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Mild Aerobic
Exercise No Protection From Osteoporosis
Muscle strength,
abdominal fat linked to bone mineral density
Oct. 31, 02 - While day-to-day
physical activities such as walking, housework and shopping may be
good for your heart, they don't do much for your bones, according to a
Johns Hopkins study.
The new report,
published in the November issue of the Journal of Internal Medicine,
found that neither light-intensity activities nor aerobic fitness
level contributed to bone health, contrasting previous studies
suggesting that aerobics could play a role. Having a few extra pounds,
however, was a help. Among a group of older adults studied, those with
greater muscle strength and higher body fat, especially in the
abdomen, had higher bone mineral densities.
"Carrying extra
body weight increases the forces on bone, strengthening it, though the
largest forces come from more vigorous exercise rather than routine
low-intensity physical activity," says lead author Kerry J. Stewart,
Ed.D., director of clinical exercise physiology at Hopkins. "In our
study of typical older people, who unfortunately do not participate in
regular vigorous exercise, daily activities and low-intensity exercise
like walking appeared to be relatively ineffective for preventing
aging-related bone loss."
Stewart does not
advocate gaining weight to fight osteoporosis.
"Paradoxically, a
high percentage of abdominal fat seems to increase bone mineral
density," he says, "but it also increases the risk of heart disease,
high blood pressure and diabetes, and worsens the symptoms of chronic
conditions such as knee arthritis. Further research is needed to
define methods that will reduce obesity while preserving or enhancing
bone health."
Stewart and
colleagues studied 84 adults (38 men and 46 women) ages 55 to 75 with
higher than normal blood pressure but who were otherwise healthy. They
were not exercising regularly, defined as moderate- or high-intensity
exercise for 30 minutes a day, three or more times per week.
Researchers used
X-rays to measure the participants' bone mineral density in the total
skeleton, lower spine and hip, and magnetic resonance imaging to
calculate abdominal fat. They weighed each participant and had each do
a treadmill exercise test and a series of weight-training exercises to
measure aerobic fitness and muscle strength. In addition, the
individuals completed a physical activity questionnaire.
Researchers found
that aerobic exercise was not associated with bone mineral density but
abdominal fat was. Muscle strength was associated with bone mineral
density at some but not all sites.
Thirty percent of
the women were taking estrogen and progesterone supplements. While
such hormone replacement therapy has been known to positively benefit
bone, in this study it contributed only modestly to bone mineral
density and only at the lower spine.
The study was
supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Johns Hopkins
Bayview General Clinical Research Center. Co-authors were J.R. DeRegis;
K.L. Turner, A.C. Bacher, J. Sung, P.S. Hees, M. Tayback and P. Ouyang.
Stewart, Kerry J.,
et al, "Fitness, fatness and activity as predictors of bone mineral
density in older persons," Journal of Internal Medicine, Nov. 2002,
Vol. 252, No. 5, pp. 1-8.
Related Web Sites:
Johns Hopkins
Division of Cardiology
http://www.cardiology.hopkinsmedicine.org
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