Starting Exercise Later in Life Still Helps Heart















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Exercise has been shown to help the heart, whereas a lazy lifestyle can be a major risk factor for heart disease. But few studies have examined how exercise impacts health at different ages. Now researchers have shown in a small study that even those who take up exercise after age 40 derive significant health effects.

Epidemiologist Dietrich Rothenbacher of the University of Heidelberg and his colleagues surveyed 312 patients--mostly men--between the ages of 40 and 68 who suffered from coronary heart disease and 479 volunteers matching the patients in age and sex. The scientists asked them to detail their physical activity from the ages of 20 to 39, 40 to 49 and 50 years and older. More than 10 percent of patients and 6 percent of the controls admitted to lifetimes devoid of physical activity.                                                                       

Compared to these inactive counterparts, those who were active throughout their lives enjoyed more than a 60 percent less chance of developing heart disease. But even those who became active only after the age of 40 enjoyed a 55 percent less chance of cardiovascular trouble, and those who went from being inactive to very active saw the greatest benefits. Although such a survey technique is open to so-called recall bias--a tendency by test subjects to incorrectly estimate their exercise--the researchers found that individuals' reports matched well with physical fitness measures and even matched better with their ultimate fate. "Our results suggest that a more active physical activity pattern is clearly associated with a reduced risk of [coronary heart disease]," the researchers write in the paper presenting their findings published online in Heart. "And that changing from a sedentary to a more physically active lifestyle even in later adulthood may strongly decrease [coronary heart disease] risk."



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  1. 1. gkadey 12:38 PM 5/10/09

    Being active is no guarantee that you will not have a heart attack. It may be all in the genes!

    I was a long distance runner. 5/7 miles 3/4 times a week for many years.. Played hockey until age 50 plus. Then took up tennis. 5'6" and weight all my life averaged 120 lbs. Heart attack at age 68. Quad bypass at age 73. Now 70 and still thriving. Mother died of heart attack age 75 and my father died of a heart attack at age 89.

    G. Kadey
    Tillosonburg, On
    Canada

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