateau, in which cardio gains stop and weight sneaks back on. In that case, users must increase both steps and intensity.

(But keep in mind, walking shouldn’t be the only exercise in the repertoire. Strength training for both the upper and lower body prevents muscle loss and helps stave off bone deterioration, both important as people age.)

Choosing a pedometer can be challenging, considering how many models are on the market. Some are equipped with accelerometers that record movement and intensity. Others tally weekly steps, have calorie counters and come with software to track progress. Some cellphones now come with a pedometer, but since the devices track steps by monitoring hip movement, they won’t work if left on a table or in a purse on the floor.

Many exercise physiologists and trainers generally recommend starting with a basic model that just counts steps and costs about $20. To ensure accuracy, count out from 20 to 50 steps a few times, checking the pedometer. If the count is within a few steps, it should be adequate. You can always upgrade later to a model with more bells and whistles.

Says Marshall, “You’re only limited by how creative you can be.”

Sleep loss may affect health by curbing exercise

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Studies have shown that a lack of sleep can lead to an increased risk of health detriments such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. In the Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Dr. Sebastian M. Schmid, of the University of Luebeck in Germany, investigated the effect sleep deprivation on physical activity.

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A number of studies have linked chronic sleep deprivation to a heightened risk of obesity, diabetes and heart disease. Now, a small study suggests that low levels of physical activity during the day may partly account for the connection.

In a study of 15 healthy men, researchers found that a couple nights of grabbing only four hours of sleep caused the men to curtail their physical activity compared with days where they had gotten the standard eight hours the night before.

In contrast, there was no evidence that sleep loss altered blood levels of appetite-regulating hormones or caused the men to eat more the next day — effects that have been seen in a number of previous studies.

The implication is that there may be a broader range of reasons for the link between sleep loss and weight and health, the researchers report in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

Practically speaking, the findings offer adults another reason to get enough sleep.

For healthy adults, that means regularly getting seven to eight hours per night, lead researcher Dr. Sebastian M. Schmid, of the University of Luebeck in Germany, told Reuters Health in an email.

A number of large epidemiological studies have found associations between poor sleep and higher risks of obesity and other health problems. Since then, a few small studies done in the sleep lab have attempted to find the possible reasons for the connection.

In some, researchers have found evidence that sleep loss alters the regulation of the hunger hormones leptin and ghrelin, and may boost daytime appetite. Leptin, which helps regulate body weight, is secreted by fat cells; low blood levels of the hormone promote hunger, while increases tell the brain that the body is full and encourage calorie burning. Ghrelin is secreted by the stomach to boost appetite.

But another possibility is that sleep-deprived people are just too tired to be physically active during the day.

While that seems logical, apparently no human studies had examined the question before.

For the new study, Schmid and his colleagues had 15 healthy, normal-weight men go through two consecutive nights with four hours of sleep and two nights with eight hours of sleep.

After the first night, the men spent the day doing their normal activities, while wearing a wrist device that recorded their movements. After the second night, they came to the sleep lab, where they again wore the wrist devices and also had their levels of leptin and ghrelin measured and their calorie intake monitored.

The researchers found that, unexpectedly, the men showed no differences in their hormone levels, hunger or food intake after the four-hour night compared with the eight-hour night.

They were, however, less active after sleep-deprived nights — devoting both fewer minutes to physical activity and a smaller proportion of that time to more-intense exercise.

Last Updated: 2010-01-01 13:00:52 -0400 (Reuters Health)

When the men got eight hours of sleep, they spent an average of 25 percent of their active time performing higher-intensity exercise; that declined to about 22 percent with four hours of sleep.

Over time, such differences could affect a person’s weight and general health, according to Schmid’s team.

The findings do not mean that sleep loss has no effects on hunger hormones and appetite, as earlier studies have suggested that it does. However, Schmid said, the results do suggest that even modest sleep restriction — so common in today’s society — reduces physical activity, while hormones and appetite are “less affected.”

SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, December 2009.

Negative Emotions Outweigh Intent to Exercise at Health Clubs

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Most Americans do not exercise even though consistent exercise clearly has proven to have many health benefits. A major contributing factor to obesity is lack of exercise. Researchers at the George Washington University Medical Center examined overweight individuals’ intent to exercise at health clubs. Listed below are the details of the study and the results.

ScienceDaily (Dec. 19, 2009) — Time and time again, it has been documented that regular exercise has many health benefits including lowering risks associated with the comorbidities of obesity. With only 30% of Americans trying to lose weight meeting the National Institutes of Health exercise guidelines of 300 minutes/week, a study in the January/February 2010 issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior explores the paradox that exists — an antidote for obesity and its comorbidities is exercise, but the majority of obese Americans do not exercise.
Investigators explore and compare the barriers associated with regular exercise in health clubs between overweight and normal weight individuals.
Researchers at The George Washington University Medical Center examined overweight individuals’ intent to exercise at health clubs by administering an online survey instrument based on Ajzen’s Theory of Planned Behavior. This theory is based on
1.     one’s attitude toward the behavior in question,
2.     the perceived social pressure (subjective norm) to perform the behavior, and
3.     the ease or difficulty with which one can actually perform the behavior (perceived control).
Of the 1,552 individuals surveyed, 989 were classified into the overweight category.
The researchers found overweight individuals believed exercise improved appearance and self image more than normal weight individuals. In addition, overweight individuals felt more embarrassed and intimidated about exercising, exercising around young people, exercising around fit people, and about health club salespeople than individuals of normal weight. Overweight and normal weight individuals felt the same about exercising with the opposite sex, complicated exercise equipment, exercise boredom, and intention to exercise. The study interestingly found that the demographics of older age and overweight Caucasians (versus overweight non-Caucasians) had more of an effect on exercise intent than did weight. Most notably, the heavier the subject’s weight, the lower his or her perception of health. In other words, for the overweight, sedentary person, the negative emotions associated with health club exercise may be stronger in controlling regular exercise than the intellectual facts.
Writing in the article, the authors state, “One of the most noteworthy findings of this study was that OW [overweight] and NW [normal weight] subjects did not differ in their overall attitude toward exercising at a health club. This similarity in overall attitude of the OW and NW to club exercise is somewhat surprising, in that it is often assumed that OW people do not exercise as much as NW people because the 2 groups have different attitudes about exercise.
The behavior theories that propose that attitude drives the intent to exercise describe attitude as an evaluation of positive versus negative. If this is the case, then, it is important to minimize the negative and maximize the positive in order to promote the desired behavior. Thus, it would be wise for exercise professionals and commercial health clubs to help OW people feel more comfortable around those who are different from themselves and to minimize the intimidating aspects of the exercise environment, while promoting the benefits of exercise to personal health and wellbeing.
Regardless of which subset of the OW population is the target for increasing health club exercise, the ultimate goal is to increase the number of positive beliefs the individual has concerning exercising in a health club…Accordingly, individual beliefs about health club exercise should be evaluated for each new client. If a plan to increase the positive beliefs and reverse the negative beliefs is constructed and followed, the likelihood of retention of that client will be augmented.”

Your body’s big enemy? You’re sitting on it. Most of us spend our days on our behinds — and it’s killing us.

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

According to a poll by the Institute for Medicine and Public Health, Americans lead extremely sedentary lifestyles and it is killing us by way of significant health problems such as obesity, heart disease, and diabetes.

Many researchers and experts such as, James Levine, M.D., Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, Marc Hamilton, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical sciences at the University of Missouri, Douglas Lentz, a certified strength and conditioning specialist and the director of fitness and wellness for Summit Health in Chambersburg, PA, Genevieve Healy, Ph.D., a research fellow at the Cancer Prevention Research Centre of the University of Queensland, Australia, and Neville Owen, Ph.D., of the University of Queensland agree that way to nip this problem in the bud is to get up off of our butts – and to start moving every day.

Women’s Health

12/9/09

You might not want to take the following stat sitting down: According to a poll of nearly 6,300 people by the Institute for Medicine and Public Health, it’s likely that you spend a stunning 56 hours a week planted like a geranium — staring at your computer screen, working the steering wheel, or collapsed in a heap in front of your high-def TV. And it turns out women may be more sedentary than men, since they tend to play fewer sports and hold less active jobs.
Even if you think you have an energetic lifestyle, sitting is how most of us spend a good part of our day. And it’s killing us — literally — by way of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. All this downtime is so unhealthy that it’s given birth to a new area of medical study called inactivity physiology, which explores the effects of our increasingly butt-bound, tech-driven lives, as well as a deadly new epidemic researchers have dubbed “sitting disease.”

The modern-day desk sentence
“Our bodies have evolved over millions of years to do one thing: move,” says James Levine, M.D., Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and author of “Move a Little, Lose a Lot.” “As human beings, we evolved to stand upright. For thousands of generations, our environment demanded nearly constant physical activity.”
But thanks to technological advances, the Internet, and an increasingly longer work week, that environment has disappeared. “Electronic living has all but sapped every flicker of activity from our daily lives,” Levine says. You can shop, pay bills, make a living, and with Twitter and Facebook, even catch up with friends without so much as standing up. And the consequences of all that easy living are profound.

When you sit for an extended period of time, your body starts to shut down at the metabolic level, says Marc Hamilton, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical sciences at the University of Missouri. When muscles — especially the big ones meant for movement, like those in your legs — are immobile, your circulation slows and you burn fewer calories. Key flab-burning enzymes responsible for breaking down triglycerides (a type of fat) simply start switching off. Sit for a full day and those fat burners plummet by 50 percent, Levine says.

That’s not all. The less you move, the less blood sugar your body uses; research shows that for every two hours spent on your backside per day, your chance of contracting diabetes goes up by 7 percent. Your risk for heart disease goes up, too, because enzymes that keep blood fats in check are inactive. You’re also more prone to depression: With less blood flow, fewer feel-good hormones are circulating to your brain.
Spending the day on your rear is also hell on your posture and spine health, says Douglas Lentz, a certified strength and conditioning specialist and the director of fitness and wellness for Summit Health in Chambersburg, Pa. “When you sit all day, your hip flexors and hamstrings shorten and tighten, while the muscles that support your spine become weak and stiff,” he says. It’s no wonder that the incidence of chronic lower-back pain among women has increased threefold since the early 1990s.

And even if you exercise, you’re not immune. Consider this: We’ve become so sedentary that 30 minutes a day at the gym may not do enough to counteract the detrimental effects of eight, nine, or 10 hours of sitting, says Genevieve Healy, Ph.D., a research fellow at the Cancer Prevention Research Centre of the University of Queensland in Australia. That’s one big reason so many women still struggle with weight, blood sugar, and cholesterol woes despite keeping consistent workout routines.

In a recent study, Healy and her colleagues found that regardless of how much moderate to vigorous exercise participants did, those who took more breaks from sitting throughout the day had slimmer waists, lower BMIs (body mass indexes), and healthier blood fat and blood sugar levels than those who sat the most. In an extensive study of 17,000 people, Canadian researchers drew an even more succinct conclusion: The longer you spend sitting each day, the more likely you are to die an early death — no matter how fit you are.
The non-exercise answer
So if exercise alone isn’t the solution, what is? Fortunately, it’s easier than you think to ward off the perils of prolonged parking. Just ramp up your daily non-exercise activity thermogenesis — or NEAT. That’s the energy (i.e., calories) you burn doing everything but exercise. It’s having sex, folding laundry, tapping your toes, and simply standing up. And it can be the difference between wearing a sarong or flaunting your bikini on your next beach vacation.

In his groundbreaking study on NEAT, the Mayo Clinic’s Levine used motion-sensing underwear to track every single step and fidget of 20 people who weren’t regular exercisers (half of them were obese; half were not). After 10 days, he found that the lean participants moved an average of 150 minutes more per day than the overweight people did — enough to burn 350 calories, or about one cheeseburger.

Fidgeting, standing, and puttering may even keep you off medications and out of the doctor’s office. Think of your body as a computer: As long as you’re moving the mouse and tapping the keys, all systems are go. But let it idle for a few minutes, and the machine goes into power-conservation mode. Your body is meant to be active, so when you sit and do nothing for too long, it shuts down and burns less energy. Getting consistent activity throughout the day keeps your metabolism humming along in high gear.

When you get out of your chair and start moving around, you turn on fat burners. Simply standing up fries three times as many calories as sitting on your butt, according to Levine. And, he adds, “NEAT activity can improve blood flow and increase the amount of serotonin available to the brain, so that your thinking becomes sharper and you’ll be less likely to feel depressed.”
Get your move on
Shake things up throughout the day by interrupting your sedentary stints as often as possible. “Stand up every half hour,” says Neville Owen, Ph.D., of the University of Queensland. “If you have to sit for longer than that, take more extended and active breaks and move around for a few minutes before sitting back down.”

When you’re reading e-mail and taking phone calls, do it standing. Walk with colleagues to brainstorm ideas. And consider trading your chair for a large stability ball. “It forces you to engage your muscles, and you’re likely to stand up more because you’re not melting into a chair,” Lentz says.

At home, it’s simple: Limit TV time to two hours a day or less. Better yet, watch it from a treadmill or exercise bike. Among women, the risk for metabolic syndrome — a constellation of health woes including high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and high blood sugar — shoots up 26 percent for every hour per day they spend watching the tube.

Not sure how much of a difference these mini moves will make? Check out the chart below. Swapping a more active approach for just a few of your daily activities can help stave off the one-to two-pound weight gain most women accumulate every year — and it can keep your metabolism buzzing the way nature intended it to.

Burn More Calories
Instead of this:                          Cal/Hr Do this:                               Cal/Hr
Sitting at your Desk                     83 Stand at your desk             115
Riding the Elevator                     128 Taking the stairs                 509
Shopping online                           96 Shop at the mall                 147
Calling for takeout                       96 Cook at home                      128
Talking on the phone seated     102 Pace while chatting             147
Emailing a co-worker                  96 Walk to her office                128
Watching TV                                  64 Make out                                96
Playing a seated video game       32 Play Wii                                  178
TOTAL CALORIES                      697 TOTAL CALORIES             1,448

Exercise May Keep Your Cells Biologically Young

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

A study conducted at the University of Saarlandes in Saarbrücken, Germany found that exercise over a lifetime may be activating an anti-aging effect that stems from people’s DNA. People who exercised frequently looked decades younger than those who were not active.

Exercise has many health benefits, but now an important discovery is helping people fight the never ending battle against accelerated aging. From the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Wojtek J. Chodzko-Zajko explained that people who regularly exercise also are less likely to develop chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease.

By LAUREN COX
ABC News
Dec. 1, 2009—

People who run everyday do it to keep their hearts strong, spirits up and waistlines trim, but how many could guess that sweating it out on the treadmill may actually fight aging?

A new study in the journal Circulation, shows that vigorous exercise may be inducing a natural anti-aging effect that goes right down to our DNA.

“People who exercise have better health and live longer, however the mechanisms are not completely understood,” said Dr. Ulrich Laufs, lead author of the new study and researcher at the University of Saarlandes in Saarbrücken, Germany “You’d be amazed at how little we know about the mechanism of exercise on the cellular level.”

In his small study of 104 people, Laufs and colleagues found that 50-year-old adults who had exercised vigorously over a lifetime — such as marathon runners or endurance athletes — appeared biologically younger –sometimes decades younger– than healthy people the same age who were not active.

The American College of Sports Medicine and other medical institutions agree that exercising can prolong life by protecting against diseases.

But research has not been able to point to an actual anti-aging effect in exercise, or detail exactly how exercise protects against some diseases even among people who are otherwise thin and healthy.

Exercise a Fountain of Youth, or Just Fountain of Health?

“As most people grow older they develop increase likelihood of developing chronic diseases such as heart disease and diabetes. People who exercise regularly have been shown to have a lower rate of developing those chronic diseases,” explained Wojtek J. Chodzko-Zajko, a member of the American College of Sports Medicine and head of Kinesiology and Community Health at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

“But individuals differ widely in how they age. I think we’re a long way from understanding all of it,” he said.

Laufs and his colleagues decided to tackle the problem by studying exercise’s chemical influence on telomeres — caps, that act as a sort of buffer at the end of chromosomes that protect DNA from damage. A young cell typically has long telomeres, but telomeres begin to degrade and fray as it ages. Older people typically have shorter telomeres in their cells. If telomeres in a cell are too short, the cell dies.

Detecting How Exercise Affects Your DNA

Laufs first did a series experiments with mice and showed the more the mice exercised, the more their body’s biochemistry protected their telomeres from deterioration. The mice also helped researchers pinpoint exactly how exercise rejuvenates cells in the cardiovascular system.

The researchers then analyzed the blood chemistry of endurances athletes and non-active, but otherwise healthy people who were either in their 20s or 50s.

Human and mice endurance athletes of any age showed the same chemical signs that exercise was protecting their telomeres. But 50-year-old athletes had significantly longer telomeres than relatively healthy people their same age.

Despite the findings, Laufs and other scientists are hesitant to call exercise the fountain of youth.

Laufs said he can’t prove that the association has anything to do with cause and effect: Did a lifetime devoted to exercise make the 50-year-old marathon runners biologically younger, or did these individuals inherit physical advantage to begin with that would have made them appear biologically younger and led them to exercise more?

“This type of conclusion cannot be made,” said Laufs, especially because “the people we looked at in this study are kind of extreme examples. We chose these extreme examples because we wanted to look at the mechanism.”

For the rest of us who don’t run marathons until we’re 50, exercise experts ask that we please keep trying.

“To a very, scientific level and an applied level there are really two tracks that we have to pursue. One is to understand the mechanisms by which exercise helps,” said Michael E. Rogers, professor and Chair of Human Performance Studies at Wichita State University in Kansas.

“The other track is to take that knowledge to make it applicable to people,” he said.

Rogers argues that science has already found ways to prolong life, but that many can’t enjoy them because they didn’t stay healthy through exercise in their older years.

“Exercise is not just about living longer, there’s a difference between quality and quantity of life. We’ve gotten to the point with technology where we can extend someone’s life long after they can be physically active,” he said. “I don’t think any one of us wants to live an extra 10 years supported by machines, we want to avoid that.”

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