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Fitness Linked to Reduced Mortality, Even in Obese Subjects

Monday, August 24, 2009

Another study exploring the relationship between being fat, being fit, and living longer has found that lower fitness is an independent predictor of all-cause mortality, even after adjustment for adiposity. In the study, obese subjects who were fit had a lower risk of dying than normal-weight subjects who were physically inactive.

"It may be possible to reduce all-cause death rates among older adults, including those who are obese, by promoting regular physical activity on most days of the week which will keep most individuals out of the low-fitness category," the authors, led by Dr Xuemei Sui (University of South Carolina, Columbia), write in the December 5, 2007 issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association.

The study tracked a cohort of 2603 adults aged 60 or over for a mean of 12 years, during which time 450 people died. Adjusted death rates were lowest for people with the lowest body-mass index (BMI), lowest waist circumference, or in the highest quintile for fitness level — this last that held true even in severely obese subjects, who were much less likely to die if their fitness levels were higher. When fitness was factored into the waist circumference analysis and vice versa, fitness predicted mortality risk regardless of smoking, baseline health, BMI, waist circumference, or percent body fat, whereas waist circumference was no longer significantly associated with increased mortality after fitness was considered.

"Normal-weight individuals in our study had greater longevity only if they were physically fit; furthermore, obese individuals who were fit did not have increased mortality," the authors conclude.

Focusing on physical activity, not fat
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10 Ways To Age Successfully

Sunday, July 05, 2009

1. Use it or lose it. As with any skill or capability we have learned, our physical, mental and social abilities will deteriorate if not challenged. This is intuitive, yet somehow as we age we attribute lost ability to getting old, rather than being out of shape or out of practice. Read More

Prescribing the Magic Pill

Monday, May 18, 2009
In the bottle before you is a pill, a marvel of modern medicine that will regulate gene transcription throughout your body, helping prevent heart disease, stroke, diabetes, obesity, and 12 kinds of cancer - plus gallstones and diverticulitis. Expect the pill to improve your strength and balance as well as your blood lipid profile. Your bones will become stronger. Read More

For people with diabetes who are obese, exercise has many benefits.

Monday, May 11, 2009
Epidemiologists compared data from two national surveys that used separate tests (fasting blood glucose test and oral glucose tolerance test) to estimate that in the United States, nearly one-third of those age 65 and older have diabetes, and three-quarters have diabetes or pre-diabetes (Diabetes Care, February 2009). Overweight is a risk factor for multiple health conditions, including diabetes. Read More

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