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Want to prevent colds? Start
exercising
Washington -
A long-term moderate exercise program can reduce the risk of colds
among older women, U.S. researchers said on Thursday.
In the first randomized clinical
trial to investigate the impact of moderate physical activity on the
common cold, researchers from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center found that post-menopausal women who worked out regularly had
about half the risk of colds as those who did not exercise.
"There has always been this anecdotal
evidence, and some small studies, suggesting that with moderate
exercise you can improve your immunity," said Cornelia Ulrich, lead
author of the study published in the American Journal of Medicine.
"Our study ... is the first time that
a rigorous trial showed that the number of colds can be affected by
exercise," she said in an interview.
The study involved 115 overweight,
post-menopausal women who had not been exercising before the trial.
The group was divided in two, with
half the women assigned to undertake a moderate exercise program of 45
minutes a day, five days a week. The other half were told to take part
in once-weekly, 45-minute stretching sessions.
The exercisers were told to do
moderate physical activity such as walking on a treadmill, cycling on
a stationary bicycle or rapid walking outside.
Over the course of a year, the women
filled out questionnaires every three months to report the number of
times they had allergies, colds or other problems.
The study found that over 12 months,
the risk of colds decreased modestly in exercisers and increased
modestly in the group of stretchers.
The researchers found that the
ability of moderate exercise to ward off colds seemed to increase over
time. In the last three months of the study, the group of women who
were only stretching were three times as likely to catch a cold as
those who were exercising regularly.
The study did not reach any
conclusions about the benefit of stretching but said that regular
cardiovascular exercise was most beneficial.
"With regards to preventing colds, it
seems you really have to stick with exercise long term," Ulrich said.
The results were seen as important in
understanding the health benefits of exercise, Ulrich said.
"It may apply also to other age
groups, it may apply to men," she said. "In the past, immune studies
have been quite consistent among men and women. I wouldn't expect that
to be different." -- Reuters Limited
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