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Moderate Exercise Might Be
Healthier Than Intense Workouts
New York -
Moderate exercise, such as walking 30 minutes a day, may offer
better protection against diabetes and heart disease than a more
rigorous workout regimen, concludes a U.S. study that included 240
middle-age, sedentary people.
"On the surface, it seems to make
sense that the harder we exercise, the better off we'll be, and by
some measures that's true," lead author and exercise physiologist
Cris Slentz, of Duke University Medical Center, said in a prepared
statement. "But our studies show that a modest amount of moderately
intense exercise is the best way to significantly lower the level of
a key blood marker linked to higher risk of heart disease and
diabetes. More intense exercise doesn't seem to do that."
Perhaps even more surprising is
that some of the benefits achieved through moderate exercise seem to
last much longer than the benefits gained through more intense
training, Slentz said.
The study was published in the
August issue of the Journal of Applied Physiology.
The participants in the study were
divided into four exercise groups: high amount/high intensity; low
amount/high intensity; low amount/moderate intensity; and a control
group that did no exercise. The volunteers started with a two- to
three-month "ramp-up" period and then continued their exercise
programs for six months.
The Duke team found that no amount
of exercise significantly changed levels of low- density lipoprotein
(LDL -- "bad" cholesterol). However, length and intensity of
exercise did improve levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL --
"good" cholesterol), and that benefit was sustained over time.
The study also found that low
amount/moderate intensity exercise significantly lowered levels of
triglycerides, which are particles that carry fat around the body
and are also a good indicator of insulin resistance, a marker for
diabetes. Reducing triglyceride levels lowers a person's risk of
diabetes and heart disease.
"A proper exercise program appears
to be able to lower a person's insulin resistance in just a matter
of days. We were also amazed to see that the lower triglyceride
levels stayed low even two weeks after the workouts ended," senior
author and cardiologist Dr. William Kraus said in a prepared
statement. --
HealthDay
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