Diabetes
in the News
Fitness Reduces
Death Risk, Regardless of Weight
Source: American Diabetes Association
Publication date: 2004-01-07
Fitness
lowers overweight diabetics' death risk
By Amy
Norton
Reuters
Health
January
6, 2003
Being
fit can lower a diabetic man's risk of dying, even if he is
significantly overweight, new research suggests.
Investigators
found that diabetic men who were physically fit were less
likely than their less-fit peers to die of any cause over
about 15 years. What's more, men who were heavy yet fit had
death risks similar to those of fit normal-weight men.
"This
is a testament to the power of being physically active,"
said lead study author Dr. Timothy S. Church, medical director
of the Cooper Institute in Dallas. "Essentially, fitness
totally negated the effects of being overweight," he
told Reuters Health.
Church
and his colleagues report the findings in the January issue
of the journal Diabetes Care.
The study
involved nearly 2,200 men who were followed for an average
of just under 15 years. All had undergone a range of health
assessments, including treadmill tests to gauge their fitness
levels, upon entry.
Church's
team found that, with all health factors considered, greater
fitness meant a lower risk of death over the years, regardless
of weight. The biggest difference in risk was seen among obese
men, where those who were only moderately fit had a much lower
risk of death than those who were the most out of shape.
This is
significant, according to Church, because it doesn't take
a grueling exercise regimen to achieve such a level of fitness.
Thirty minutes of walking five times a week should do it,
he noted.
Excess
weight and obesity are major factors in type 2 diabetes, and
weight loss can often help control the disease and its complications,
which include heart disease and stroke. The new findings do
not minimize the importance of weight control in managing
diabetes, according to Church and his colleagues.
However,
Church said they do point to the power of physical fitness
even in the absence of weight loss.
And, looking
at the findings from a different perspective, thinness did
not protect study participants from the ill effects of being
out of shape. Among normal men, those who were the least fit
were nearly seven times more likely to die than the most fit.
Doctors,
Church said, should talk to all patients about getting and
staying physically active.
Exactly
why fitness cut death risk in this study is not fully clear,
but better cardiovascular health almost certainly factored
in, according to Church. However, the Cooper Institute researchers
have also found that fitness is related to a lower risk of
cancer death.
SOURCE:
Diabetes Care, January 2004.
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