Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » What's the best exercise for heart health?
27 July 2011 [09:53] - Today.Az
A combination of weight training and aerobic exercise might be the
best prescription for overweight people at risk for diabetes and heart
disease, a new study suggest, American Journal of Cardiology wrote.
People doing only aerobic exercise dropped weight and inches off
their waistlines -- so an aerobic-only program is also a good (and less
time-consuming) option, researchers said. Those in the study who just
lifted weights saw very little benefit in terms of heart health,
although they did gain strength.
"Aerobic plus resistance is clearly the optimal program," said Dr.
Timothy Church, who studies exercise and disease at Louisiana State
University's Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge.
The findings, he told Reuters Health, are in line with other recent
research and physical activity guidelines that suggest mixing in a
little resistance training with regular aerobic exercise.
Researchers led by Lori Bateman of the Duke University Medical Center
in Durham, North Carolina randomly assigned 196 overweight, sedentary
adults to three different exercise programs.
One group did resistance training three days a week, working out on
eight different weight machines to target upper and lower body muscles. A
second group did two hours of aerobic training per week on gym machines
-- the equivalent of about 12 miles of walking or jogging over the
course of the week. The third group was assigned to do both the
weight-training and aerobic-exercise programs.
More than one quarter of the exercisers dropped out of the study
during the eight-month exercise programs and some others didn't have
complete before-and-after health readings for researchers to compare.
In the end, Bateman and her colleagues analyzed the pre-exercise and post-exercise status of 86 participants.
On average, people in the weight-training group who completed the
exercise program gained about 1.5 pounds and added a smidgen to their
waistline, without changing any of their other heart or diabetes risk
factors.
Those in the aerobic group lost an average of 3 pounds and half an inch from their waists.
Study participants who did both weight and aerobic training dropped
about 4 pounds and 1 waistline inch. That group also saw a decrease in
diastolic blood pressure (the bottom blood pressure reading) and in a
"metabolic syndrome" score that reflects combined heart and diabetes
risk factors.
However, statistical analyses showed that participants doing both
aerobics and weight training didn't necessarily have better outcomes
than those who just did aerobic training.
The researchers said it wasn't clear if the apparent marginal
benefits of the combination regimen -- the 4-pound weight loss versus 3,
for instance -- were due to the effects of weight training, or just
more total time in the gym.
Resistance training builds muscle and bone, which can actually add
weight to the body, although it is leaner, stronger body mass.
Both the aerobic-only group and the combined-exercise group also
lowered their levels of triglycerides -- a type of fat in the blood.
Church, who wasn't involved in the new study, said that the number of
drop-outs made the data harder to interpret, but that the trends are
consistent with what other researchers have found. Previous studies have
also shown that weight training by itself has a very minimal benefit
for heart health, he said.
Because aerobic exercise alone seemed to be almost as good, if not as
good, as aerobic and resistance training combined, Bateman said that
"when you're weighing the time commitment that you're going to spend, if
your overall goal is to...improve your diabetes and heart disease
risks, our study would suggest that aerobic exercise is the best way to
better those outcomes."
That said, "we're not trying to send a message that resistance
training is not good for things like increasing lean body mass or
increasing strength," she told Reuters Health.
/Asiaone Health/
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