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Fitness & Exercise for Senior Citizens
Severely Restricted Diet Leads to Physical Fitness
into Old Age
Rats on restricted calorie diet had
significantly higher physical performance
Oct.
31, 2007 Although research has well established that a healthy diet is
very beneficial to longevity, scientist say in a new study they have
proven for the first time that severely restricting calories not only
leads to a longer life, it also maintains physical fitness into advanced
age.
The seemingly inevitable progression to physical
disability and loss of independence is slowed by this diet, they say.
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By Taunya English, Science Writer, Health Behavior
News Service
October 27, 2006
Read more
on
Senior Citizen Fitness & Exercise |
|
The study, using rats with life-time caloric
restriction, showed that the diet reduces the amount of visceral fat
(difficult to remove deep fat), which expresses inflammatory factors
that in humans cause chronic disease and a decline in physical
performance and vitality across the lifespan.
The study appears in the October issue of.
Have we finally discovered the Fountain of Youth?
No. But we may be getting a little closer, the
researcher say, in the report in the October issue of Journals of
Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences.
"This is the first study to report that caloric
restriction reduced production in visceral fat of the inflammatory
cytokine IL-6 and enhanced performance on overall physical function
assessments," said Tongjian You, Ph.D., principal investigator and
assistant professor of exercise and nutrition sciences in the University
at Buffalo School of Public Health and Health Professions.
"In addition, rats that ate a normal diet lost a
significant amount of lean muscle mass and acquired more fat, while
calorie-restricted rats maintained lean muscle mass as they aged."
The study was conducted with male rats in three age
groups -- 18, 24 and 29 months, comparable to ages 50-70 years in humans
-- that had been fed either a normal or 40-percent calorie-restricted
diet from birth. The animals were put through tests to determine grip
strength, muscle tone, stamina and swimming speed.
Data also were collected on whole body mass, lean
body mass, fat mass, percent body fat, the ratio of fat-to-lean body
mass, amount of visceral fat and the amount of pro-inflammatory
cytokines and C-reactive protein, a marker of chronic inflammation.
Results showed that animals on the restricted
calorie diet had significantly higher physical performance scores than
animals fed a normal diet. They also had less fat, a lower fat-to-lean
ratio, and lower adipose tissue secretion of IL-6 and circulating levels
of C-reactive protein.
The stumbling block on this path to remaining
forever young is that humans could not adhere to such a severe diet.
"Based on an average of 2,000 calories per day for
adult women and 2,500 for men, cutting by 40 percent would mean
surviving on 1,200 and 1,500 calories per day, respectively, said You.
"It's very difficult for people to maintain that
type of diet for short periods of time, and it would be nearly
impossible over a lifetime, while staying healthy. Starting on a diet
like that in the senior years would be harmful."
You said that a more moderate form of caloric
restriction, 8 percent, is achievable in humans, based on recent
findings, and may have positive effects on specific oxidative stress and
inflammatory biomarkers.
"Preclinical testing of this 8-percent regimen
could be informative and beneficial in translating to humans," he said.
Researchers on the study, in addition to You, were
William E. Sonntag, Ph.D., and Xiaoyan Leng, M.D., Ph.D., from Wake
Forest University School of Medicine, and Christy S. Carter, Ph.D., from
the University of Florida and the Malcom Randall VA Medical Center in
Gainesville.
The study was supported by grants from the National
Institutes of Health.
University of Buffalo's self-description
The University at Buffalo is a premier
research-intensive public university, the largest and most comprehensive
campus in the State University of New York. The School of Public Health
and Health Professions is one of five schools that constitute UB's
Academic Health Center. UB's more than 28,000 students pursue their
academic interests through more than 300 undergraduate, graduate and
professional degree programs. Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo
is a member of the Association of American Universities. The university
is in full compliance with mandates of state and federal regulatory
agencies pertaining to the humane use and care of research animals.
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