Why is exercise more essential than weight reduction when it comes to living a longer life?
For endless lifestyle
According to an intriguing new study of the links between fitness, weight, heart health, and longevity, exercise is more essential than weight loss for improved health and a longer life span, especially if you are overweight or obese.
Obese persons who develop fitness rather than lose weight or diet have a decreased risk of heart disease and early mortality, according to the study, which looked at the outcomes of hundreds of prior studies of weight loss and exercises in men and women.
I've written a lot in this column on the science of exercise and weight loss, and a lot of it is depressing if your objective is to lose weight. People who begin to exercise seldom lose much, if any, weight unless they simultaneously significantly reduce their food intake, according to a previous study.
In general, the exercise burns far too few calories to help with weight loss. As I discussed in last week's column, we also tend to compensate for some of the sparse calorie expenditure from exercise by eating more afterward, moving less, or unintentionally dialing down on our bodies' metabolic functions to minimize overall daily energy expenditure.
Dr. Glenn Gaesser, an exercise physiology professor at Arizona State University in Phoenix, is well-versed in the shortcomings of fat-burning regimens. He has spent decades researching the impact of physical exercise on individuals' body compositions, metabolisms, and endurance, with a special focus on obese people.
Much of his previous research has demonstrated the futility of weight-loss regimens. For example, in a 2015 trial he directed, 81 inactive, overweight women began a new regimen of walking for 30 minutes three times a week. A couple of them had lost weight after 12 weeks, but 55 of them had gained weight.
However, in other studies from Gaesser's lab, overweight and obese people with significant health problems, such as high blood pressure, poor cholesterol profiles, or insulin resistance, a marker for Type 2 diabetes, showed significant improvements in those conditions after they began exercising, regardless of whether or not they lost weight.
Following these findings, Dr. Gaesser began to question if exercise may help overweight people maintain good metabolic health, regardless of their body mass, and perhaps live as long as slim people — or even longer if the thin people were out of shape.
So he and his colleague Siddhartha Angadi, a professor of education and kinesiology at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, began scouring research databases for past studies related to dieting, exercise, fitness, metabolic health, and longevity for the new study, which was published this month in iScience.
They were particularly interested in meta-analyses, which pool and analyze data from numerous previous studies, allowing researchers to examine the outcomes of much more people than most individual weight loss or exercise studies, which are typically small-scale.
More than 200 relevant meta-analyses and individual studies were found. Then they set out to investigate what all of this research, which included tens of thousands of men and women, the vast majority of whom were obese, had to say about the relative benefits of decreasing weight or getting in shape for enhancing metabolisms and lifespan. In other words, they wanted to know if decreasing weight or getting up and exercising is better for someone who is overweight.
They discovered that the competition was not close. "When comparing head-to-head, the magnitude of benefit from improving fitness was considerably bigger than the size of gain from lowering weight," Dr. Gaesser stated.
The studies they reference suggest that inactive, obese men and women who start exercising and improving their fitness can reduce their risk of early mortality by 30% or more, even if their weight does not change. According to Dr. Gaesser, this improvement puts them at a reduced risk of early mortality than persons who are regarded to be of normal weight but out of shape.
On the other hand, if obese persons lose weight via dieting (rather than disease), their chance of dying young lowers by roughly 16 percent on average, albeit not in all studies. According to several of the studies highlighted in the current analysis, weight reduction among obese adults did not affect mortality risks.
The main message from the current study, according to Dr. Gaesser, is that you don't have to reduce weight to be healthy. "In terms of mortality risk, improving your physical activity and fitness is preferable to attempting to lose weight," he stated.
About the Creator
Lesly Johnson
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