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Active life may help elderly keep
their eyesight
New York -
Keeping an active lifestyle can reduce the risk of developing
an eye disease that is a leading cause of blindness in the elderly,
researchers said on Tuesday.
Age-related macular degeneration
(AMD) gradually destroys the central vision of the eye. It is linked
to aging but scientists in the United States have found that physical
activity such as walking and climbing stairs has a protective effect
against it.
Exercise helped to reduce the odds of
suffering from "wet," or exudative, AMD -- a form of the condition in
which new blood vessels grow behind the eye causing bleeding and
scarring which leads to distorted vision and impaired sight.
The effects were still noticed after
taking of other risk factors such as weight, blood pressure and
smoking.
"Engaging in an active lifestyle or
walking more ... reduced the risk of developing exudative AMD over 15
years by 70 percent and 30 percent, respectively," Michael Knudtson,
of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health,
said in a report in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.
Knudtson
and his team studied the impact of exercise on 4,000 men and women in
Beaver Dam, Wisconsin over 15 years. The volunteers were aged between
43 and 86 when the study started in 1988-1990.
They were questioned about how much
exercise they did and assessed every five years. About 25 percent had
an active lifestyle and nearly the same number climbed more than six
flights of stairs each day.
The researchers said they could not
rule out other factors but added that the report "provides evidence
that a modifiable behavior, regular physical activity, such as
walking, may have a protective effect for incident AMD." --
Reuters Limited
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