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Mercedes Carnethon on "Benefits of Fitness in Early Adulthood"]
MEDIA CONTACT: Elizabeth
Crown at (312) 503-8928 or at e-crown@northwestern.edu
December 16, 2003
Early Fitness Protects Middle Age Hearts
CHICAGO --- Fitness in early adulthood greatly reduces the likelihood
of developing high blood pressure and diabetes -- both major risk
factors for heart disease and stroke -- in middle age, a new study
has found.
Reporting in the Dec. 17 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association,
Northwestern University researcher Mercedes Carnethon and colleagues found that
fitness also decreases risk for metabolic syndrome, a collection of factors that
includes excess abdominal fat, elevated blood pressure and levels of triglycerides
and low levels of high-density lipoprotein, or “good” cholesterol.
Improving fitness greatly reduces – by as much as 50 percent – risk
for diabetes and metabolic syndrome, said lead author Carnethon, assistant professor
of preventive medicine at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University.
“If all the young adults in our study had been fit, there would have been
nearly a third fewer cases of high blood pressure, diabetes and metabolic syndrome,” Carnethon
said.
“Given the epidemic of obesity in the United States and the decline in
people’s physical activity, it’s important that Americans take steps
to improve their physical fitness,” she said.
Heart disease and stroke are the first and third leading causes of death for
Americans. According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, nearly
13 million Americans have heart disease and nearly 5 million have had a stroke.
The research is the first, large observational study to assess the role of fitness
on healthy young adults developing risk factors for heart disease. Data were
derived from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study,
which began in 1984 and ended in 2001.
Over 4,400 men and women aged 18 to 30 participated in the study and were followed
up for 15 years, but about 2,500 had their cardiopulmonary fitness retested after
seven years to measure changes in fitness.
Fitness was measured with an exercise treadmill test, which included up to nine,
two-minute stages of progressive difficulty. Women who completed less than six
minutes and men who completed less than 10 minutes of exercise were classified
as having “low fitness.” Women who were classified as “moderately
fit” could exercise six to nine minutes; moderately fit men could exercise
10 to 12 minutes. Those who completed more exercise were classified as “highly
fit.”
Results of the study showed that persons with low or moderate fitness had twice
the risk for high blood pressure, diabetes and metabolic syndrome as those who
were highly fit. Risk increased directly as fitness level dropped. Weight gain
was inversely related to fitness over the course of the study. Those who were
obese tended to be less fit: Of those who were obese, 68 percent had low fitness,
while among those who were not obese, 51 percent were highly fit.
Interestingly, improving fitness had no significant effect on reducing high blood
pressure or low-density lipoprotein, the so-called “bad” cholesterol.
“This may be because low-density lipoprotein levels are affected largely
by genetics and diet, and less by fitness. The key point is that the development
of risk factors for heart disease and stroke isn’t just the natural result
of aging,” Carnethon said.
Collaborating with Carnethon on this study were Kiang Liu, professor of preventive
medicine at the Feinberg School; and researchers from the Nemours Cardiac Center
and Thomas Jefferson University, Wilmington, Del.; Kaiser Permanente Medical
Care Program, Oakland, Calif.; University of Minnesota School of Public Health,
Minneapolis; and University of Alabama at Birmingham. This research was supported
by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute.
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