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Fitness & Exercise for Senior Citizens
Researchers Find Cholesterol Helps Increase Muscle Gain from
Exercise
Study of Older Adults Shows Cholesterol May Pose
Benefits
Jan. 18, 2008-- If you're worried about high
cholesterol levels and keeping heart-healthy as you get older, don't
push aside bacon and eggs just yet. A new study says they might actually
provide a benefit. Lower cholesterol levels can actually reduce muscle
gain with exercising, according to a study from Texas A&M University.
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Bottom line: Before you have that second helping of
oatmeal, it's very possible that cholesterol may not be the mean Mr.
Evil thing we tend to believe it is.
Lead investigator Steven Riechman, assistant
professor of health and kinesiology, and Simon Sheather, head of the
Department of Statistics, along with colleagues from The Johns Hopkins
Weight Management Center and the Northern Ontario School of Medicine,
have recently had their findings published in the Journal of
Gerontology.
"We were not expecting to get these kind of
results," Riechman explains.
What we found could really make us look
differently at cholesterol, especially as it relates to a vigorous
workout." Riechman cautioned that further research in the area is
needed.
The team studied 55 men and women, ages 60-69, who
were healthy non-smokers and were able to perform exercise testing and
training.
Three days a week for 12 weeks, participants
performed several exercises, including stretching, stationary bike
riding and vigorous weight lifting. Those who had to miss one or more
sessions all conducted make-up sessions so that by the study's end, the
entire group had engaged in uniform activities. Also, all participants
consumed similar meals.
At the conclusion of the study, the researchers
found that there was a significant association of dietary cholesterol
and change in strength. In general, those with higher cholesterol intake
also had the highest muscle strength gain.
Cholesterol circulating in the blood also appeared
to have contributed to greater muscle gain in the participants, Riechman
said.
"One possible explanation is through cholesterol's
important role in the inflammation process," he noted.
"As you exercise, your muscles can become sore
because they are rebuilding muscle mass. More cholesterol may result in
a more robust inflammatory response. We know that inflammation in some
areas, such as near the heart, is not good, but for building muscles it
may be beneficial, and cholesterol appears to aid in this process."
Riechman said that subjects who were taking
cholesterol-lowering drugs while participating in the study showed lower
muscle gain totals than those who were not.
"Needless to say, these findings caught us totally
off guard," he explains.
"From here, we need to look at a number of
questions, such as what exactly happens to cholesterol while you are
exercising? What role does protein intake have in all of this? What we
really need to do is to trace cholesterol the moment it goes into the
muscles."
Combined with exercise, cholesterol appears to play
a role in contributing to muscle gain, Riechman says. The key here is
working out - it doesn't mean sitting in front of a television all day
thinking you don't have to worry about cholesterol levels.
"Our findings show that the restricting of
cholesterol - while in the process of exercising - appears to affect
building muscle mass in a negative manner. If it's true, as our findings
suggest, that cholesterol may play a key role in muscle repair, we need
to know exactly how that happens.
"And because cholesterol is negatively associated
with cardiovascular health, we need further study in this area. It shows
that there is still a lot about cholesterol that we don't know."
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