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Lack of Physical Activity More Life
Threatening Than Obesity
Small amounts of
physical activity found to be protective
Dec. 9, ’02 -
Being inactive is more life-threatening than being overweight or
obese, results of one of the first studies to consider body weight and
physical activity simultaneously and assess their independent effects
on mortality has found.
The good news is that participants
didn't need to be marathon runners to decrease their mortality risk.
Results showed that for men in the
study, small amounts of physical activity were significantly
protective, while moderate or intense physical activity provided
little additional life-preserving benefit, irrespective of weight.
Moreover, in an interesting twist to the "leaner is better" axiom,
underweight persons in this study were at greater risk of dying from
any cause than people of healthy weight. The study appears in the
current issue of Annals of Epidemiology.
"Consistently, physical inactivity
was a better predictor of all-cause mortality than being overweight or
obese," said lead author Carlos J. Crespo, Dr.P.H., associate
professor of social and preventive medicine in the University at
Buffalo's School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.
"Our findings confirm that,
independent of other known risk factors, such as hypertension, high
cholesterol and smoking, physical activity exerts positive health
benefits independent of body weight. The benefit may derive from the
fact that regular moderate physical activity, no matter how much you
weigh, appears to stimulate the immune system, improve insulin
sensitivity and increase bone density, among other positive effects.
These findings send a strong message that everyone should strive to be
active in some way," Crespo said.
The study was based on data
collected for the Puerto Rico Heart Health Program, which was designed
to examine sickness and death from coronary heart disease in rural and
urban men. The initial data on physical activity and body measurements
were collected between 1962 and 1965 from 9,824 men aged 35-79. Men
found to have heart disease at the first examination or who died
within the first three years were excluded from the study.
During that 12-year follow-up
period, 1,445 participants died and nine couldn't be found. The final
sample for this analysis consisted of data on 9,136 men.
Participants were placed in a
quartile of physical activity, based on the number of hours per day
they spent at various activities. Activity hours were converted into
an activity index based on METs, or metabolic equivalents, a standard
method used to indicate energy expenditure. An activity index of 24
reflects no activity (one MET per hour is necessary to maintain basic
body functions). The first activity quartile included participants
with an activity index of 24-27; 2nd quartile from 27-30; 3rd quartile
from 30-37, and 4th quartile, greater than 37.
Weight categories were based on
body mass index, or BMI, which reflects a weight-to-height ratio. A
BMI of 18.5-24.9 is considered normal or healthy. Other weight
categories were: underweight, BMI less than 18.5; overweight, BMI from
25-29.9, and obese, BMI above 30.
Analyzing these variables from the
1,445 participants who died showed physical inactivity to be an
independent risk factor for all-cause mortality. Men in activity
category 1 were at twice the risk of dying than those in category 2.
Additional activity provided little extra benefit, results showed.
When deaths from heart disease were considered separately, findings
showed sedentary men had 38 percent more deaths from the heart disease
than men in the next activity quartile. Men in the highest quartile of
activity lived the longest, regardless of weight.
However, comparing heart disease
deaths based on weight category showed a 33.6 percent increase in
heart disease deaths in obese (BMI=30+) men compared to men in the
healthy weight category. Overweight (BMI=25-29.9) men showed only a
seven percent increase in deaths from heart disease.
"These findings are of public
health significance because both physical inactivity and obesity have
been cited by the Surgeon General as two of the top 10 public-health
priorities for the nation," Crespo said. "In this study, inactivity
was a significant predictor of all-cause mortality, and overweight men
who exercised reduced their risk of premature death compared with
overweight men who did not exercise.
"We encourage individuals not to
evaluate their exercise program on pounds of body weight lost, but to
engage in a regular exercise program for their general health.
Exercise is good for all persons, regardless of their body weight."
Additional authors on the study
were Mario Palmieri, M.D.,and Rosa Perdomo, M.D., Ph.D., from the
University of Puerto Rico; Daniel McGee, Ph.D., from South Carolina
Medical School; Ellen Smit, Ph.D., and Christopher Sempos, Ph.D., from
the UB medical school; I-Min Lee, Sc.D., from Harvard Medical School,
and Paul Sorlie, Ph.D., from the National Institutes of Health.
The study was supported by a grant
from the National Institute on Aging.
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